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Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania

The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania is a non-stock, not-for-profit organization[4] headquartered in Warwick, New York. It is the main legal entity used worldwide by Jehovah's Witnesses to direct, administer and disseminate doctrines for the group and is often referred to by members of the denomination simply as "the Society". It is the parent organization of a number of Watch Tower subsidiaries, including the Watchtower Society of New York and International Bible Students Association.[5][6] The number of voting shareholders of the corporation is limited to between 300 and 500 "mature, active and faithful" male Jehovah's Witnesses.[7] About 5,800 Jehovah's Witnesses provide voluntary unpaid labour, as members of a religious order, in three large Watch Tower Society facilities in New York.[8] Nearly 15,000 other members of the order work at the Watch Tower Society's other facilities worldwide.[8][9][10]

Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania
Logo
Formation
  • February 16, 1881; 142 years ago (1881-02-16)
  • (incorporated December 15, 1884; 138 years ago (1884-12-15))
FounderCharles Taze Russell
Founded atPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
11-1857820[1]
Legal status501(c)(3) church[1][2]
HeadquartersWarwick, New York[3]
Robert Ciranko
SubsidiariesVarious
Websitejw.org
Formerly called
  • Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society (1881–1896)
  • Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society (1896–1955)

The organization was formed in 1881 as Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society for the purpose of distributing religious tracts.[4] The society was incorporated in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on December 15, 1884. In 1896, the society was renamed Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society.[11] Following a leadership dispute in the Bible Student movement, the society remained associated with the branch of the movement that became known as Jehovah's Witnesses. In 1955, the corporation was renamed Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania.[12] In 1976, all activities of the Watch Tower Society were brought under the supervision of the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses.[13]

History edit

On February 16, 1881, Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society was formed in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, for the purpose of organizing the printing and distribution of religious tracts. William Henry Conley, a Pittsburgh industrialist and philanthropist, served as president, with Charles Taze Russell serving as secretary-treasurer.[14] The society's primary journal was Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, first published in 1879 by Russell,[15] founder of the Bible Student movement.[16] Other early writers for the Watch Tower Society included J. H. Paton and W. I. Mann.[14][17] Formation of the Watch Tower Society was announced in the April 1881 issue of Zion's Watch Tower.[18] That year, the society received donations of $35,391.18.[19]

Incorporation edit

On December 15, 1884, the society was incorporated as Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society in Pennsylvania as a non-profit, non-stock corporation with Russell as president. The corporation was located in Allegheny, Pennsylvania. In its charter, written by Russell, the society's purpose was stated as "the mental, moral and religious improvement of men and women, by teaching the Bible by means of the publication and distribution of Bibles, books, papers, pamphlets and other Bible literature, and by providing oral lectures free for the people".[20] The charter provided for a board of seven directors, three of whom served as officers—a president, vice-president (initially William I. Mann) and secretary-treasurer (initially Maria Russell).[21]

The charter stipulated that the officers be chosen from the directors and be elected annually by ballot. Board members would hold office for life unless removed by a two-thirds vote by shareholders. Vacancies on the board resulting from death, resignation or removal would be filled by a majority vote of the remaining board members within 20 days; if such vacancies were not filled within 30 days an appointment could be made by the president, with the appointments lasting only until the next annual corporation meeting, when vacancies would be filled by election.[21]

Anyone subscribing to $10 or more of the Watch Tower Society's Old Testament Tracts or donating $10 or more to the society was deemed a voting member and entitled to one vote per $10 donated.[21] Russell indicated that despite having a board and shareholders, the society would be directed by only two people—him and his wife Maria.[22] Russell said that as of December 1893 he and his wife owned 3705, or 58 percent, of the 6383 voting shares, "and thus control the Society; and this was fully understood by the directors from the first. Their usefulness, it was understood, would come to the front in the event of our death... For this reason, also, formal elections were not held; because it would be a mere farce, a deception, to call together voting shareholders from all over the world, at great expense, to find upon arrival that their coming was useless, Sister Russell and myself having more than a majority over all that could gather. However, no one was hindered from attending such elections."[23][24]

The influx of donations gradually diluted the proportion of the Russells' shares and in 1908 their voting shares constituted less than half the total.[23][24] Russell emphasized the limitations of the corporation, explaining: "Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society is not a 'religious society' in the ordinary meaning of this term"[25] He also stated, "This is a business association merely... It has no creed or confession. It is merely a business convenience in disseminating the truth."[21] Incorporation of the society meant that it would outlive Russell, so individuals who wished to bequeath their money or property to him would not have to alter their will if he died before they did.[26] On September 19, 1896, the name of the corporation was changed to Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society.[27]

 
Charles Taze Russell, secretary-treasurer (1881–1884) and president (1884–1916) of the Watch Tower Society and founder of the Bible Student movement

From 1908 Russell required the directors to write out resignations when they were appointed so Russell could dismiss them by simply filling in the date.[23] In 1909, Russell instructed legal counsel Joseph Franklin Rutherford to determine whether the Watch Tower Society's headquarters could be moved to Brooklyn, New York.[28] Rutherford reported that because it had been established under Pennsylvania law, the corporation could not be registered in New York state, but suggested that a new corporation be registered there to do the society's work. Rutherford subsequently organized the formation of the People's Pulpit Association, which was incorporated on February 23, 1909, and wrote the charter which gave the president—to be elected for life at the first meeting—"absolute power and control" of its activities in New York.[28][29] The society sold its buildings in Pittsburgh[30] and moved staff to its new base in Brooklyn. Although all New York property was bought in the name of the New York corporation and all legal affairs of the society done in its name, Russell insisted on the continued use of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society name on all correspondence and publications.[28]

The move from Pennsylvania to New York occurred during court proceedings over the breakdown of Russells' marriage. His wife Maria had been granted a "limited divorce" on March 4, 1908, but in 1909 returned to court in Pittsburgh to request an increase in alimony,[31] which her former husband refused.[32] Authors Barbara Grizzuti Harrison and Edmond C. Gruss have claimed Russell's move to Brooklyn was motivated by his desire to transfer from the jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania courts. They claim he transferred all his assets to the Watch Tower Society so he could declare himself bankrupt and avoid being jailed for failure to pay alimony.[31][33][34]

In 1914, the International Bible Students Association was incorporated in Britain to administer affairs in that country. Like the People's Pulpit Association, it was subsidiary to the Pennsylvania parent organization and all work done through both subsidiaries was described as the work of the Watch Tower Society. The Watchtower noted: "The editor of The Watchtower is the President of all three of these Societies. All financial responsibility connected with the work proceeds from [the Pennsylvania corporation]. From it the other Societies and all the branches of the work receive their financial support... we use sometimes the one name and sometimes the other in various parts of our work—yet they all in the end mean the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, to which all donations should be made."[6]

Leadership dispute edit

Russell died on October 31, 1916, in Pampa, Texas, during a cross-country preaching trip. On January 6, 1917, board member and Watch Tower Society legal counsel Joseph Franklin Rutherford, aged 47, was elected president of the society, unopposed, at the Pittsburgh convention. Under his presidency, the role of the Watch Tower Society underwent a major change.[35] By-laws passed by both the Pittsburgh convention and the board of directors stated that the president would be the executive officer and general manager of the society, giving him full charge of its affairs worldwide.[36]

 
Joseph Franklin Rutherford, president of the Watch Tower Society (1917–1942)

By June 1917, four of the seven Watch Tower Society directors, Robert H. Hirsh, Alfred I. Ritchie, Isaac F. Hoskins and James D. Wright, had decided they had erred in endorsing Rutherford's expanded powers of management,[37] claiming Rutherford had become autocratic.[37] Hirsch attempted to rescind the new by-laws and reclaim the powers of management from the president,[38] but Rutherford later claimed he had by then detected a conspiracy among the directors to seize control of the society.[39] In July, Rutherford gained a legal opinion from a Philadelphia corporation lawyer that none of his opposers were legally directors of the society.

On July 12, 1917, Rutherford filled what he claimed were four vacancies on the board, appointing A. H. Macmillan and Pennsylvania Bible Students W. E. Spill, J. A. Bohnet, and George H. Fisher as directors.[40] Between August and November the Watch Tower Society and the four ousted directors published a series of pamphlets, with each side accusing the other of ambitious and reckless behavior. The former directors also claimed Rutherford had required all headquarters workers to sign a petition supporting him and threatened dismissal for any who refused to sign.[41] The former directors left the Brooklyn headquarters on August 8, 1917.[42] On January 5, 1918, Rutherford was returned to office.

In May 1918, Rutherford and seven other Watch Tower Society directors and officers were arrested on charges of sedition under the federal Espionage Act. On June 21, 1918, they were sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment. Rutherford feared his opponents would gain control of the society in his absence, but on January 2, 1919, he learned he had been re-elected president at the Pittsburgh convention the day before.[43] However, by mid-1919 about one in seven Bible Students had chosen to leave rather than accept Rutherford's leadership,[44] forming groups such as The Stand Fast Movement, Paul Johnson Movement, Dawn Bible Students Association, Pastoral Bible Institute of Brooklyn, Elijah Voice Movement, and Eagle Society.[45]

Although formed as a "business convenience" with the purpose of publishing and distributing Bible-based literature and managing the funds necessary for that task, the corporation from the 1920s began its transformation into the "religious society" Russell had insisted it was not, introducing centralized control and regulation of Bible Student congregations worldwide.[46] In 1938, Rutherford introduced the term "theocracy" to describe the hierarchical leadership of Jehovah's Witnesses, with Consolation explaining: "The Theocracy is at present administered by the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, of which Judge Rutherford is the president and general manager."[47] The society appointed "zone servants" to supervise congregations and in a Watchtower article Rutherford declared the need for congregations to "get in line" with the changed structure.[48][49]

Amendments to charter edit

 
Nathan Homer Knorr, vice-president (1941–1942) and president (1942–1977) of the Watch Tower Society
 
Frederick William Franz, vice-president (1945–1977) and president (1977–1992) of the Watch Tower Society
 
Milton George Henschel, vice-president (1977–1992) and president (1992–2000) of the Watch Tower Society
 
Don Alden Adams, president of the Watch Tower Society (2000–2014)[50]

Following Rutherford's death in 1942, Nathan H. Knorr became president of the Watch Tower Society, and subsequently introduced further changes to the role of the society. At a series of talks given in Pittsburgh on September 30, 1944, coinciding with the society's annual meeting, it was announced that changes would be made to the 1884 charter to bring it into "closer harmony with theocratic principles". The amendments, most of which were passed unanimously,[51] significantly altered the terms of membership and stated for the first time that the society's purposes included preaching about God's kingdom, acting as a servant and governing agency of Jehovah's Witnesses, and sending missionaries and teachers for the public worship of God and Jesus Christ. The new charter, which took effect from January 1, 1945, included the following changes:

