Hi Little Wren

Shrewsbury Society of Friends.
The earliest visits of Quaker Preachers to Shrewsbury and its neighbourhood appear to have been about the year 1654. The strangers were apprehended and committed, but were guarded out of town "with a pass towards their own country, but two friends of Shrewsbury, that is to say, William Payne and Katherine Broughton, brought them on their way." George Fox visited Shrewsbury in 1657 and again in 1667. Before 1660 a "hired house in the town of Shrewsbury" was used as the recognised place of Meetings for Worship. After the organisation of the Society had become more settled, it was agreed at a Meeting held at Dolobran in 1668 of "Representatives from ye several Meetings in Shropshire, Montgomeryshire, and Merionethshire," that "Charles Lloyd and Thomas Lloyd doe register all births, marriages and deaths, and sufferings of Friends of all kinds"; and in 1669 it was agreed to purchase "a Meeting Room and an enclosure for a Burying place" in Shrewsbury. Accordingly in 1670 , Constantine Overton became the purchaser from John Thomas of two messuages, with their appurtenant gardens and premises, in a certain street called St. John's Hill,and assigned the same to trustees on behalf of the Society. About the same time John Millington gave a part of a garden: and afterwards Owen Roberts contributed £80 to the Society's funds, which were expended about 1750 in the rebuilding of the Meeting Room; which again was rebuilt and enlarged in 1807. From the association of Montgomeryshire with Shropshire the existing Register Book is not complete, and it is believed one or more volumes were lost on the removal of the Lloyd family from Dolobran about 1730. Since about 1710 the Shropshire Registers have been kept more distinctly separate, and they include the other Meetings as well as Shrewsbury, to which centre the present volume chiefly relates. It may not be out of place to explain that the number of signatures to the Registers or Certificates of Marriage arises from the care which was desired to be taken to certify each marriage. That there should be full publicity of the intentions of the parties, after enquiry as to the absence of other engagements and as to the consent of parents or guardians, was the invariable preliminary to the solemnisation of the contract, which also took place publicly, as is the rule at the present time, in a religious Meeting of the Society.
Pete
