Southampton Quaker Meeting House
1A Ordnance Road, Southampton, Hampshire, SO15 2AZ
We know that the first Quaker meeting house in Southampton was a private home because it was mentioned in court proceedings in 1660. Between 1657 and 1666 some 60 Friends were prosecuted (a third of them women) for holding their own meetings for worship not in a church.
After the passing of the Toleration Act in 1689, Quakers built a registered Meeting House in Castle Lane in 1705, then in Castle Square in 1822. As the town grew, a new Meeting House was built in 1884 conveniently close to the Quaker Burial Ground. The address ‘Ordnance Road’ with its military connotations was considered ‘unfriendly’ but Friends hoped that they might ‘plant heavenly ordnance in the locality’. The architect was instructed to design ‘something between a chapel, a mission room and a club building’.
Visitors will notice the striking simplicity of the meeting rooms. Until the 1970s there was a raised platform for elders facing the meeting, however this was removed to demonstrate the traditional Quaker concern of equality, which is one of our testimonies. The others are peace; truth and integrity; and simplicity and sustainability.
In 2024 Southampton Quaker Meeting agreed to share the building the Society of St James, an organisation which offers support to people experiencing homelessness. They use the upstairs for office work, and the downstairs during the week for their educational and support programme. Other organisations which align with our testimonies regularly hire the building.
1A Ordnance Road, Southampton, Hampshire, SO15 2AZ
The upstairs room is only accessible by stairs. There is no lift. The main room where Meeting for Worship is held is downstairs.
The Southampton Quaker Burial Ground on the corner of Brighton Road and the Avenue (SO17 1XR) will also be open from 10.00-16.00 on 13th September. It is about 12 minutes to walk there so you may wish to visit both venues.