  • An altered and expanded explanation of article II, detailing the purpose of the Watch Tower Society. This included the preaching of the gospel of God's kingdom to all nations; to print and distribute Bibles and disseminate Bible truths with literature explaining Bible truths and prophecy concerning the establishment of God's kingdom; to authorise and appoint agents, servants, employees, teachers evangelists, missionaries, ministers and others "to go all the world publicly and from house to house to preach Bible truths to persons willing to listen by leaving with such persons said literature and by conducting Bible studies thereon"; to improve people mentally and morally by instruction "on the Bible and incidental scientific, historical and literary subjects"; to establish and maintain Bible schools and classes; to "teach, train, prepare and equip men and women as ministers, missionaries, evangelists, preachers, teachers and instructors in the Bible and Bible literature, and for public Christian worship of Almighty God and Jesus Christ" and "to arrange for and hold local and worldwide assemblies for such worship".
  • An amendment to article V, detailing the qualifications for membership of the Watch Tower Society. Each donation of $10 to the society funds had formerly entitled the contributor to one voting share; the amendment limited membership to "only men who are mature, active and faithful witnesses of Jehovah devoting full time to performance of one or more of its chartered purposes... or such men who are devoting part time as active presiding ministers or servants of congregations of Jehovah's witnesses". The amended article stipulated that "a man who is found to be in harmony with the purposes of the Society and who possesses the above qualifications may be elected as a member upon being nominated by a member, director or officer, or upon written application to the president or secretary. Such members shall be elected upon a finding by the Board of Directors that he possesses the necessary qualifications and by receiving a majority vote of the members." The amendment limited membership at any one time to between 300 and 500, including approximately seven residents of each of the 48 states of the US. It also introduced a clause providing for the suspension or expulsion of a member for wilfully violating the society's rules, or "becoming out of harmony with any of the Society's purposes or any of its work or for wilful conduct prejudicial to the best interests of the Society and contrary to his duties as a member, or upon ceasing to be a full-time servant of the Society or a part-time servant of a congregation of Jehovah's witnesses".
  • An amendment to article VII, dealing with the governance of the Watch Tower Society by its board of directors. The amendment deleted reference to adherence to the constitution and laws of Pennsylvania of the US. It also specified powers of the board, including matters of finance and property.
  • An amendment to article VIII, detailing the office holders of the Watch Tower Society and the terms of office and method of appointment of officers and directors. A clause stating that board members would hold office for life was deleted. The new clause provided for board membership for a maximum of three years, with directors qualifying for re-election at the expiration of their term.[52]

Governing Body edit

In 1976, direction of the Watch Tower Society and of the congregations of Jehovah's Witnesses worldwide came under the control of the Governing Body, reducing the power of the society's president. The society has described the change as "one of the most significant organizational readjustments in the modern-day history of Jehovah's Witnesses."[53] Since 2000, the role of president of the Watch Tower Society has been held by individuals who are considered "helpers" to the Governing Body.[54]

Notable people edit

Name Date of birth Date of death Position Started Ended
William Henry Conley June 11, 1840 July 25, 1897 President February 16, 1881 December 15, 1884
Charles Taze Russell February 16, 1852 Secretary-treasurer[55][14]
Incorporated
Charles Taze Russell October 31, 1916 President December 15, 1884 October 31, 1916
Joseph Franklin Rutherford November 8, 1869 January 8, 1942 President January 6, 1917 January 8, 1942
Nathan Homer Knorr April 23, 1905 June 8, 1977 Vice president[56][57] October 1, 1941 January 13, 1942
President January 13, 1942 June 8, 1977
Frederick William Franz September 12, 1893 December 22, 1992 Vice president[58] October 5, 1945 June 22, 1977
President June 22, 1977 December 22, 1992
Milton George Henschel August 9, 1920 March 22, 2003 Vice president[59] June 22, 1977 December 30, 1992
President December 30, 1992 October 7, 2000
Don Alden Adams January 16, 1925 December 30, 2019 President October 7, 2000 2014
Robert Ciranko March 9, 1947 President[50] 2014 incumbent

Operations edit

The corporation is a major publisher of religious publications, including books, tracts, magazines and Bibles. By 1979, the Watch Tower Society had 39 printing branches worldwide. In 1990, it was reported that in one year the society printed 696 million copies of its magazines, The Watchtower and Awake! as well as another 35,811,000 pieces of literature worldwide, which are offered door-to-door by Jehovah's Witnesses.[60] As of 2013, the society prints more than 43 million of its public issues of these magazines each month, totaling over 1 billion annually.

The Watch Tower Society describes its headquarters and branch office staff as volunteers rather than employees,[8] and identifies them as members of the Worldwide Order of Special Full-Time Servants of Jehovah's Witnesses.[9] Workers receive a small monthly stipend[61] with meals and accommodation provided by the society. The "Bethel family" in the Brooklyn headquarters includes hairdressers, dentists, doctors, housekeepers and carpenters, as well as shops for repairing personal appliances, watches, shoes and clothing without charge for labor.[62]

The Watch Tower Society does not file any publicly accessible financial figures, but reported in 2011 that it had spent more than $173 million that year "in caring for special pioneers, missionaries and traveling overseers in their field service assignments".[9][63] Donations obtained from the distribution of literature is a major source of income, most of which is used to promote its evangelical activities.[64]

Author James Beckford has claimed the status of voting members of the Watch Tower Society is purely symbolic. He said they cannot be considered to be representatives of the mass of Jehovah's Witnesses and are in no position to challenge the actions or authority of the society's directors.[65]

Property ownership edit

United States edit

The corporation was first located at 44 Federal Street, Allegheny, Pennsylvania (the city was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1907), but in 1889 moved to "Bible House", newly built premises at 56–60 Arch Street, Allegheny, owned by Russell's privately owned Tower Publishing Company. The new building contained an assembly hall seating about 200, as well as editorial, printing and shipping facilities and living quarters for some staff.[66] The title for the building was transferred in April 1898 to the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society.

In 1909, the Watch Tower Society moved its base to Brooklyn. A four-story brownstone parsonage formerly owned by Congregationalist clergyman and social reformer Henry Ward Beecher at 124 Columbia Heights was converted to a residence for a headquarters staff of 30, as well as an office for Russell. A former Plymouth church building at 13–17 Hicks Street was purchased and converted into the Watch Tower headquarters, with room for 350 staff. It contained an 800-seat assembly hall, shipping department and printing facilities.[67]

The Watch Tower announced: "The new home we shall call 'Bethel,' and the new office and auditorium, 'The Brooklyn Tabernacle'; these names will supplant the term 'Bible House.'"[68] In October 1909, an adjoining building at 122 Columbia Heights was bought.[69] In 1911, a new nine-story residential block was built at the rear of the headquarters, fronting on Furman Street and overlooking the Brooklyn waterfront.[67] The Brooklyn Tabernacle was sold in 1918 or 1919.[70]

Printing facilities were established in Myrtle Street, Brooklyn in 1920. The February 1, 1920, issue of The Watch Tower was printed by the Watch Tower Society at the plant. Two months later the plant began printing The Golden Age. In 1922, the printing factory was moved to a six-story building at 18 Concord Street, Brooklyn. In 1926 it moved to larger premises, a new eight-story building at 117 Adams Street, Brooklyn, at which time the society's headquarters was rebuilt and enlarged. In December 1926, a building at 126 Columbia Heights was bought. A month later the three buildings from 122–126 Columbia Heights were demolished and rebuilt for accommodation and executive offices, using the official address of 124 Columbia Heights.[69]

In 1946, property surrounding the Adams Street factory was bought to expand printing operations. When completed in 1949, the factory occupied an entire block, bounded by Adams, Sands Pearl and Prospect Streets. Five more properties adjoining 124 Columbia Heights were purchased for a 10-story building.[71][72] In the late 1950s a property at 107 Columbia Heights, across the road from 124 Columbia Heights, was bought.[73] In 1960 a residential building for staff was constructed there.[74][75] More residences were built at 119 Columbia Heights in 1969.[75]

The Watchtower detailed further expansion in the 1950s and 1960s: "In 1956, a 13-story building was constructed at 77 Sands Street. Then just across the street, another (10-story building) was purchased in 1958. In 1968, an adjoining 11-story new printing factory was completed. Along with the factory at 117 Adams Street, these fill out four city blocks of factories that are all tied together by overhead bridges. Then in November 1969, the Squibb complex located a few blocks away was purchased."[75]

The Watch Tower Society bought the Towers Hotel at 79–99 Willow Street in 1974 for accommodation,[76] which is connected to the society's other Columbia Heights properties via tunnels.[77] In 1978, a property at 25 Columbia Heights underwent renovation for use as offices.[75] In the early 1980s properties were bought at 175 Pearl Street and 360 Furman Street for factory and office use.[78] A building at 360 Furman Street was bought in March 1983 and renovated, providing almost 9 hectares of floor space[76] for shipping, carpentry and construction.[79] The Bossert Hotel at 98 Montague Street was bought in 1983 as a residence building.[80]

97 Columbia Heights, the former site of the Margaret Hotel, was purchased in 1986.[76] It was ideally located next to the WTBTS residences at 107 and 124 Columbia Heights and it could easily tie in with the main complex on the other side of the street by means of an under-street tunnel. An 11-story residential building was erected on the site to house 250 workers.[81][82] A property at 90 Sands Street was bought in December 1986. A 30-story residential building[76] for 1,000 workers was completed on the site in 1995. A 1996 publication listed other Watch Tower residential buildings in Brooklyn, including the 12-story Bossert Hotel, 34 Orange Street (1945), the Standish Arms Hotel at 169 Columbia Heights (1981), 67 Livingston Street (1989), and 108 Joralemon Street (1988).[76]

Two properties known as Watchtower Farms, at Wallkill, 160 kilometres (99 mi) north of Brooklyn and totaling 1,200 hectares (3,000 acres), were bought in 1963 and 1967. Factories were erected in 1973 and 1975.[75] In 2012–2014 the Watch Tower Society added an office building, residence building and garage.[83] In 1984, the society paid $2.1 million for a 270 hectare farm at Patterson, New York[84] for a development that included 624 apartments, garages for 800 cars, and a 149-room hotel.[85] Other rural purchases included a 220 hectares (540 acres) farm near South Lansing, New York, and a 60 hectares (150 acres) farm near Port Murray, New Jersey.[84]

In February 2009, the Watch Tower Society paid $11.5 million for 100 hectares of land in Ramapo, New York, for an administration and residential complex.[86] The site was reported to be planned as a base for about 850 Watch Tower workers, creating a compound combining residential and publishing facilities currently located in Brooklyn. A Witness spokesman said the land was currently zoned for residential uses, but an application would be made to rezone it, adding that "Construction is several years in the future."[87]

A year later, the Watch Tower Society announced it planned to move its world headquarters from Brooklyn to a proposed eight-building complex, replacing the pre-existing four-building complex on a 100-hectare Watch Tower property in Warwick, New York,[83] 1.5 km from its Ramapo site.[88][89] A Watch Tower presentation to Warwick planning authorities said the complex would house up to 850 people.[90][91] In July 2012, the Warwick planning commission approved the environmental impact statement for building the Warwick site.[92][93] In July 2013, Warwick approved building plans of the multiple building complex of the new headquarters, including four residence buildings of 588 rooms for about 1,000 people.[94]

In August 2011, a 50-acre property was bought in Tuxedo, New York, with 184,000 square foot building, for $3.2 million, six miles from the Warwick site to facilitate the staging of machinery and building materials.[95] The Watch Tower Society bought a 48-unit apartment building in Suffern, New York, near Warwick, New York, for housing temporary construction workers in June 2013.[96] In December 2014, the society bought the 250-unit Rivercrest Luxury Apartments in Fishkill, Dutchess County, New York. The sale price was not released, though taxes on the sale indicated a transaction of $57 million. The current leases will not be renewed.[97]

Brooklyn property sales edit

 
The former Watch Tower Society headquarters in Columbia Heights, Brooklyn.

