Part 2 (1/2)
V.
Seating the Meeting.
Perhaps no duty was more important and more difficult of satisfactory performance in the church work in early New England than ”seating the meeting-house.” Our Puritan forefathers, though bitterly denouncing all forms and ceremonies, were great respecters of persons; and in nothing was the regard for wealth and position more fully shown than in designating the seat in which each person should sit during public wors.h.i.+p. A committee of dignified and influential men was appointed to a.s.sign irrevocably to each person his or her place, according to rank and importance. Whittier wrote of this custom:--
”In the goodly house of wors.h.i.+p, where in order due and fit, As by public vote directed, cla.s.sed and ranked the people sit; Mistress first and goodwife after, clerkly squire before the clown, From the brave coat, lace embroidered: to the gray frock shading down.”
In many cases the members of the committee were changed each year or at each fresh seating, in order to obviate any of the effects of partiality through kins.h.i.+p, friends.h.i.+p, personal esteem, or debt. A second committee was also appointed to seat the members of committee number one, in order that, as Haverhill people phrased it, ”there may be no Grumbling at them for picking and placing themselves.”
This seating committee sent to the church the list of all the attendants and the seats a.s.signed to them, and when the list had been twice or thrice read to the congregation, and nailed on the meeting-house door, it became a law. Then some such order as this of the church at Watertown, Connecticut, was pa.s.sed: ”It is ordered that the next Sabbath Day every person shall take his or her seat appointed to them, and not go to any other seat where others are placed: And if any one of the inhabitants shall act contrary, he shall for the first offence be reproved by the deacons, and for a second pay a fine of two s.h.i.+llings, and a like fine for each offence ever after.” Or this of the Stratham church: ”When the comety have Seatid the meeting-house every person that is Seatid shall set in those Seats or pay Five s.h.i.+llings Pir Day for every day they set out of There seats in a Disorderly Manner to advance themselves Higher in the meeting-house.” These two church-laws were very lenient. In many towns the punishments and fines were much more severe. Two men of Newbury were in 1669 fined 27 4s.
each for ”disorderly going and setting in seats belonging to others.” They were dissatisfied with the seats a.s.signed to them by the seating committee, and openly and defiantly rebelled. Other and more peaceable citizens ”entred their Decents” to the first decision of the committee and asked for reconsideration of their special cases and for promotion to a higher pew before the final orders were ”Jsued.”
In all the Puritan meetings, as then and now in Quaker meetings, the men sat on one side of the meeting-house and the women on the other; and they entered by separate doors. It was a great and much-contested change when men and women were ordered to sit together ”promiscuoslie.” In front, on either side of the pulpit (or very rarely in the foremost row in the gallery), was a seat of highest dignity, known as the ”foreseat,” in which only the persons of greatest importance in the community sat.
Sometimes a row of square pews was built on three sides of the ground floor, and each pew occupied by separate families, while the pulpit was on the fourth side. If any man wished such a private pew for himself and family, he obtained permission from the church and town, and built it at his own expense. Immediately in front of the pulpit was either a long seat or a square inclosed pew for the deacons, who sat facing the congregation.
This was usually a foot or two above the level of the other pews, and was reached by two or three steep, narrow steps. On a still higher plane was a pew for the ruling elders, when ruling elders there were. The magistrates also had a pew for their special use. What we now deem the best seats, those in the middle of the church, were in olden times the free seats.
Usually, on one side of the pulpit was a square pew for the minister's family. When there were twenty-six children in the family, as at least one New England parson could boast, and when ministers' families of twelve or fourteen children were far from unusual, it is no wonder that we find frequent votes to ”inlarge the ministers wives pew the breadth of the alley,” or to ”take in the next pue to the ministers wives pue into her pue.” The seats in the gallery were universally regarded in the early churches as the most exalted, in every sense, in the house, with the exception, of course, of the dignity-bearing foreseat and the few private pews.
It is easy to comprehend what a source of disappointed antic.i.p.ation, heart-burning jealousy, offended dignity, unseemly pride, and bitter quarrelling this method of a.s.signing scats, and ranking thereby, must have been in those little communities. How the goodwivcs must have hated the seating committee! Though it was expressly ordered, when the committee rendered their decision, that ”the inhabitants are to rest silent and sett down satysfyed,” who can still the tongue of an envious woman or an insulted man? Though they were Puritans, they were first of all men and women, and complaints and revolts were frequent. Judge Sewall records that one indignant dame ”treated Captain Osgood very roughly on account of seating the meeting-house.” To her the difference between a seat in the first and one in the second row was immeasurably great. It was not alone the Scribes and Pharisees who desired the highest seats in the synagogue.
