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Oneida Society

(Redirected from Oneida Community)

The Oneida Society (Oneida Community) was a commune founded by John H. Noyes in 1848 near Oneida, New York. The community followed the beliefs of Noyes including Communalism (in the sense of communal property and possessions), Complex Marriage, Male Continence, Mutual Criticism and Ascending Fellowship. There were initially some forty-five members to the community. The community grew slowly (72 members by February of 1850, 205 by February of 1851, and 306 members by 1878) but had a complex bureaucracy of twenty-one committees and forty-eight administration departments. There were smaller communities in Wallingford, Newark, Putney, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Manlius, New York for a short time.

Contents

The community

Males and females had equality and equal voice in the governance of the community. A community nursery provided care for infants and children so that both parents could work. Females adopted a style of dress, believed to have been copied from the Iroquois, consisting in a short skirt over trousers (bloomers). This allowed them much greater freedom of movement than contemporary women's styles.

Even though the community reached a maximum population of about three hundred, it had twenty-seven standing committees and forty-eight administrative sections.

Complex marriage

In theory, every male was married to every female. In practice, this meant that most adults had sexual access to a partner. Partners were not to have an exclusive relationship. Older widows, often post-menopausal, were encouraged to introduce teenage males to sex, providing both with legitimate partners that rarely resulted in pregnancies. Furthermore, these women became religious role models for the young men. Noyes often used his own judgment in determining the partnerships which would form and would often pair encourage relationships between the weak and the devout in the community, in the hopes that the attitudes and behaviors of the devout would influence the weak.

Male continence

Males were encouraged to avoid orgasms during intercourse with their partners, as a sign of grace. This meant that many sexual acts did not cause impregnation of the female partner. This practice was based on the idea that "wasting" a man's Censored page was bad, and that difficult pregnancies for women should be avoided. The Oneida Community had a low fecundity rate. Compare with Censored page.

Mutual criticism

Every member of the community was subject to criticism by the many committees or the community as a whole. The goal was to eliminate bad character traits. Only Noyes himself was exempt from this criticism because he considered himself to be on a higher moral level than the rest of the members of the community.

Ascending fellowship

The more senior members, male and female, had the right of first marriage to virgins of the opposite sex, both for spiritual and sexual indoctrination. Subordinate males and females had little choice but to accept the marital arrangements.

The Decline

The community lasted until John Humphrey Noyes attempted to pass on the community to his son, Theodore Noyes. This move was unsuccessful because Theodore Noyes was not a Christian and lacked his father's talent for leadership. In addition, their neighbors objected to various features of the community, such as the marital arrangements. Complex Marriage was abandoned in 1879 following external pressures and the community soon after broke apart, some of the members reorganizing themselves as a joint-stock company. Marital partners regularized their status with the partners they were cohabiting with at the time of the re-organizaion. The joint-stock corporation is still in existence today and is a major producer of cutlery under the brand name Oneida Limited.

In September 2004 Oneida Limited announced that it would cease all manufacturing operations in the beginning of 2005 (ending a 124 year tradition), but continue as a marketer for products made overseas. The company has slowly been selling off its manufacturing facilities.

From 1929 Betty Crocker coupons have been redeemable for some patterns of Oneida flatware.


Last updated: 02-10-2005 00:19:28
Last updated: 04-25-2005 03:06:01