In 2004, the Watch Tower Society began transferring its printing operations to its Wallkill factory complex.[98][99] The move triggered the sale of a number of Brooklyn factory and residential properties, including:

  • 360 Furman Street, sold in 2004 for $205 million;[100]
  • 67 Livingston Street, (nicknamed the Sliver)[101] sold in 2006 for $18.6 million.[100]
  • 89 Hicks Street, sold in 2006 for $14 million.[100]
  • Standish Arms Hotel, 169 Columbia Heights, sold in 2007 for $50 million.[102]
  • 183 Columbia Heights, bought in 1986, offered for sale in 2007 and sold in April 2012 for $6.6 million.[99][103][104]
  • 161 Columbia Heights, bought in 1988, offered for sale in 2007 and sold in March 2012 for $3 million.[99][103]
  • 165 Columbia Heights, offered for sale in 2007 and sold in January 2012 for $4.1 million.[99][105]
  • 105 Willow Street, offered for sale in 2007 and sold in April 2012 for $3.3 million.[99][106]
  • 34 Orange Street, offered for sale in 2007 and sold in November 2012 for $2,825,000.[99][107]
  • Bossert Hotel, 98 Montague Street, bought in 1983,[80] offered for sale in 2008.[87] sold in 2012 to a hotel developer, Rosewood Realty Group, for $81 million.[108][109]
  • 50 Orange Street, bought in 1988, renovated to sell 2006, and sold in December 2011 for $7.1 million.[110]
  • 67 Remsen Street, offered for sale in July 2012,[111] and sold the same year for $3.25 million.[112]
  • Three adjoining properties (173 Front Street, 177 Front Street and 200 Water Street) sold together for 30.6 million in April 2013 to Urban Realty Partners.[113][114]
  • 55 Furman Street, 400,000 sq. ft., is for sale as of June 2013.[115]
  • Five adjoining properties (175 Pearl Street, 55 Prospect Street, 81 Prospect Street, 117 Adams Street, and 77 Sands Street totaling 700,000 sq. ft.), offered for sale in September 2011,[116][117] under contract as of July 2013 to a three company buy-out. A sixth building (90 Sands Street, about 500,000 sq. ft., a 505-room, 30-story building) in this sale will be released in 2017, after the scheduled completion of the Jehovah's Witnesses' new headquarters in Warwick, New York. The properties are under contract for $375 million at completion of the sale.[115][118]
  • Two private parking lots are for sale as of June 2013.[115]
  • 124 Columbia Heights, bought in 1909, was sold in May 2016 to Florida Panthers' Vincent Viola for $105 million.[119][120]
  • In 2016, three more properties valued at an estimated $850 million to $1 billion—including the headquarters building—were put up for sale.[121] The Watch Tower Society reached a deal to sell the headquarters at Columbia Heights for $700 million.[122] The Watch Tower Society sold the 25/30 Columbia Heights complex along with adjoining 50 and 58 Columbia Heights and 55 Furman Street sites on August 3, 2016, for $340 million.[123][124]

In 2011, the Watch Tower Society was reported to still own 34 properties in Brooklyn;[8][125] a 2009 report calculated "a dozen or more" properties in the Brooklyn area.[87] In a 2010 news report the society said it was "not actively promoting" the sale of eight Brooklyn properties still on the market.[90] The society's remaining nine unsold Brooklyn properties are 97, 107, and 119 Columbia Heights; 80 and 86 Willow Street; 21 Clark Street (Towers Hotel); parking lots at 67 Furman Street, 1 York Street and 85 Jay Street; and 90 Sands Street already arranged to sell in 2017. Many sold buildings are to be emptied by 2017.[126] The Furman Street properties and parking lots are for sale currently as stated above.

Other countries edit

In 1900, the Watch Tower Society opened its first overseas branch office in Britain.[127] Germany followed in 1903[128] and Australia in 1904.[129] By 1979 the society had 39 printing branches throughout the world, with facilities transferred to farming properties in many countries, including Brazil, Sweden, Denmark, Canada and Australia.[130] In 2011, the society had 98 branch offices worldwide reporting to New York directly; other nations' offices report to large branches nearby.[131]

Directors edit

Since 1987 edit

Period Directors
November 25, 1987–December 22, 1992 Frederick William Franz[59] William Lloyd Barry[59][132] Milton George Henschel[59] Lyman Alexander Swingle[59] John Edwin Barr[59] John Charles Booth[59][133] Theodore Jaracz[59]
December 30, 1992[134]–January 8, 1996 Daniel Sydlik[135]
after January 8, 1996 – July 2, 1999 ?
after July 2, 1999 – October 7, 2000[136] ?
October 7, 2000 – July 28, 2004 Don Alden Adams Robert W. Wallen William F. Malenfant Danny L. Bland Richard E. Abrahamson Philip D. Wilcox John N. Wischuk
after July 28, 2004 – 2014 David G. Sinclair[137]
2014 – 2015 Robert Louis Ciranko[138] David W. Schafer[138]
2016 – 2019 Richard E. Devine[139]
since 2019 Enrique R. Ford[140] Robert V. Luccioni[140] Mark J. Noumair[140]

1916–1987 edit

Period Directors
[before] – October 31, 1916 Charles Taze Russell[141][142][143] A. I. Ritchie[142][143] W. E. Van Amburgh[142][143] H. C. Rockwell[142][143] J. D. Wright[142][143] I. F. Hoskins[142][143] Joseph Franklin Rutherford[142][143]
November 2, 1916 – July 12, 1917 A. N. Pierson[142][143]
July 12, 1917 – January 5, 1918 Alexander Hugh Macmillan[144] W. E. Spill[144] J. A. Bohnet[144] G. H. Fisher[144]
January 5, 1918 – January 4, 1919 C. H. Anderson[145]
January 4, 1919 – January 3, 1920 Charles[56] A. Wise[146] R. H. Barber[146][147] W. F. Hudgings[146]
January 3, 1920 – October 1, 1923 Alexander Hugh Macmillan[148] G. H. Fisher[148]
October 1, 1923 – November 1, 1926 Hugo Henry Riemer[149] J. A. Baeuerlein[149]
November 1, 1926 – October 31, 1929 R. J. Martin[150]
October 31, 1929 – September 23, 1932 E. J. Lueck[151]
October 31, 1932 – October 31, 1935 Thomas James Sullivan[152][153]
October 31, 1935 – October 1, 1938 G. Y. McCormick[154]
October 1, 1938 – June 10, 1940 Grant George Suiter[155][156] W. P. Pratt Heath, Jr.[155]
June 10, 1940 – January 8, 1942 Nathan Homer Knorr[58][157][158][159]
January 13, 1942 – October 2, 1944 Hayden Cooper Covington[160][161]
October 2, 1944 – September 24, 1945 Frederick William Franz[162]
October 1, 1945 – February 7, 1947 Lyman Alexander Swingle[58]
October 1, 1947 – March 31, 1965 Milton George Henschel[163][164]
April 5, 1965 – September 5, 1973 John Otto Groh[165][166]
October 2, 1973 – January 23, 1975 William Kirk Jackson[167][168]
after January 23, 1975 – June 8, 1977 ?
after June 8, 1977 – December 13, 1981 ?
after December 13, 1981– November 22, 1983 ?
after November 22, 1983–November 25, 1987 ?

Before 1916 edit

  • J. H. Giesey (director ?–?, vice-president ?–1908)[169]
  • William M. Wright (?–1906)[170]
  • Henry Weber (director 1894–1904, vice-president 1894–1904)[171][172]
  • Rose J. Ball (director 1892–?, vice-president 1893-1894)[171]
  • Simon O. Blunden (director 1884–1908)[171][173]
  • W. C. McMillan (director 1884–1898)[174][173]
  • Maria Frances Russell (née Ackley) (director 1884–1897, secretary-treasurer 1884–?, then-wife of Charles Taze Russell)[174][175][176]
  • J. B. Adamson (director 1884–1895)[174][173]
  • W. I. Mann (director 1884–1892, vice-president 1884-1892)[174][173]
  • J. F. Smith (director 1884–1892)[174][173]

Criticism edit

Critics, including Raymond Franz, Edmond C. Gruss and James Penton, have accused the Watch Tower Society of being authoritarian, controlling and coercive in its dealings with Witnesses. Franz, a former Governing Body member, has claimed the society's emphasis of the term "theocratic organization" to describe the authority structure of Jehovah's Witnesses, which places God at the apex of its organization, is designed to exercise control over every aspect of the lives of Jehovah's Witnesses[177] and condition them to think it is wrong for them to question anything the society publishes as truth.[178][179]

