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Stony Brook Assembly : ウィキペディア英語版
Stony Brook Assembly

The Stony Brook Assembly was an evangelical organization that held a series of annual summer Bible Conferences and camp meetings in Stony Brook, NY on Long Island from 1909 to the early 1960s. Nationally and internationally known speakers led conferences covering religious, educational, and social topics. The assembly was also the parent organization which founded The Stony Brook School to use its grounds outside of the summer months. Though the assembly eventually dissolved, the school still remains today.
==History==
Beginning in the late nineteenth century, a number of summer religious retreats and camp meetings were founded following the tradition of the Keswick movement in England and the Chautauqua movement in the United States. Other notable conferences were founded at such places as Chautauqua, NY, Winona Lake, IN, and Northfield, MA, grew in popularity as places of physical rest, entertainment, and spiritual renewal.
In 1906 a prominent group of predominantly Presbyterian ministers and laymen united to establish a summer Bible conference enterprise in the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. The group was led by the Pastor of the Central Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn, NY, the Rev. Dr. John Fleming Carson. Among the handful of sites considered for the endeavor were southern New Jersey and the Poconos, but in 1907, after having visited the north shore of Long Island, Carson settled on the hamlet of Stony Brook. Land was acquired directly across from the Stony Brook branch of the Long Island Railroad. This allowed easy transportation for the approximately ten million people living in the New York metropolitan area, fifty-five miles away. The nearby Stony Brook harbor could also accommodate sailboats carrying guests from Connecticut and other parts of New England across the Long Island Sound. The first meeting began on July 3, 1909 in a large tent pitched on the lawn of Carson's home on Christian Avenue. Despite the stormy weather, which tore the tent, the conferences were an immediate success. Though the first conference had 707 registered guests, 3,869 people in all were in attendance. By the next summer, an auditorium accommodating 1,000 people was erected on the assembly grounds. At the time it was the largest building on Long Island. Today the auditorium is known as Carson Auditorium.
In April 1914, the Assembly was incorporated by the State of New York with the Platform of Principles included in its certificate and bylaws.
In 1915, New York philanthropist Ferdinand T. Hopkins funded the erection of a hotel for conference guests on the assembly grounds. Hopkins Hall stood until it was demolished in 1980.
In 1918, St. Louis department store owner Robert S. Johnston erected another hotel adjacent to the auditorium. Johnston Hall still stands today.
In September 1922, the Directors of the Assembly opened The Stony Brook School for Boys as part of their mission to further Christian scholarship at the secondary level. Frank E. Gaebelein, a recent graduate of Harvard's master's program and the son of perennial speaker Arno C. Gaebelein, was chosen as the first headmaster. The Assembly oversaw the governance of the school until the Assembly's dissolution.
Following Billy Graham's 1957 crusade at Madison Square Garden, Frank E. Gaebelein, who chaired the crusade committee, invited Mr. Graham to campus for a follow-up event that September. It is supposed that many fundamentalist conference-goers objected to his presence on campus because of his broadly ecumenical relationship with other branches of Christianity, which was not embraced at the time among strictly fundamentalist circles. It is partly because of this that the summer conferences were suspended in 1957 and why the Assembly was dissolved in the early 1960s. The Stony Brook School retained the property and was rechartered separately from the former Stony Brook Assembly.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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