Peter Quire
Peter Quire (June 15, 1806–May 5, 1899) was an American abolitionist, community leader, cobbler, and church founder.[1][2] He was a member of the Underground Railroad in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as a child; and later with his wife Harriet, he was a founder of St. John the Evangelist Church (now known as the Zabriskie Memorial Church of Saint John the Evangelist) in Newport, Rhode Island.[3][4] BiographyPeter Quire was born on June 15, 1806, in Pennsylvania, U.S..[3] As a child, he worked as a Chaise driver for Joseph Parrish (1779–1840), a white Quaker physician and the president of the Pennsylvania Abolition Society.[3] The Parrish house basement was a stop on the Underground Railroad, and Quire worked on the related rescue missions.[3] Quire married Maria Quire, and moved to Chester, Pennsylvania where he worked as a shoemaker.[3] In 1831, they moved to Timbuctoo, New Jersey after receiving a gifted plot of land from the Atkinsons, another Quaker family.[3] Timbuctoo was a newly formed Black, emancipated community, and it was in need of a school. The Quires donated their Timbuctoo deed of land for the creation of a new Black school, which it specified in the grant it was to be led by Black teachers.[3] It is unknown what happened after they left Timbuctoo. By 1865, Quire was living in Newport, Rhode Island with his new wife Sarah.[3] Sarah died by 1870, and sometime after he re-married Harriet Frances Rodman.[3] They were active in the Trinity Church in Newport, which was segregated.[3] At this time period there was only one Black church in the state, the African Union Meeting and Schoolhouse.[3] On July 11, 1875, the rector from Trinity Church and several of the churchgoers meet for worship in the home of Peter and Harriet.[1][3][5] Months later they built St. John’s Church (the building is now St. Johns’ Guild Hall) at 61 Poplar Street in the Point neighborhood, and featured a racially diverse congregation.[1][3][4] By 1885, the church was accepted into the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island, and continued to be mostly self-funded.[3] In the 1890s, the church was struggling financially.[4] In 1893, Sarah Titus Zabriskie donated money to the church in the memory of her mother inspiring the new name Zabriskie Memorial Church.[4] See also
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