The Watch Tower Society has been accused of employing techniques of mind control on Witnesses, including the direction to avoid reading criticism of the organization,[180][181] frequent and tightly controlled "indoctrination" meetings, regimentation, social alienation and elaborate promises of future rewards.[182][183] Apart from life stories, all Watch Tower Society magazine articles and other publications are written anonymously and correspondence from the society does not typically indicate a specific author or personal signature.[184]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania". Exempt Organizations Select Check. Internal Revenue Service. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  2. ^ "Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania". Guidestar. Retrieved October 18, 2017. "This organization is not required to file an annual return with the IRS because it is a church."
  3. ^ "Contact Us". Official website of Jehovah's Witnesses. The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. October 18, 2017.
  4. ^ a b Pennsylvania Department of State.
  5. ^ 1980 Yearbook. Watch Tower Society. p. 257. The first of these, formed in 1881 and incorporated in 1884, is known today as the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. It is the parent of similar religious corporations formed world wide. Among such are the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc., and the International Bible Students Association in a number of British Commonwealth nations.
  6. ^ a b Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, p. 49
  7. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, p. 229.
  8. ^ a b c d "Jehovahs loses comp case: Church may be forced to pay millions", New York Daily News, January 6, 2006. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  9. ^ a b c 2009 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. 2009. p. 42.
  10. ^ 2012 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. 2009. p. 55.
  11. ^ "Report for Fiscal Year", Watch Tower, December 1, 1896, page 301, Reprints page 2077 Retrieved 2010-03-30 February 15, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, "WATCH TOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY. REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC. 1, 1896. ALTHOUGH the above has been the recognized name of our Society for some four years, it was not until this year that the Board of Directors took the proper steps to have the name legally changed from ZION'S WATCH TOWER TRACT SOCIETY to that above. The new name seems to be in every way preferable."
  12. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, p. 229, [1], "Zion’s Watch Tower Tract Society. First formed in 1881 and then legally incorporated in the state of Pennsylvania on December 15, 1884. In 1896 its name was changed to Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society. Since 1955 it has been known as Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania."
  13. ^ Franz 2007, pp. 80–107
  14. ^ a b c Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, pp. 575–576, chapter 26
  15. ^ "Prospectus". Zion's Watch Tower: 1. July 1879.
  16. ^ "Encyclopædia Britannica – Russell, Charles Taze"
  17. ^ Zion's Watch Tower, January 1881, Reprints page 1.
  18. ^ Zion's Watch Tower, April 1881, Reprints page 214.
  19. ^ "Z. W. T. TRACT SOCIETY". Zion's Watch Tower: 2. January 1882.
  20. ^ J. F. Rutherford, A Great Battle in the Ecclesiastical Heavens, April 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine 1915, p. 14.
  21. ^ a b c d C.T. Russell, "A Conspiracy Exposed", Zion's Watch Tower Extra edition, April 25, 1894, page 55-60.
  22. ^ C.T. Russell, "A Conspiracy Exposed", Zion's Watch Tower Extra edition, April 25, 1894, page 55-60, "The affairs of the Society are so arranged that its entire control rests in the care of Brother and Sister Russell as long as they shall live... The fact is that, by the grace of God, Sister R. and myself have been enabled not only to give our own time without charge to the service of the truth, in writing and overseeing, but also to contribute more money to the Tract Society's fund for the scattering of the good tidings, than all others combined."
  23. ^ a b c Wills 2006, p. 91
  24. ^ a b J. F. Rutherford, A Great Battle in the Ecclesiastical Heavens, April 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine 1915, p. 14., "While there are nearly two hundred thousand shares, and it would be an easy matter to elect some other man as president, there never has been cast a vote against Pastor Russell. At the last election he was absent, his own votes were not cast, yet more than one hundred thousand votes of others were cast for him as president."
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on February 9, 2012. Retrieved October 4, 2009.
  26. ^ Wills 2006, pp. 75
  27. ^ Pierson et al. 1917, p. 22
  28. ^ a b c Rutherford 1917a, p. 16
  29. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, p. 48
  30. ^ Allegheny City was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1909.
  31. ^ a b Grizzuti Harrison 1978
  32. ^ Penton 1997, p. 39
  33. ^ Gruss 2003, p. 17
  34. ^ "Girl's midnight visit to Pastor Russell", Brooklyn Eagle, August 14, 1909, "His wife, whom he married 30 years ago, when she was Maria F. Ackley, obtained a limited divorce from him in Pittsburg on the ground of cruelty. The judge who decided for Mrs Russell granted her $100 a month alimony. Pastor Russell was slow in coming to the front with payments and finally stopped paying alimony altogether. An order was ordered for the pastor's arrest in Pittsburg, but Brooklyn is a comfortable enough place and Pastor Russell didn't like going back to Pittsburg where a yawning prison awaited him. He said that his friends had paid the alimony, anyhow, and that he was purged of contempt of court thereby."
  35. ^ Gruss 2003, pp. 25–27
  36. ^ Pierson et al. 1917, pp. 5, 6
  37. ^ a b Pierson et al. 1917, pp. 4
  38. ^ Rutherford 1917a, pp. 12
  39. ^ Rutherford 1917a, pp. 22–23
  40. ^ Rutherford 1917a, pp. 14, 15
  41. ^ Pierson et al. 1917, pp. 9
  42. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, pp. 68, Chapter 6 - A Time of Testing (1914-1918)
  43. ^ Macmillan 1957, pp. 106
  44. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1975, pp. 93–94, Part 1—United States of America
  45. ^ Rogerson 1969, pp. 39
  46. ^ Wills 2006, pp. 175, 176
  47. ^ Consolation, September 4, 1940, pg 25, as cited by Penton, pg. 61.
  48. ^ Wills 2006, pp. 201
  49. ^ Watchtower, June 15, 1938.
  50. ^ a b George D. Chryssides. Jehovah's Witnesses: Continuity and Change. p. 143.
  51. ^ Amendments to articles II, III, VII, VIII, and X were passed unanimously, with more than 225,000 votes cast; the amendments to article V of the Charter, affecting qualifications for membership of the society, were passed 225,255 to 47.
  52. ^ Articles of amendment to Watch Tower Society charter, February 15, 1945. Retrieved October 4, 2009.
  53. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, pp. 108–109, chapter 9
  54. ^ "Keep Holding Men of That Sort Dear". The Watchtower. October 15, 2015. p. 3. The Governing Body members make the final decisions, but the helpers implement the committee's direction and carry out whatever assignments they are given. The helpers accompany Governing Body members to special and international conventions. They may also be assigned to visit branch offices as headquarters representatives. ... Helpers to Governing Body Committees ... Publishing Committee—Don Adams ... Writing Committee—Robert Ciranko...
  55. ^ Charter of Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society (1881), signed in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, by Charles Taze Russell, Albert Delmont Jones, William Henry Conley and Joseph Lytel/Lytle Russell.
  56. ^ a b "At 6 a.m. Thursday, September 25, 1947, Charles A. Wise finished his life work upon earth at the age of 84 years [...] On January 4, 1919, he was elected vice-president of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, in which capacity he acted continuously until October 1, 1941, his 79th year."–The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, October 15, 1947, p. 306.
  57. ^ "October 1, 1941 [...] N. H. Knorr, for vice-president"–1942 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, pp. 226-7.
  58. ^ a b c Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, p. 91.
  59. ^ a b c d e f g h Revisions to Pennsylvania Charter (November 25, 1987)
  60. ^ Brooklyn Heights Press, March 15, 1990, page 1, as cited by Edmond C. Gruss, 2003, pages 72–73.
  61. ^ A 1990 news report stated that Brooklyn workers received $80 per month to buy personal needs. See "A sect grows in Brooklyn", Philadelphia Inquirer, August 2, 1990.
  62. ^ "A sect grows in Brooklyn", Philadelphia Inquirer, August 2, 1990.
  63. ^ Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watch Tower Bibel and Track Society. 2012. p. 55.
  64. ^ Penton 1997, p. 231
  65. ^ Beckford, James A. (1975). The Trumpet of Prophecy: A Sociological Study of Jehovah's Witnesses. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 83. ISBN 0-631-16310-7.
  66. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, pp. 27
  67. ^ a b Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, pp. 47–48
  68. ^ Watch Tower March 1, 1909, pages 67,68.
  69. ^ a b Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, p. 115
  70. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, pp. 97
  71. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, pp. 234
  72. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, pp. 253–255
  73. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, pp. 292
  74. ^ The Watchtower, September 1, 1989, page 29.
  75. ^ a b c d e The Watchtower, December 1, 1982, page 23.
  76. ^ a b c d e The Watchtower, April 15, 1996, page 24.
  77. ^ Awake!, April 22, 1989, pages 25–27; "In fact, the Towers, 124 Columbia Heights, 107 Columbia Heights, and 119 Columbia Heights, which accommodate nearly 2,000 of the family, are connected by underground tunnels."
  78. ^ Centennial of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, 1984, pages 8–9.
  79. ^ "New Shipping Facilities of Jehovah’s Witnesses", Awake!, August 22, 1987, pages 16–18.
  80. ^ a b Jehovah's Witnesses sell the former Hotel Bossert
  81. ^ Yearbook, Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society, 1988, page 25.
  82. ^ Awake 1989, April 22, pp 23-24
  83. ^ a b "Wallkill and Warwick Projects Moving Ahead", JW.org News, May 13, 2013.
  84. ^ a b Awake!, February 22, 1987, pages 25–27.
  85. ^ "Watchtower project grows in Patterson", New York Times, April 18, 1983, 1993. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  86. ^ "Watchtower Society may move some NY offices", WCAX website, March 26, 2009. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  87. ^ a b c "A Witness to the future as Watchtower buys land upstate", The Brooklyn Paper, April 2, 2009. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  88. ^ "Watchtower's move to Warwick? 'Not anytime soon'", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, October 24, 2011.
  89. ^ "The Watchtower is getting tired of being shown the door in Brooklyn Heights", The New York Observer, October 25, 2011.
  90. ^ a b "Historic Turning Point: After Century in Brooklyn, Watchtower Pulls Out of Heights", Brooklyn Heights, February 23, 2010.
  91. ^ "The Witnesses Leave. Then What?", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, February 24, 2010.
  92. ^ "Town OKs impact plan for Jehovah's Witnesses", Times Herald-Record, July 17, 2012.
  93. ^ "Witnesses to Relocate World Headquarters", jw.org News, August 15, 2012.
  94. ^ "Warwick OKs Watchtower Site", Recordonline.com, Times Herald Record, July 19, 2013.
  95. ^ Sunkin, Alyssa (August 25, 2011). "Watchtower Buys Another Parcel". Times Herald-Record.
  96. ^ "Suffern tenants must move after Jehovah's Witnesses group buys building", Lohud.com, June 12, 2013.
  97. ^ "Jehovah's Witnesses buy Fishkill apartments", Poughkeepie Journal, December 22, 2014.
  98. ^ "Increased Activity at United States Bethel", Our Kingdom Ministry, September 2003.
  99. ^ a b c d e f "Watchtower to sell 6 Brooklyn Heights properties", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 26, 2007. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  100. ^ a b c "Selloff! But Witnesses say they will remain kings of Kings", The Brooklyn Paper, May 12, 2007. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  101. ^ Yearbook, 1991, Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society, page 10.
  102. ^ "Have a seat in the Standish", The Brooklyn Paper, December 15, 2007. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  103. ^ a b Different Building, Same Buyer for Witnesses
  104. ^ Group with big Brooklyn plan snaps up property
  105. ^ Second Witnesses property fetches $4.1M
  106. ^ Praise God! Another Watchtower Property Sells
  107. ^ Watchtower Sells Yet Another Heights Property, Brownstoner Brooklyn Inside and Out, November 30, 2012.
  108. ^ New York Post, Brooklyn Blog, May 8, 2012, Brooklyn's Bossert Hotel could become a hotel again
  109. ^ The Real Deal News, Nov. 12, 2012, Chetrit, Bistricer pay $81 million for Brooklyn's Bossert Hotel
  110. ^ Jehovah's Witnesses Sell First Property for $7.1 million
  111. ^ Latest Witnesses-owned property in Brooklyn Heights hits the market, THE REAL DEAL, July 24, 2012.
  112. ^ "Watchtower Sells 67 Remsen Street for 3.25 million", Brooklyn Heights Blog, October 10, 2012.
  113. ^ "Witnesses put prime Dumbo site on the block", Crain's New York Business, June 4, 2012.
  114. ^ "Jehovah's Witnesses Sell Latest Dumbo Development Site for $31M", The Real Deal, April 25, 2013.
  115. ^ a b c Brooklyn-Bridge-Park "Developers Jostling for a piece of Brooklyn Bridge Park", The Real Deal, June 10, 2013.
  116. ^ Watchtower Society selling five more properties in Brooklyn, NY, THE REAL DEAL, Sept. 16, 2011.
  117. ^ "Big Deal: Jehovah's Witnesses List Prime Properties, The New York Times – City Room, September 16, 2011.
  118. ^ "Witnesses knocking on $375M bldg. sale", New York Post, July 7, 2013.
  119. ^ "Witnesses Sell Their Longest-Held Property in Brooklyn Heights". Jw.org. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  120. ^ "Jehovah's Witnesses sell 124 Columbia Heights to Florida Panthers owner Vincent Viola". May 2, 2016.
  121. ^ "Jehovah's Witnesses' Brooklyn Headquarters for Sale". The New York Times. January 31, 2016. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  122. ^ "Jehovah's Witnesses' lock down deal for $700M Brooklyn plot", New York Post, April 16, 2016.
