Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village
Vorlage:Infobox nrhp Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village is a Shaker village near New Gloucester and Poland, Maine in the United States. It is the last active Shaker community, with only three members as of 2009.[1] The community was established in either 1782, 1783 or 1793 at the height of the Shaker movement in the United States. The Sabbathday Lake meetinghouse was built in 1794. The entire property was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1974.[2][3]
History
The Shakers
The Shakers were originally located in England in 1747, in the home of Mother Ann Lee. They developed from the religious group called the Quakers which originated in the 17th century. Both groups believed that everybody could find God within him or herself, rather than through clergy or rituals, but the Shakers tended to be more emotional and demonstrative in their worship. Shakers also believed that their lives should be dedicated to pursuing perfection and continuously confessing their sins and attempting a cessation of sinning.[4]
The Shakers migrated to Colonial America in 1774 in pursuit of religious freedom. They built 19 communal settlements that attracted some 20,000 converts over the next century. The first Shaker village was built in New Lebanon, New York at the Mount Lebanon Shaker Society. The other 18 communities were built in Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Georgia and Florida.[5] Strict believers in celibacy, Shakers maintained their numbers through conversion and adoption of orphans. The group reached maximum size of about 6,000 full members in 1840,[6] but as of December 2009 had only three members left.[1]
Sabbathday Lake
The Shaker settlement at Sabbathday Lake was established in 1782, 1783 or 1793 at was then known as Thompson's Pond Plantation by a group of Shaker missionaires. The community grew to over two hundred members in less than a year.[5] Its location in Cumberland County, Maine, made it the most northern and eastern of all the Shaker communes.[7] The Sabbathday Lake community grew to a size of Vorlage:Convert with 26 large buildings by 1850. Buildings on the grounds included the meetinghouse, the Brethren's Shop which still holds a working blacksmith shop and woodworking operation. A large Central Dwelling House was built in 1883[8] or 1884.[7] The Shakers strived to be entirely self sufficient. They built a mill and farm that enabled them to sell produce and commercial goods to the outside world.[7] In 1823 there were about 150 members at the Sabbathday Lake community. Numbers diminshed from there over the years to the three remaining as of 2009. Membership to the community is still open, and occasionally "novices" will explore joining the society.[8]

As of 2006, the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village has 14 working buildings. Including the Central Dwelling House which houses the Shaker Sisters. The Central Dwelling House is also home to a music room, chapel, kitchen and large dining room.[7] The community still holds regular Public Meetings (worship services) on Sundays in the 1794 meetinghouse. Other buildings with historical significance are the Shaker Library, the Cart and Carriage Shed, Ox Barn, The Girl's Shop, Herb House, Brooder House, Wood House, a garage built in 1910 for the group's first car,[8] stable, Summer House and the Laundry building.[3] The village, which attracts up to 10,000 visitors a year,[8] has been open to the public since 1931, when the Shaker Museum and Library was established.[9]
This Museum is the largest repository of Maine Shaker culture. Examples of furniture, oval boxes, woodenware, metal and tin wares, technology and tools, "fancy" sales goods, costume and textiles, visual arts, and herbal and medicinal products are among the 13,000 artifacts currently part of the Sabbathday Lake collection. The collection represents every Shaker Community known to have existed, special emphasis has been placed upon preserving the heritage of the Maine Shaker Communities, including Sabbathday Lake, Poland Hill, Gorham, and Alfred.[9]
Present and future

The fact that the Shakers are celibate causes problems for the future of the organization.[8] Many prospective members find the celibacy a major drawback and it keeps them from joining. New members cannot be born into the group and must join from the outside. The members have taken steps to ensure that Sabbathday Lake Village will remain largely unchanged once the final members of the group pass away.[8]
The Vorlage:Convert of land owned by the Shakers in both Cumberland County and Androscoggin County include Sabbathday Lake which is Vorlage:Convert with Vorlage:Convert of undeveloped shoreline with a beach that is open to the public and the Vorlage:Convert Shaker Bog.[8] Other dismantled Shaker villages were converted into housing lots or prisons. In order to avoid this fate at Sabbathday Lake the Shakers took some preventative measures in 2001.[8]
Preservation and conservation easements were sold to Maine Preservation and the New England Forestry Foundation. The two groups with the help of eight other public and non-profit agencies are working to cover cost of the easements. The village and surrounding farmland and forests will be protected from development. Brother Arnold Hadd was quoted by the Boston Globe in 2006. "We can't put up a Wal*Mart. Or a housing development. The land always has to remain for agricultural and forest purposes."[8]
The selling of future development rights has enabled the Shakers to restore and maintain the structures of the village. They also make money by leasing 29 cottage lots on Sabbathday Lake, leasing Vorlage:Convert of forests, Vorlage:Convert of farmland and orchards and a gravel pit.[8] Other income sources include production of fancy goods, basket making, weaving, printing, and the manufacturing of some small woodenware.[5] Their operation is run with the help of six year-round employees and six seasonal employees.[8]
References
External links
- Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village & Museum
- The Shaker Village at Sabbathday Lake
- Friends of the Shakers
- Shaker Music in Our Time
- Search on "Sabbathday ME" yields six photosets, drawings, data pages and supplemental material, at Historic American Building Survey
Vorlage:Registered Historic Places
- ↑ a b Ouimet, Leanne: Jeannine Lauber: Exploring the Modern Day Shakers. The Independent, 8. Dezember 2009, abgerufen am 16. Dezember 2009.
- ↑ Referenzfehler: Ungültiges
<ref>
-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen nhlsum. - ↑ a b Vorlage:Cite document and Vorlage:PDFlink
- ↑ Clarke Garrett: Origins of the Shakers: From the New World to the Old World. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore 1987.
- ↑ a b c History of the United Society of Shakers. The United Society of Shakers, abgerufen am 16. Dezember 2009.
- ↑ Thomas Hauffe: Design: An Illustrated Historical Overview. DuMont Buchverlag gmbH, Koln 1995.
- ↑ a b c d Referenzfehler: Ungültiges
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-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen nps. - ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k Referenzfehler: Ungültiges
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-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen globe. - ↑ a b The Shaker Village at Sabbathday Lake. The United Society of Shakers, abgerufen am 16. Dezember 2009.