It was found necessary at a very early date to ”dignify the meeting,”
which was to make certain seats, though in different localities, equal in dignity; thus could peace and contented pride be partially restored. For instance, the seating committee in the Sutton church used their ”best discresing,” and voted that ”the third seat below be equal in dignity with the foreseat in the front gallery, and the fourth seat below be equal in dignity with the foreseat in the side gallery,” etc., thus making many seats of equal honor. Of course wives had to have seats of equal importance with those of their husbands, and each widow retained the dignity apportioned to her in her husband's lifetime. We can well believe that much ”discresing” was necessary in dignifying as well as in seating. Often, after building a new meeting-house with all the painstaking and thoughtful judgment that could be shown, the dissensions over the seating lasted for years. The conciliatory fas.h.i.+on of ”dignifying the seats” clung long in the Congregational churches of New England. In East Hartford and Windsor it was not abandoned until 1824.
Many men were unwilling to serve on these seating committees, and refused to ”medle with the seating,” protesting against it on account of the odium that was incurred, but they were seldom ”let off.” Even so influential and upright a man as Judge Sewall felt a dread of the responsibility and of the personal spleen he might arouse. He also feared in one case lest his seat-decisions might, if disliked, work against the ministerial peace of his son, who had been recently ordained as pastor of the church. Sometimes the difficulty was settled in this way: the entire church (or rather the male members) voted who should occupy the foreseat, or the highest pew, and the voted-in occupants of this seat of honor formed a committee, who in turn seated the others of the congregation.
In the town of Rowley, ”age, office, and the amount paid toward building the meeting-house were considered when a.s.signing seats.” Other towns had very amusing and minute rules for seating. Each year of the age counted one degree. Military service counted eight degrees. The magistrate's office counted ten degrees. Every forty s.h.i.+llings paid in on the church rate counted one degree. We can imagine the ambitious Puritan adding up his degrees, and paying in forty s.h.i.+llings more in order to sit one seat above his neighbor who was a year or two older.
In Pittsfield, as early as the year 1765, the pews were sold by ”vandoo”
to the highest bidder, in order to stop the unceasing quarrels over the seating. In Windham, Connecticut, in 1762, the adoption of this pacificatory measure only increased the dissension when it was discovered that some miserable ”bachelors who never paid for more than one head and a horse” had bid in several of the best pews in the meeting-house. In New London, two women, sisters-in-law, were seated side by side. Each claimed the upper or more dignified seat, and they quarrelled so fiercely over the occupation of it that they had to be brought before the town meeting.
In no way could honor and respect be shown more satisfactorily in the community than by the seat a.s.signed in meeting. When Judge Sewall married his second wife, he writes with much pride: ”Mr. Oliver in the names of the Overseers invites my Wife to sit in the foreseat. I thought to have brought her into my pue. I thankt him and the Overseers.” His wife died in a few months, and he reproached himself for his pride in this honor, and left the seat which he had in the men's foreseat. ”G.o.d in his holy Sovereignty put my wife out of the Fore Seat. I apprehended I had Cause to be ashamed of my Sin and loath myself for it, and retired into my Pue,” which was of course less dignified than the foreseat.
Often, in thriving communities, the ”pues” and benches did not afford seating room enough for the large number who wished to attend public wors.h.i.+p, and complaints were frequent that many were ”obliged to sit squeased on the stairs.” Persons were allowed to bring chairs and stools into the meeting-house, and place them in the ”alleys.” These extra seats became often such enc.u.mbering nuisances that in many towns laws were pa.s.sed abolis.h.i.+ng and excluding them, or, as in Hadley, ordering them ”back of the women's seats.” In 1759 it was ordered in that town to ”clear the Alleys of the meeting-house of chairs and other Inc.u.mbrances.” Where the chairless people went is not told; perhaps they sat in the doorway, or, in the summer time, listened outside the windows. One forward citizen of Hardwicke had gradually moved his chair down the church alley, step by step, Sunday after Sunday, from one position of dignity to another still higher, until at last he boldly invaded the deacons' seat. When, in the year 1700, this honored position was forbidden him, in his chagrin and mortification he committed suicide by hanging.