  123. ^ "Jehovah's Witnesses Sell 25/30 Columbia Heights Buildings in Brooklyn, New York". Jw.org. August 5, 2016. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  124. ^ Nonko, Emily (August 4, 2016). "Jehovah's Witnesses' Watchtower building in Brooklyn sells for $340M - Curbed NY". Ny.curbed.com. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  125. ^ Hallelujah! "Jehovah's Witnesses land sell-off has Brooklyn dreaming big", Crain's New York Business, October 16, 2011.
  126. ^ "No longer 'Vatican City' for Watchtower, Brooklyn watches jehovahs retreat", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, October 9, 2013
  127. ^ "Bible Truth Triumphs Amid Tradition", The Watchtower, May 15, 1985, page 27.
  128. ^ "Your Will Be Done on Earth", The Watchtower, 1960, page 30.
  129. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1959, p. 33
  130. ^ "Building to Jehovah’s Glory", The Watchtower, May 1, 1979, pages 26–29.
  131. ^ 2012 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses p.32, 33, 55.
  132. ^ "Brother Barry died on July 2, 1999, while having a direct part in serving a district convention in Hawaii."—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, October 1, 1999, p. 16.
  133. ^ Booth died on January 8, 1996, according to The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, June 15, 1996, p. 32.
  134. ^ The meeting after Franz' death occurred on December 30, 1992, according to The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, March 15, 1993, p. 32.
  135. ^ Amendments to Charter of Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, signed on November 22, 1994, by Secretary-Treasurer Lyman Alexander Swingle.
  136. ^ "AT THE conclusion of the annual meeting of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania on October 7, 2000, a special announcement was made [... M]embers of the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses who had been serving as directors and officers voluntarily stepped aside from the boards of directors of all the corporations used by "the faithful and discreet slave" in the United States. Responsible brothers of the other sheep class were elected as replacements."—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, January 15, 2001, p. 31.
  137. ^ Exempt Organization Business Income Tax Return (2010), p. 9.
  138. ^ a b "Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Nonprofit Corporation Information Update 2014". LARA Corporations Online Filing System. Retrieved October 28, 2023.
  139. ^ "Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Nonprofit Corporation Annual Report 2016". LARA Corporations Online Filing System. October 12, 2016. Retrieved October 28, 2023.
  140. ^ a b c "Annual Report (Required by Section 911, Act 162, Public Act of 1982)" (PDF). LARA Corporations Online Filing System. September 16, 2019. Retrieved October 28, 2023.
  141. ^ "A charter of incorporation for Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society was granted December 13, 1884. [...] The incorporators are the Directors, named below [...] Directors C. T. Russell, Pres., M. F. Russell, Sec and Treas., W. C. McMillan, W. I. Mann, Vice Pres., J. B. Adamson, J. F. Smith."–Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, January 1885, p. 1, reprints p. 707.
  142. ^ a b c d e f g h "Organization of the Work", The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, December 1, 1916, p. 391, reprints p. 6024, "Two days after his [C. T. Russell's] death the Board met and elected Brother A. N. Pierson as a member of the Board to fill the vacancy caused by Brother Russell's change. The seven members of the Board as now constituted are A. I. Ritchie, W. E. Van Amburgh, H. C. Rockwell, J. D. Wright, I. F. Hoskins, A. N. Pierson and J. F. Rutherford."
  143. ^ a b c d e f g h Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, p. 65, [2], "So, two days after Russell’s death, the board of directors met and elected A. N. Pierson to be a member. The seven members of the board at that point were A. I. Ritchie, W. E. Van Amburgh, H. C. Rockwell, J. D. Wright, I. F. Hoskins, A. N. Pierson, and J. F. Rutherford."
  144. ^ a b c d The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, November 1, 1917, p. 330.
  145. ^ The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, January 15, 1918, p. 23.
  146. ^ a b c The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, January 15, 1919, p. 24.
  147. ^ "The Society's annual meeting in 1919 Jan. 4 in Pittsburgh reelected J. F. Rutherford President and W. E. Van Amburgh Secretary-Treasurer. But the others elected to the Board of Directors, viz. C. A. Wise (Vice President), R. H. Barber [...] were freer to carry out their responsibilities. When the imprisoned leaders were released, Barber resigned"—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, October 15, 1939, pp. 316, 317.
  148. ^ a b The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, January 15, 1920, p. 30.
  149. ^ a b "I therefore, take pleasure in nominating for Directors the following: J. F. Rutherford, C. A. Wise, W. E. Van Amburgh, A. H. Macmillan, Hugo H. Riemer, J. A. Baeuerlein, C. H. Anderson"—The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, December 15, 1923, p. 383.
  150. ^ "Pursuant to notice duly given as provided by law and by the charter and by-laws of the Society the annual meeting of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society was held at Memorial Hall, Pittsburgh, Pa. at ten o'clock Monday, November 1st, 1926. [...] Thereupon Brother C. H. Anderson arose and stated to the corporate members that he was so situated that he could not give personal attention to the duties as a member of the Board of Directors, and therefore withdrew his name"—1927 Year Book of the International Bible Students Association, pp. 33, 34 and The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, December 1, 1926, p. 381.
  151. ^ 1930 Year Book of the International Bible Students Association, p. 17.
  152. ^ "Martin [...] died at his post on September 23, 1932, at the age of fifty-four years."—God's Kingdom of a Thousand Years Has Approached, pp. 245, 246.
  153. ^ "On October 31, 1932, he [Sullivan] was made a member of the board of directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania"—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, September 15, 1974, p. 554.
  154. ^ Year Book of Jehovah's Witnesses for 1936, pp. 192, 193.
  155. ^ a b "The corporation, the WATCH TOWER BIBLE & TRACT SOCIETY, pursuant to its charter and by-laws, and the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, held its annual meeting at Pittsburgh, North Side, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, on the first day of October, A.D. 1938, at which annual meeting a Board of Directors was elected as follows, to wit: J. F. Rutherford, C. A. Wise, W. E. Van Amburgh, H. H. Riemer, T. J. Sullivan, Wm. P. Heath, Jr., and Grant Suiter, to hold office for a period of three years, or until their successors are duly elected."—1939 Year Book of Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 195.
  156. ^ "Grant Suiter [...] finished his earthly course the morning of November 22, and announcement of this was made to the Bethel family at Brooklyn and Watchtower Farms following morning worship and breakfast that morning."—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, February 1, 1984, p. 9. No replacing director for Suiter was mentioned.
  157. ^ "The following brethren were put in nomination: J. F. Rutherford / T. J. Sullivan / N. H. Knorr / Grant Suiter / W. E. Van Amburgh / W. P. Heath, Jr. / H. H. Riemer"—1942 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 227.
  158. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1975, p. 196.
  159. ^ "On June 8, 1977, after an illness of some months, Nathan H. Knorr, president of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania since January 13, 1942, succumbed at Watchtower Farms, Wallkill, New York."—Awake!, August 22, 1977, p. 29. No replacing director for Knorr was mentioned.
  160. ^ "On January 13, 1942, a special meeting was called of the board of directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society (Pennsylvania corporation) and the board of directors of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, Inc. (New York corporation). A joint meeting was held at Brooklyn, New York, for the election of a president. The boards of directors were notified of the passing of Brother J. F. Rutherford as president, January 8, 1942, and the purpose of this meeting was to fill this vacancy. The joint boards unanimously elected Nathan H. Knorr as president of both corporations. This caused a vacancy in the office of vice-president, whereupon Hayden C. Covington was unanimously elected as vice-president of the two corporations."—1943 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 225.
  161. ^ "In 1940, Hayden C. Covington—then the Society's legal counsel and one of the "other sheep," with the earthly hope—was elected a director of the Society. (John 10:16) He served as the Society's vice president from 1942 to 1945. At that time, Brother Covington stepped aside as a director."—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah' Kingdom, January 1, 2001, page 28.
  162. ^ 1945 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 192.
  163. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1993, p. 622, [3], "In 1916, W. E. Van Amburgh declared: “This great worldwide work is not the work of one person. . . . It is God’s work.” Although he saw others turn away, he remained firm in that conviction right down till his death in 1947, at 83 years of age."
  164. ^ "It was also announced that M. G. Henschel was elected by the board of directors to fill the vacancy made on the board by the death of W. E. Van Amburgh."—1947 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 223.
  165. ^ "We would like to note here that John Otto Groh was elected a director of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania on April 5, 1965, to fill the term of Brother H. H. Riemer, who died March 31, 1965"—1966 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, p. 289.
  166. ^ "IN THE early morning hours of Thursday, January 23, 1975, John Otto Groh ended forty-one years of devoted service to Jehovah his God."—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, March 15, 1975, p. 190. No replacing director for Groh was mentioned.
  167. ^ "T. J. Sullivan, who has been a faithful and beloved brother and director of the Society for approximately forty years, had found it necessary to resign on September 5, 1973. [...] A few weeks earlier the board of directors had accepted his resignation, so now it was necessary to recommend another director in his place. W. K. Jackson's name was put in nomination. [...] On October 2 the members of the board of directors met for the purpose of electing officers for the ensuing year."—1974 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses, pp. 257, 258.
  168. ^ "William Kirk Jackson was born September 16, 1901, at Galveston, Texas. After a lifetime of devoted service to Jehovah God, he completed his earthly course on December 13, 1981."—The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, February 15, 1982, p. 15. No replacing director for Jackson was mentioned.
  169. ^ Rogerson 1969, p. 25.
  170. ^ "Passed Beyond the Vail", Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, April 15, 1906, p. 126, reprints p. 3765, "ANOTHER member of the Board [...] Brother William M. Wright, passed beyond the vail, into the Most Holy, we trust, on April 3."
  171. ^ a b c "The Corporation is to be managed by a Board of Directors consisting of seven members, and the names and residences of those already chosen directors are [we give the names of the present board and officers] as follows:—Charles T. Russell, President, W. C. McMillan, Henry Weber, Vice President, J. B. Adamson, Maria F. Russell, Sec’y & Treas., Simon O. Blunden. Rose J. Ball."–A Conspiracy Exposed, extra edition of Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, April 25, 1894, p. 56.
  172. ^ "Pilgrim Brother Henry Weber has passed beyond the vail, to be forever with the Lord. We rejoice on his behalf. He finished his earthly course on Thursday, January 21st, at 2:15 p.m., at his home—Oakland, Md.—and was buried on Saturday, the 23rd. [...] Hence, although we will sadly miss our dear brother, as a friend and as a pilgrim and as a Vice-President of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, nevertheless we sorrow not as others who have less substantial hopes."–"Entered into his Rest", Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, February 1, 1904, reprints p. 3314.
  173. ^ a b c d e The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, November 1, 1917, p. 328, 329.
  174. ^ a b c d e "A charter of incorporation for Zion's Watch Tower Tract Society was granted December 13, 1884. [...] The incorporators are the Directors, named below [...] Directors C. T. Russell, Pres., M. F. Russell, Sec and Treas., W. C. McMillan, W. I. Mann, Vice Pres., J. B. Adamson, J. F. Smith."–Zion's Watch Tower and Herald of Christ's Presence, January 1885, p. 1, reprints p. 707.
  175. ^ Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society 1975, pp. 65–66, "During the trouble in 1894, Mrs. C. T. Russell (the former Maria Frances Ackley, whom Russell had married in 1879) undertook a tour from New York to Chicago, meeting with Bible Students along the way and speaking in her husband’s behalf. Being an educated, intelligent woman, she was well received when visiting the congregations at that time. Mrs. Russell was a director of the Watch Tower Society and served as its secretary and treasurer for some years."
  176. ^ "Maria Frances Ackley [...] had become a colaborer and a contributor of articles to the Watch Tower magazine. [...] Nearly eighteen years later, in 1897, due to Watch Tower Society members’ objecting to a woman’s teaching and being a member of the board of directors contrary to 1 Timothy 2:12, Russell and his wife disagreed about the management of the journal, Zion’s Watch Tower. Thereupon she voluntarily separated herself"–The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah's Kingdom, January 15, 1955, p. 46
  177. ^ Franz 2007, pp. 614–654
  178. ^ Franz 2007, pp. 69–124
  179. ^ "You Must Be Holy Because Jehovah Is Holy". The Watchtower. February 15, 1976. pp. 119–125., as cited by R. Franz, "In Search if Christian Freedom", page 107,"Would not a failure to respond to direction from God through his organization really indicate a rejection of divine rulership?"
  180. ^ "Do not be quickly shaken from your reason". The Watchtower. March 15, 1986. pp. 10–15.
  181. ^ "At which table are you feeding?". The Watchtower. July 1, 1994. pp. 8–13.
  182. ^ Franz 2007, pp. 391–431
  183. ^ Gruss 2003, pp. 110–114
  184. ^ Holden 2002, p. 32

