*** Welcome to piglix ***

Freethinkers Society

The Freethinkers of America
Formation 1915 as the Freethinkers Society of New York
Founded at New York City, New York, United States
Type Social group
Purpose Promoting freethought
Headquarters New York City, New York
President
Joseph Lewis

The Freethinkers Society was an American organization founded as the Freethinkers' Society of New York in 1915. Later renamed, the society was behind a number of lawsuits seeking to ensure the separation of church and state.

The society was founded in 1915. In January 1920, under the auspices of the Freethinkers' Society, Thomas Wright lectured in New York on Nietzsche and Thomas Paine in Manhattan.

The society was behind a number of lawsuits seeking to ensure the separation of church and state. In 1925, the society was suing Mount Vernon, New York to stop school authorities from requiring children to attend religious services, with the case picked up as important by attorney Clarence Darrow. As of 1926, publisher Joseph Lewis remained president. After a court order favored their suit in early 1926, later that year, the society instituted injunction proceedings against the Board of Education of White Plains, New York over the decision of Supreme Court Justice Ellis J. Staley to allow time out for children's religious instruction. In May 1927, the Freethinkers' Society of New York took a decision on religious teaching to the Supreme Court on an appeal, after the court upheld the "religious training of public school children during schools hours at churches by parents."

In 1928, Lewis incorporated The Freethinkers Society, renaming it "The Freethinkers of America" and becoming its president.

In March 1930, at a luncheon honoring Philip J. Peabody, it was announced the society would move to legally force the Board of Education to eliminate the reading of the Bible in public schools. It was announced that Mayor Joseph Wheless, attorney for the association, would handle the case, with aid offered by Clarence Darrow, Arthur Garfield Hays and Stephen B. Vreeland.


...
Wikipedia

...