1949: The Year of Our BeginningWhen Iola Moore and Harriet Doar met in Raleigh in 1949, something was bound to happen. They started our fellowship! Miss Moore was a Unitarian from Plainfield, New Jersey and Mrs. Doar, a Unitarian from Charlotte, North Carolina. In the fall of that year the two called some friends and other interested people together for a meeting at the old YMCA on State College campus. Monroe Husbands from the AUA (American Unitarian Association) came down from Boston to explain accreditation procedures. December 7, 1949: the Unitarian Fellowship of Raleigh was accepted by the AUA as the 33rd fellowship in the U.S. A L.H. Jobe anecdote tells of his response to a question regarding the use of "any" in the by-laws section on membership. "Any person may become a voting member." "What does 'any' really mean?" a man asked. "ANY means ANY!" pronounced Mr. Jobe. The man got up and left. This unequivocal statement was the first of many anti-segregation and civil rights stands taken by the fellowship in the fifties and beyond. |