Bibliography edit

  • Penton, James M. (1997). Apocalypse Delayed: The Story of Jehovah's Witnesses (2nd ed.). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-7973-3.
  • Rogerson, Alan (1969). Millions Now Living Will Never Die. Constable, London.
  • Wills, Tony (2006). A People For His Name. Lulu Enterprises. ISBN 978-1-4303-0100-4.
  • Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society (1975). 1975 Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses. Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society.
  • Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society (1959). Jehovah's Witnesses in the Divine Purpose. Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society.
  • Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society (1993). Jehovah's Witnesses—Proclaimers of God's Kingdom. Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society.
  • Macmillan, A. H. (1957). . Prentice-Hall. Archived from the original on September 7, 2009. Retrieved October 4, 2009.
  • Rutherford, J. F. (August 1, 1917a). (PDF). Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2011. Retrieved July 19, 2009.
  • Rutherford, J. F. (October 1, 1917b). (PDF). Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2011. Retrieved July 19, 2009.
  • Pierson, A. N.; et al. (September 1, 1917). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2011. Retrieved July 21, 2009.
  • Johnson, Paul S. L. (November 1, 1917). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2011. Retrieved July 21, 2009.
  • Grizzuti Harrison, Barbara (1978). Visions of Glory – A History and a Memory of Jehovah's Witnesses. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7091-8013-5.
  • Gruss, Edmond C. (2003). The Four Presidents of the Watch Tower Society. Xulon Press. ISBN 1-59467-131-1.
  • Holden, Andrew (2002). Jehovah's Witnesses: Portrait of a Contemporary Religious Movement. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-26609-2.
  • Franz, Raymond (2007). Crisis of Conscience. Commentary Press. ISBN 978-0-914675-23-5.
  • Botting, Heather; Gary Botting (1984). The Orwellian World of Jehovah's Witnesses. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-6545-7.