The young men sat together in rows, and the young women in corresponding seats on the other side of the house. In 1677 the selectmen of Newbury gave permission to a few young women to build a pew in the gallery. It is impossible to understand why this should have roused the indignation of the bachelors of the town, but they were excited and angered to such a pitch that they broke a window, invaded the meeting-house, and ”broke the pue in pessis.” For this sacrilegious act they were fined 10 each, and sentenced to be whipped or pilloried. In consideration, however, of the fact that many of them had been brave soldiers, the punishment was omitted when they confessed and asked forgiveness. This episode is very comical; it exhibits the Puritan youth in such an ungallant and absurd light. When, ten years later, liberty was given to ten young men, who had sat in the ”foure backer seats in the gallery,” to build a pew in ”the hindermost seat in the gallery behind the pulpit,” it is not recorded that the Salem young women made any objection. In the Woburn church, the four daughters of one of the most respected families in the place received permission to build a pew in which to sit. Here also such indignant and violent protests were made by the young men that the selectmen were obliged to revoke the permission.
It would be interesting to know the bachelors' discourteous objections to young women being allowed to own a pew, but no record of their reasons is given. Bachelors were so restricted and governed in the colonies that perhaps they resented the thought of any independence being allowed to single women. Single men could not live alone, but were forced to reside with some family to whom the court a.s.signed them, and to do in all respects just what the court ordered. Thus, in olden times, a man had to marry to obtain his freedom. The only clue to a knowledge of the cause of the fierce and resentful objection of New England young men to permitting the young women of the various congregations to build and own a ”maids pue” is contained in the record of the church of the town of Scotland, Connecticut.
”An Hurlburt, Pashants and Mary Lazelle, Younes Bingham, prudenc Hurlburt and Jerusha meachem” were empowered to build a pew ”provided they build within a year and raise ye pue no higher than the seat is on the Mens side.” ”Never ye Less,” saith the chronicle, ”ye above said have built said pue much higher than ye order, and if they do not lower the same within one month from this time the society comitte shall take said pue away.” Do you wonder that the bachelors resented this towering ”maids pue?” that they would not be scornfully looked down upon every Sabbath by women-folk, especially by a girl named ”meachem”? Pashants and Younes and prudenc had to quickly come down from their unlawfully high church-perch and take a more humble seat, as befitted them; thus did their ”vaulting ambition o'erleap itself and fall on the other side.” Perhaps the Salem maids also built too high and imposing a pew. In Haverhill, in 1708, young women were permitted to build pews, provided they did not ”d.a.m.nify the Stairway.” This somewhat profane-sounding restriction they heeded, and the Haverhill maids occupied their und.a.m.nifying ”pue” unmolested. Medford young women, however, in 1701, when allowed only one side gallery for seats, while the young men were a.s.signed one side and all the front gallery, made such an uproar that the town had to call a meeting, and restore to them their ”woman's rights”
in half the front gallery.
Infants were brought to church in their mothers' arms, and on summer days the young mothers often sat at the meeting-house door or in the porch,--if porch there were,--where, listening to the word of G.o.d, they could attend also to the wants of their babes. I have heard, too, of a little cage, or frame, which was to be seen in the early meeting-houses, for the purpose of holding children who were too young to sit alone,--poor Puritan babies!
Little girls sat with their mothers or elder sisters on ”crickets” within the pews; or if the family were over-numerous, the children and crickets exundated into ”the alley without the pues.” Often a row of little daughters of Zion sat on three-legged stools and low seats the entire length of the aisle,--weary, sleepy, young sentinels ”without the gates.”
The boys, the Puritan boys, those wild animals who were regarded with such suspicion, such intense disfavor, by all elderly Puritan eyes, and who were publicly stigmatized by the Duxbury elders as ”ye wretched boys on ye Lords Day,” were herded by themselves. They usually sat on the pulpit and gallery stairs, and constables or t.i.thingmen were appointed to watch over them and control them. In Salem, in 1676, it was ordered that ”all ye boyes of ye towne are and shall be appointed to sitt upon ye three pair of stairs in ye meeting-house on ye Lords Day, and Wm. Lord is appointed to look after ye boyes yt sitte upon ye pulpit stairs. Reuben Guppy is to look and order soe many of ye boyes as may be convenient, and if any are unruly, to present their names, as the law directs.” Nowadays we should hardly seat boys in a group if we wished them to be orderly and decorous, and I fear the man ”by the name of Guppy” found it no easy task to preserve order and due gravity among the Puritan boys in Salem meeting. In fact, the rampant boys behaved thus badly for the very reason that they were seated together instead of with their respective families; and not until the fas.h.i.+on was universal of each family sitting in a pew or group by itself did the boys in meeting behave like human beings rather than like mischievous and unruly monkeys.