watch, tower, bible, tract, society, pennsylvania, watch, tower, society, redirects, here, related, corporations, including, watchtower, society, york, corporations, jehovah, witnesses, stock, profit, organization, headquartered, warwick, york, main, legal, en. Watch Tower Society redirects here For related corporations including the Watchtower Society of New York see Corporations of Jehovah s Witnesses The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania is a non stock not for profit organization 4 headquartered in Warwick New York It is the main legal entity used worldwide by Jehovah s Witnesses to direct administer and disseminate doctrines for the group and is often referred to by members of the denomination simply as the Society It is the parent organization of a number of Watch Tower subsidiaries including the Watchtower Society of New York and International Bible Students Association 5 6 The number of voting shareholders of the corporation is limited to between 300 and 500 mature active and faithful male Jehovah s Witnesses 7 About 5 800 Jehovah s Witnesses provide voluntary unpaid labour as members of a religious order in three large Watch Tower Society facilities in New York 8 Nearly 15 000 other members of the order work at the Watch Tower Society s other facilities worldwide 8 9 10 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of PennsylvaniaLogoFormationFebruary 16 1881 142 years ago 1881 02 16 incorporated December 15 1884 138 years ago 1884 12 15 FounderCharles Taze RussellFounded atPittsburgh PennsylvaniaTax ID no 11 1857820 1 Legal status501 c 3 church 1 2 HeadquartersWarwick New York 3 PresidentRobert CirankoSubsidiariesVariousWebsitejw wbr orgFormerly calledZion s Watch Tower Tract Society 1881 1896 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society 1896 1955 The organization was formed in 1881 as Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society for the purpose of distributing religious tracts 4 The society was incorporated in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania on December 15 1884 In 1896 the society was renamed Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society 11 Following a leadership dispute in the Bible Student movement the society remained associated with the branch of the movement that became known as Jehovah s Witnesses In 1955 the corporation was renamed Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania 12 In 1976 all activities of the Watch Tower Society were brought under the supervision of the Governing Body of Jehovah s Witnesses 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Incorporation 1 2 Leadership dispute 1 3 Amendments to charter 1 4 Governing Body 1 5 Notable people 2 Operations 3 Property ownership 3 1 United States 3 1 1 Brooklyn property sales 3 2 Other countries 4 Directors 4 1 Since 1987 4 2 1916 1987 4 3 Before 1916 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 BibliographyHistory editOn February 16 1881 Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society was formed in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States for the purpose of organizing the printing and distribution of religious tracts William Henry Conley a Pittsburgh industrialist and philanthropist served as president with Charles Taze Russell serving as secretary treasurer 14 The society s primary journal was Zion s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence first published in 1879 by Russell 15 founder of the Bible Student movement 16 Other early writers for the Watch Tower Society included J H Paton and W I Mann 14 17 Formation of the Watch Tower Society was announced in the April 1881 issue of Zion s Watch Tower 18 That year the society received donations of 35 391 18 19 Incorporation edit On December 15 1884 the society was incorporated as Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society in Pennsylvania as a non profit non stock corporation with Russell as president The corporation was located in Allegheny Pennsylvania In its charter written by Russell the society s purpose was stated as the mental moral and religious improvement of men and women by teaching the Bible by means of the publication and distribution of Bibles books papers pamphlets and other Bible literature and by providing oral lectures free for the people 20 The charter provided for a board of seven directors three of whom served as officers a president vice president initially William I Mann and secretary treasurer initially Maria Russell 21 The charter stipulated that the officers be chosen from the directors and be elected annually by ballot Board members would hold office for life unless removed by a two thirds vote by shareholders Vacancies on the board resulting from death resignation or removal would be filled by a majority vote of the remaining board members within 20 days if such vacancies were not filled within 30 days an appointment could be made by the president with the appointments lasting only until the next annual corporation meeting when vacancies would be filled by election 21 Anyone subscribing to 10 or more of the Watch Tower Society s Old Testament Tracts or donating 10 or more to the society was deemed a voting member and entitled to one vote per 10 donated 21 Russell indicated that despite having a board and shareholders the society would be directed by only two people him and his wife Maria 22 Russell said that as of December 1893 he and his wife owned 3705 or 58 percent of the 6383 voting shares and thus control the Society and this was fully understood by the directors from the first Their usefulness it was understood would come to the front in the event of our death For this reason also formal elections were not held because it would be a mere farce a deception to call together voting shareholders from all over the world at great expense to find upon arrival that their coming was useless Sister Russell and myself having more than a majority over all that could gather However no one was hindered from attending such elections 23 24 The influx of donations gradually diluted the proportion of the Russells shares and in 1908 their voting shares constituted less than half the total 23 24 Russell emphasized the limitations of the corporation explaining Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society is not a religious society in the ordinary meaning of this term 25 He also stated This is a business association merely It has no creed or confession It is merely a business convenience in disseminating the truth 21 Incorporation of the society meant that it would outlive Russell so individuals who wished to bequeath their money or property to him would not have to alter their will if he died before they did 26 On September 19 1896 the name of the corporation was changed to Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society 27 nbsp Charles Taze Russell secretary treasurer 1881 1884 and president 1884 1916 of the Watch Tower Society and founder of the Bible Student movementFrom 1908 Russell required the directors to write out resignations when they were appointed so Russell could dismiss them by simply filling in the date 23 In 1909 Russell instructed legal counsel Joseph Franklin Rutherford to determine whether the Watch Tower Society s headquarters could be moved to Brooklyn New York 28 Rutherford reported that because it had been established under Pennsylvania law the corporation could not be registered in New York state but suggested that a new corporation be registered there to do the society s work Rutherford subsequently organized the formation of the People s Pulpit Association which was incorporated on February 23 1909 and wrote the charter which gave the president to be elected for life at the first meeting absolute power and control of its activities in New York 28 29 The society sold its buildings in Pittsburgh 30 and moved staff to its new base in Brooklyn Although all New York property was bought in the name of the New York corporation and all legal affairs of the society done in its name Russell insisted on the continued use of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society name on all correspondence and publications 28 The move from Pennsylvania to New York occurred during court proceedings over the breakdown of Russells marriage His wife Maria had been granted a limited divorce on March 4 1908 but in 1909 returned to court in Pittsburgh to request an increase in alimony 31 which her former husband refused 32 Authors Barbara Grizzuti Harrison and Edmond C Gruss have claimed Russell s move to Brooklyn was motivated by his desire to transfer from the jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania courts They claim he transferred all his assets to the Watch Tower Society so he could declare himself bankrupt and avoid being jailed for failure to pay alimony 31 33 34 In 1914 the International Bible Students Association was incorporated in Britain to administer affairs in that country Like the People s Pulpit Association it was subsidiary to the Pennsylvania parent organization and all work done through both subsidiaries was described as the work of the Watch Tower Society The Watchtower noted The editor of The Watchtower is the President of all three of these Societies All financial responsibility connected with the work proceeds from the Pennsylvania corporation From it the other Societies and all the branches of the work receive their financial support we use sometimes the one name and sometimes the other in various parts of our work yet they all in the end mean the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society to which all donations should be made 6 Leadership dispute edit Main article Watch Tower Society presidency dispute 1917 Russell died on October 31 1916 in Pampa Texas during a cross country preaching trip On January 6 1917 board member and Watch Tower Society legal counsel Joseph Franklin Rutherford aged 47 was elected president of the society unopposed at the Pittsburgh convention Under his presidency the role of the Watch Tower Society underwent a major change 35 By laws passed by both the Pittsburgh convention and the board of directors stated that the president would be the executive officer and general manager of the society giving him full charge of its affairs worldwide 36 nbsp Joseph Franklin Rutherford president of the Watch Tower Society 1917 1942 By June 1917 four of the seven Watch Tower Society directors Robert H Hirsh Alfred I Ritchie Isaac F Hoskins and James D Wright had decided they had erred in endorsing Rutherford s expanded powers of management 37 claiming Rutherford had become autocratic 37 Hirsch attempted to rescind the new by laws and reclaim the powers of management from the president 38 but Rutherford later claimed he had by then detected a conspiracy among the directors to seize control of the society 39 In July Rutherford gained a legal opinion from a Philadelphia corporation lawyer that none of his opposers were legally directors of the society On July 12 1917 Rutherford filled what he claimed were four vacancies on the board appointing A H Macmillan and Pennsylvania Bible Students W E Spill J A Bohnet and George H Fisher as directors 40 Between August and November the Watch Tower Society and the four ousted directors published a series of pamphlets with each side accusing the other of ambitious and reckless behavior The former directors also claimed Rutherford had required all headquarters workers to sign a petition supporting him and threatened dismissal for any who refused to sign 41 The former directors left the Brooklyn headquarters on August 8 1917 42 On January 5 1918 Rutherford was returned to office In May 1918 Rutherford and seven other Watch Tower Society directors and officers were arrested on charges of sedition under the federal Espionage Act On June 21 1918 they were sentenced to 20 years imprisonment Rutherford feared his opponents would gain control of the society in his absence but on January 2 1919 he learned he had been re elected president at the Pittsburgh convention the day before 43 However by mid 1919 about one in seven Bible Students had chosen to leave rather than accept Rutherford s leadership 44 forming groups such as The Stand Fast Movement Paul Johnson Movement Dawn Bible Students Association Pastoral Bible Institute of Brooklyn Elijah Voice Movement and Eagle Society 45 Although formed as a business convenience with the purpose of publishing and distributing Bible based literature and managing the funds necessary for that task the corporation from the 1920s began its transformation into the religious society Russell had insisted it was not introducing centralized control and regulation of Bible Student congregations worldwide 46 In 1938 Rutherford introduced the term theocracy to describe the hierarchical leadership of Jehovah s Witnesses with Consolation explaining The Theocracy is at present administered by the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of which Judge Rutherford is the president and general manager 47 The society appointed zone servants to supervise congregations and in a Watchtower article Rutherford declared the need for congregations to get in line with the changed structure 48 49 Amendments to charter edit nbsp Nathan Homer Knorr vice president 1941 1942 and president 1942 1977 of the Watch Tower Society nbsp Frederick William Franz vice president 1945 1977 and president 1977 1992 of the Watch Tower Society nbsp Milton George Henschel vice president 1977 1992 and president 1992 2000 of the Watch Tower Society nbsp Don Alden Adams president of the Watch Tower Society 2000 2014 50 Following Rutherford s death in 1942 Nathan H Knorr became president of the Watch Tower Society and subsequently introduced further changes to the role of the society At a series of talks given in Pittsburgh on September 30 1944 coinciding with the society s annual meeting it was announced that changes would be made to the 1884 charter to bring it into closer harmony with theocratic principles The amendments most of which were passed unanimously 51 significantly altered the terms of membership and stated for the first time that the society s purposes included preaching about God s kingdom acting as a servant and governing agency of Jehovah s Witnesses and sending missionaries and teachers for the public worship of God and Jesus Christ The new charter which took effect from January 1 1945 included the following changes An altered and expanded explanation of article II detailing the purpose of the Watch Tower Society This included the preaching of the gospel of God s kingdom to all nations to print and distribute Bibles and disseminate Bible truths with literature explaining Bible truths and prophecy concerning the establishment of God s kingdom to authorise and appoint agents servants employees teachers evangelists missionaries ministers and others to go all the world publicly and from house to house to preach Bible truths to persons willing to listen by leaving with such persons said literature and by conducting Bible studies thereon to improve people mentally and morally by instruction on the Bible and incidental scientific historical and literary subjects to establish and maintain Bible schools and classes to teach train prepare and equip men and women as ministers missionaries evangelists preachers teachers and instructors in the Bible and Bible literature and for public Christian worship of Almighty God and Jesus Christ and to arrange for and hold local and worldwide assemblies for such worship An amendment to article V detailing the qualifications for membership of the Watch Tower Society Each donation of 10 to the society funds had formerly entitled the contributor to one voting share the amendment limited membership to only men who are mature active and faithful witnesses of Jehovah devoting full time to performance of one or more of its chartered purposes or such men who are devoting part time as active presiding ministers or servants of congregations of Jehovah s witnesses The amended article stipulated that a man who is found to be in harmony with the purposes of the Society and who possesses the above qualifications may be elected as a member upon being nominated by a member director or officer or upon written application to the president or secretary Such members shall be elected upon a finding by the Board of Directors that he possesses the necessary qualifications and by receiving a majority vote of the members The amendment limited membership at any one time to between 300 and 500 including approximately seven residents of each of the 48 states of the US It also introduced a clause providing for the suspension or expulsion of a member for wilfully violating the society s rules or becoming out of harmony with any of the Society s purposes or any of its work or for wilful conduct prejudicial to the best interests of the Society and contrary to his duties as a member or upon ceasing to be a full time servant of the Society or a part time servant of a congregation of Jehovah s witnesses An amendment to article VII dealing with the governance of the Watch Tower Society by its board of directors The amendment deleted reference to adherence to the constitution and laws of Pennsylvania of the US It also specified powers of the board including matters of finance and property An amendment to article VIII detailing the office holders of the Watch Tower Society and the terms of office and method of appointment of officers and directors A clause stating that board members would hold office for life was deleted The new clause provided for board membership for a maximum of three years with directors qualifying for re election at the expiration of their term 52 Governing Body edit In 1976 direction of the Watch Tower Society and of the congregations of Jehovah s Witnesses worldwide came under the control of the Governing Body reducing the power of the society s president The society has described the change as one of the most significant organizational readjustments in the modern day history of Jehovah s Witnesses 53 Since 2000 the role of president of the Watch Tower Society has been held by individuals who are considered helpers to the Governing Body 54 Notable people edit Name Date of birth Date of death Position Started EndedWilliam Henry Conley June 11 1840 July 25 1897 President February 16 1881 December 15 1884Charles Taze Russell February 16 1852 Secretary treasurer 55 14 IncorporatedCharles Taze Russell October 31 1916 President December 15 1884 October 31 1916Joseph Franklin Rutherford November 8 1869 January 8 1942 President January 6 1917 January 8 1942Nathan Homer Knorr April 23 1905 June 8 1977 Vice president 56 57 October 1 1941 January 13 1942President January 13 1942 June 8 1977Frederick William Franz September 12 1893 December 22 1992 Vice president 58 October 5 1945 June 22 1977President June 22 1977 December 22 1992Milton George Henschel August 9 1920 March 22 2003 Vice president 59 June 22 1977 December 30 1992President December 30 1992 October 7 2000Don Alden Adams January 16 1925 December 30 2019 President October 7 2000 2014Robert Ciranko March 9 1947 President 50 2014 incumbentOperations editThe corporation is a major publisher of religious publications including books tracts magazines and Bibles By 1979 the Watch Tower Society had 39 printing branches worldwide In 1990 it was reported that in one year the society printed 696 million copies of its magazines The Watchtower and Awake as well as another 35 811 000 pieces of literature worldwide which are offered door to door by Jehovah s Witnesses 60 As of 2013 the society prints more than 43 million of its public issues of these magazines each month totaling over 1 billion annually The Watch Tower Society describes its headquarters and branch office staff as volunteers rather than employees 8 and identifies them as members of the Worldwide Order of Special Full Time Servants of Jehovah s Witnesses 9 Workers receive a small monthly stipend 61 with meals and accommodation provided by the society The Bethel family in the Brooklyn headquarters includes hairdressers dentists doctors housekeepers and carpenters as well as shops for repairing personal appliances watches shoes and clothing without charge for labor 62 The Watch Tower Society does not file any publicly accessible financial figures but reported in 2011 that it had spent more than 173 million that year in caring for special pioneers missionaries and traveling overseers in their field service assignments 9 63 Donations obtained from the distribution of literature is a major source of income most of which is used to promote its evangelical activities 64 Author James Beckford has claimed the status of voting members of the Watch Tower Society is purely symbolic He said they cannot be considered to be representatives of the mass of Jehovah s Witnesses and are in no position to challenge the actions or authority of the society s directors 65 Property ownership editUnited States edit The corporation was first located at 44 Federal Street Allegheny Pennsylvania the city was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1907 but in 1889 moved to Bible House newly built premises at 56 60 Arch Street Allegheny owned by Russell s privately owned Tower Publishing Company The new building contained an assembly hall seating about 200 as well as editorial printing and shipping facilities and living quarters for some staff 66 The title for the building was transferred in April 1898 to the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society In 1909 the Watch Tower Society moved its base to Brooklyn A four story brownstone parsonage formerly owned by Congregationalist clergyman and social reformer Henry Ward Beecher at 124 Columbia Heights was converted to a residence for a headquarters staff of 30 as well as an office for Russell A former Plymouth church building at 13 17 Hicks Street was purchased and converted into the Watch Tower headquarters with room for 350 staff It contained an 800 seat assembly hall shipping department and printing facilities 67 The Watch Tower announced The new home we shall call Bethel and the new office and auditorium The Brooklyn Tabernacle these names will supplant the term Bible House 68 In October 1909 an adjoining building at 122 Columbia Heights was bought 69 In 1911 a new nine story residential block was built at the rear of the headquarters fronting on Furman Street and overlooking the Brooklyn waterfront 67 The Brooklyn Tabernacle was sold in 1918 or 1919 70 Printing facilities were established in Myrtle Street Brooklyn in 1920 The February 1 1920 issue of The Watch Tower was printed by the Watch Tower Society at the plant Two months later the plant began printing The Golden Age In 1922 the printing factory was moved to a six story building at 18 Concord Street Brooklyn In 1926 it moved to larger premises a new eight story building at 117 Adams Street Brooklyn at which time the society s headquarters was rebuilt and enlarged In December 1926 a building at 126 Columbia Heights was bought A month later the three buildings from 122 126 Columbia Heights were demolished and rebuilt for accommodation and executive offices using the official address of 124 Columbia Heights 69 In 1946 property surrounding the Adams Street factory was bought to expand printing operations When completed in 1949 the factory occupied an entire block bounded by Adams Sands Pearl and Prospect Streets Five more properties adjoining 124 Columbia Heights were purchased for a 10 story building 71 72 In the late 1950s a property at 107 Columbia Heights across the road from 124 Columbia Heights was bought 73 In 1960 a residential building for staff was constructed there 74 75 More residences were built at 119 Columbia Heights in 1969 75 The Watchtower detailed further expansion in the 1950s and 1960s In 1956 a 13 story building was constructed at 77 Sands Street Then just across the street another 10 story building was purchased in 1958 In 1968 an adjoining 11 story new printing factory was completed Along with the factory at 117 Adams Street these fill out four city blocks of factories that are all tied together by overhead bridges Then in November 1969 the Squibb complex located a few blocks away was purchased 75 The Watch Tower Society bought the Towers Hotel at 79 99 Willow Street in 1974 for accommodation 76 which is connected to the society s other Columbia Heights properties via tunnels 77 In 1978 a property at 25 Columbia Heights underwent renovation for use as offices 75 In the early 1980s properties were bought at 175 Pearl Street and 360 Furman Street for factory and office use 78 A building at 360 Furman Street was bought in March 1983 and renovated providing almost 9 hectares of floor space 76 for shipping carpentry and construction 79 The Bossert Hotel at 98 Montague Street was bought in 1983 as a residence building 80 97 Columbia Heights the former site of the Margaret Hotel was purchased in 1986 76 It was ideally located next to the WTBTS residences at 107 and 124 Columbia Heights and it could easily tie in with the main complex on the other side of the street by means of an under street tunnel An 11 story residential building was erected on the site to house 250 workers 81 82 A property at 90 Sands Street was bought in December 1986 A 30 story residential building 76 for 1 000 workers was completed on the site in 1995 A 1996 publication listed other Watch Tower residential buildings in Brooklyn including the 12 story Bossert Hotel 34 Orange Street 1945 the Standish Arms Hotel at 169 Columbia Heights 1981 67 Livingston Street 1989 and 108 Joralemon Street 1988 76 Two properties known as Watchtower Farms at Wallkill 160 kilometres 99 mi north of Brooklyn and totaling 1 200 hectares 3 000 acres were bought in 1963 and 1967 Factories were erected in 1973 and 1975 75 In 2012 2014 the Watch Tower Society added an office building residence building and garage 83 In 1984 the society paid 2 1 million for a 270 hectare farm at Patterson New York 84 for a development that included 624 apartments garages for 800 cars and a 149 room hotel 85 Other rural purchases included a 220 hectares 540 acres farm near South Lansing New York and a 60 hectares 150 acres farm near Port Murray New Jersey 84 In February 2009 the Watch Tower Society paid 11 5 million for 100 hectares of land in Ramapo New York for an administration and residential complex 86 The site was reported to be planned as a base for about 850 Watch Tower workers creating a compound combining residential and publishing facilities currently located in Brooklyn A Witness spokesman said the land was currently zoned for residential uses but an application would be made to rezone it adding that Construction is several years in the future 87 A year later the Watch Tower Society announced it planned to move its world headquarters from Brooklyn to a proposed eight building complex replacing the pre existing four building complex on a 100 hectare Watch Tower property in Warwick New York 83 1 5 km from its Ramapo site 88 89 A Watch Tower presentation to Warwick planning authorities said the complex would house up to 850 people 90 91 In July 2012 the Warwick planning commission approved the environmental impact statement for building the Warwick site 92 93 In July 2013 Warwick approved building plans of the multiple building complex of the new headquarters including four residence buildings of 588 rooms for about 1 000 people 94 In August 2011 a 50 acre property was bought in Tuxedo New York with 184 000 square foot building for 3 2 million six miles from the Warwick site to facilitate the staging of machinery and building materials 95 The Watch Tower Society bought a 48 unit apartment building in Suffern New York near Warwick New York for housing temporary construction workers in June 2013 96 In December 2014 the society bought the 250 unit Rivercrest Luxury Apartments in Fishkill Dutchess County New York The sale price was not released though taxes on the sale indicated a transaction of 57 million The current leases will not be renewed 97 Brooklyn property sales edit nbsp The former Watch Tower Society headquarters in Columbia Heights Brooklyn In 2004 the Watch Tower Society began transferring its printing operations to its Wallkill factory complex 98 99 The move triggered the sale of a number of Brooklyn factory and residential properties including 360 Furman Street sold in 2004 for 205 million 100 67 Livingston Street nicknamed the Sliver 101 sold in 2006 for 18 6 million 100 89 Hicks Street sold in 2006 for 14 million 100 Standish Arms Hotel 169 Columbia Heights sold in 2007 for 50 million 102 183 Columbia Heights bought in 1986 offered for sale in 2007 and sold in April 2012 for 6 6 million 99 103 104 161 Columbia Heights bought in 1988 offered for sale in 2007 and sold in March 2012 for 3 million 99 103 165 Columbia Heights offered for sale in 2007 and sold in January 2012 for 4 1 million 99 105 105 Willow Street offered for sale in 2007 and sold in April 2012 for 3 3 million 99 106 34 Orange Street offered for sale in 2007 and sold in November 2012 for 2 825 000 99 107 Bossert Hotel 98 Montague Street bought in 1983 80 offered for sale in 2008 87 sold in 2012 to a hotel developer Rosewood Realty Group for 81 million 108 109 50 Orange Street bought in 1988 renovated to sell 2006 and sold in December 2011 for 7 1 million 110 67 Remsen Street offered for sale in July 2012 111 and sold the same year for 3 25 million 112 Three adjoining properties 173 Front Street 177 Front Street and 200 Water Street sold together for 30 6 million in April 2013 to Urban Realty Partners 113 114 55 Furman Street 400 000 sq ft is for sale as of June 2013 115 Five adjoining properties 175 Pearl Street 55 Prospect Street 81 Prospect Street 117 Adams Street and 77 Sands Street totaling 700 000 sq ft offered for sale in September 2011 116 117 under contract as of July 2013 to a three company buy out A sixth building 90 Sands Street about 500 000 sq ft a 505 room 30 story building in this sale will be released in 2017 after the scheduled completion of the Jehovah s Witnesses new headquarters in Warwick New York The properties are under contract for 375 million at completion of the sale 115 118 Two private parking lots are for sale as of June 2013 115 124 Columbia Heights bought in 1909 was sold in May 2016 to Florida Panthers Vincent Viola for 105 million 119 120 In 2016 three more properties valued at an estimated 850 million to 1 billion including the headquarters building were put up for sale 121 The Watch Tower Society reached a deal to sell the headquarters at Columbia Heights for 700 million 122 The Watch Tower Society sold the 25 30 Columbia Heights complex along with adjoining 50 and 58 Columbia Heights and 55 Furman Street sites on August 3 2016 for 340 million 123 124 In 2011 the Watch Tower Society was reported to still own 34 properties in Brooklyn 8 125 a 2009 report calculated a dozen or more properties in the Brooklyn area 87 In a 2010 news report the society said it was not actively promoting the sale of eight Brooklyn properties still on the market 90 The society s remaining nine unsold Brooklyn properties are 97 107 and 119 Columbia Heights 80 and 86 Willow Street 21 Clark Street Towers Hotel parking lots at 67 Furman Street 1 York Street and 85 Jay Street and 90 Sands Street already arranged to sell in 2017 Many sold buildings are to be emptied by 2017 126 The Furman Street properties and parking lots are for sale currently as stated above Other countries edit In 1900 the Watch Tower Society opened its first overseas branch office in Britain 127 Germany followed in 1903 128 and Australia in 1904 129 By 1979 the society had 39 printing branches throughout the world with facilities transferred to farming properties in many countries including Brazil Sweden Denmark Canada and Australia 130 In 2011 the society had 98 branch offices worldwide reporting to New York directly other nations offices report to large branches nearby 131 Directors editSince 1987 edit Period DirectorsNovember 25 1987 December 22 1992 Frederick William Franz 59 William Lloyd Barry 59 132 Milton George Henschel 59 Lyman Alexander Swingle 59 John Edwin Barr 59 John Charles Booth 59 133 Theodore Jaracz 59 December 30 1992 134 January 8 1996 Daniel Sydlik 135 after January 8 1996 July 2 1999 after July 2 1999 October 7 2000 136 October 7 2000 July 28 2004 Don Alden Adams Robert W Wallen William F Malenfant Danny L Bland Richard E Abrahamson Philip D Wilcox John N Wischukafter July 28 2004 2014 David G Sinclair 137 2014 2015 Robert Louis Ciranko 138 David W Schafer 138 2016 2019 Richard E Devine 139 since 2019 Enrique R Ford 140 Robert V Luccioni 140 Mark J Noumair 140 1916 1987 edit Period Directors before October 31 1916 Charles Taze Russell 141 142 143 A I Ritchie 142 143 W E Van Amburgh 142 143 H C Rockwell 142 143 J D Wright 142 143 I F Hoskins 142 143 Joseph Franklin Rutherford 142 143 November 2 1916 July 12 1917 A N Pierson 142 143 July 12 1917 January 5 1918 Alexander Hugh Macmillan 144 W E Spill 144 J A Bohnet 144 G H Fisher 144 January 5 1918 January 4 1919 C H Anderson 145 January 4 1919 January 3 1920 Charles 56 A Wise 146 R H Barber 146 147 W F Hudgings 146 January 3 1920 October 1 1923 Alexander Hugh Macmillan 148 G H Fisher 148 October 1 1923 November 1 1926 Hugo Henry Riemer 149 J A Baeuerlein 149 November 1 1926 October 31 1929 R J Martin 150 October 31 1929 September 23 1932 E J Lueck 151 October 31 1932 October 31 1935 Thomas James Sullivan 152 153 October 31 1935 October 1 1938 G Y McCormick 154 October 1 1938 June 10 1940 Grant George Suiter 155 156 W P Pratt Heath Jr 155 June 10 1940 January 8 1942 Nathan Homer Knorr 58 157 158 159 January 13 1942 October 2 1944 Hayden Cooper Covington 160 161 October 2 1944 September 24 1945 Frederick William Franz 162 October 1 1945 February 7 1947 Lyman Alexander Swingle 58 October 1 1947 March 31 1965 Milton George Henschel 163 164 April 5 1965 September 5 1973 John Otto Groh 165 166 October 2 1973 January 23 1975 William Kirk Jackson 167 168 after January 23 1975 June 8 1977 after June 8 1977 December 13 1981 after December 13 1981 November 22 1983 after November 22 1983 November 25 1987 Before 1916 edit J H Giesey director vice president 1908 169 William M Wright 1906 170 Henry Weber director 1894 1904 vice president 1894 1904 171 172 Rose J Ball director 1892 vice president 1893 1894 171 Simon O Blunden director 1884 1908 171 173 W C McMillan director 1884 1898 174 173 Maria Frances Russell nee Ackley director 1884 1897 secretary treasurer 1884 then wife of Charles Taze Russell 174 175 176 J B Adamson director 1884 1895 174 173 W I Mann director 1884 1892 vice president 1884 1892 174 173 J F Smith director 1884 1892 174 173 Criticism editCritics including Raymond Franz Edmond C Gruss and James Penton have accused the Watch Tower Society of being authoritarian controlling and coercive in its dealings with Witnesses Franz a former Governing Body member has claimed the society s emphasis of the term theocratic organization to describe the authority structure of Jehovah s Witnesses which places God at the apex of its organization is designed to exercise control over every aspect of the lives of Jehovah s Witnesses 177 and condition them to think it is wrong for them to question anything the society publishes as truth 178 179 The Watch Tower Society has been accused of employing techniques of mind control on Witnesses including the direction to avoid reading criticism of the organization 180 181 frequent and tightly controlled indoctrination meetings regimentation social alienation and elaborate promises of future rewards 182 183 Apart from life stories all Watch Tower Society magazine articles and other publications are written anonymously and correspondence from the society does not typically indicate a specific author or personal signature 184 See also edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania Criticism of Jehovah s Witnesses History of Jehovah s Witnesses Organizational structure of Jehovah s Witnesses List of Watch Tower Society publicationsReferences edit a b Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania Exempt Organizations Select Check Internal Revenue Service Retrieved October 18 2017 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania Guidestar Retrieved October 18 2017 This organization is not required to file an annual return with the IRS because it is a church Contact Us Official website of Jehovah s Witnesses The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania October 18 2017 a b Pennsylvania Department of State 1980 Yearbook Watch Tower Society p 257 The first of these formed in 1881 and incorporated in 1884 is known today as the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania It is the parent of similar religious corporations formed world wide Among such are the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York Inc and the International Bible Students Association in a number of British Commonwealth nations a b Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 p 49 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 p 229 a b c d Jehovahs loses comp case Church may be forced to pay millions New York Daily News January 6 2006 Retrieved October 3 2009 a b c 2009 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses Watchtower Bible and Tract Society 2009 p 42 2012 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses Watchtower Bible and Tract Society 2009 p 55 Report for Fiscal Year Watch Tower December 1 1896 page 301 Reprints page 2077 Retrieved 2010 03 30 Archived February 15 2012 at the Wayback Machine WATCH TOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC 1 1896 ALTHOUGH the above has been the recognized name of our Society for some four years it was not until this year that the Board of Directors took the proper steps to have the name legally changed from ZION S WATCH TOWER TRACT SOCIETY to that above The new name seems to be in every way preferable Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 p 229 1 Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society First formed in 1881 and then legally incorporated in the state of Pennsylvania on December 15 1884 In 1896 its name was changed to Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society Since 1955 it has been known as Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania Franz 2007 pp 80 107 a b c Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 pp 575 576 chapter 26 Prospectus Zion s Watch Tower 1 July 1879 Encyclopaedia Britannica Russell Charles Taze Zion s Watch Tower January 1881 Reprints page 1 Zion s Watch Tower April 1881 Reprints page 214 Z W T TRACT SOCIETY Zion s Watch Tower 2 January 1882 J F Rutherford A Great Battle in the Ecclesiastical Heavens Archived April 4 2009 at the Wayback Machine 1915 p 14 a b c d C T Russell A Conspiracy Exposed Zion s Watch Tower Extra edition April 25 1894 page 55 60 C T Russell A Conspiracy Exposed Zion s Watch Tower Extra edition April 25 1894 page 55 60 The affairs of the Society are so arranged that its entire control rests in the care of Brother and Sister Russell as long as they shall live The fact is that by the grace of God Sister R and myself have been enabled not only to give our own time without charge to the service of the truth in writing and overseeing but also to contribute more money to the Tract Society s fund for the scattering of the good tidings than all others combined a b c Wills 2006 p 91 a b J F Rutherford A Great Battle in the Ecclesiastical Heavens Archived April 4 2009 at the Wayback Machine 1915 p 14 While there are nearly two hundred thousand shares and it would be an easy matter to elect some other man as president there never has been cast a vote against Pastor Russell At the last election he was absent his own votes were not cast yet more than one hundred thousand votes of others were cast for him as president Zion s Watch Tower October 1894 page 330 Archived from the original on February 9 2012 Retrieved October 4 2009 Wills 2006 pp 75 Pierson et al 1917 p 22 a b c Rutherford 1917a p 16 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 p 48 Allegheny City was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1909 a b Grizzuti Harrison 1978 Penton 1997 p 39 Gruss 2003 p 17 Girl s midnight visit to Pastor Russell Brooklyn Eagle August 14 1909 His wife whom he married 30 years ago when she was Maria F Ackley obtained a limited divorce from him in Pittsburg on the ground of cruelty The judge who decided for Mrs Russell granted her 100 a month alimony Pastor Russell was slow in coming to the front with payments and finally stopped paying alimony altogether An order was ordered for the pastor s arrest in Pittsburg but Brooklyn is a comfortable enough place and Pastor Russell didn t like going back to Pittsburg where a yawning prison awaited him He said that his friends had paid the alimony anyhow and that he was purged of contempt of court thereby Gruss 2003 pp 25 27 Pierson et al 1917 pp 5 6 a b Pierson et al 1917 pp 4 Rutherford 1917a pp 12 Rutherford 1917a pp 22 23 Rutherford 1917a pp 14 15 Pierson et al 1917 pp 9 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 pp 68 Chapter 6 A Time of Testing 1914 1918 Macmillan 1957 pp 106 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1975 pp 93 94 Part 1 United States of America Rogerson 1969 pp 39 Wills 2006 pp 175 176 Consolation September 4 1940 pg 25 as cited by Penton pg 61 Wills 2006 pp 201 Watchtower June 15 1938 a b George D Chryssides Jehovah s Witnesses Continuity and Change p 143 Amendments to articles II III VII VIII and X were passed unanimously with more than 225 000 votes cast the amendments to article V of the Charter affecting qualifications for membership of the society were passed 225 255 to 47 Articles of amendment to Watch Tower Society charter February 15 1945 Retrieved October 4 2009 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 pp 108 109 chapter 9 Keep Holding Men of That Sort Dear The Watchtower October 15 2015 p 3 The Governing Body members make the final decisions but the helpers implement the committee s direction and carry out whatever assignments they are given The helpers accompany Governing Body members to special and international conventions They may also be assigned to visit branch offices as headquarters representatives Helpers to Governing Body Committees Publishing Committee Don Adams Writing Committee Robert Ciranko Charter of Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society 1881 signed in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania by Charles Taze Russell Albert Delmont Jones William Henry Conley and Joseph Lytel Lytle Russell a b At 6 a m Thursday September 25 1947 Charles A Wise finished his life work upon earth at the age of 84 years On January 4 1919 he was elected vice president of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society in which capacity he acted continuously until October 1 1941 his 79th year The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom October 15 1947 p 306 October 1 1941 N H Knorr for vice president 1942 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses pp 226 7 a b c Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 p 91 a b c d e f g h Revisions to Pennsylvania Charter November 25 1987 Brooklyn Heights Press March 15 1990 page 1 as cited by Edmond C Gruss 2003 pages 72 73 A 1990 news report stated that Brooklyn workers received 80 per month to buy personal needs See A sect grows in Brooklyn Philadelphia Inquirer August 2 1990 A sect grows in Brooklyn Philadelphia Inquirer August 2 1990 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses Watch Tower Bibel and Track Society 2012 p 55 Penton 1997 p 231 Beckford James A 1975 The Trumpet of Prophecy A Sociological Study of Jehovah s Witnesses Oxford Basil Blackwell p 83 ISBN 0 631 16310 7 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 pp 27 a b Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 pp 47 48 Watch Tower March 1 1909 pages 67 68 a b Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 p 115 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 pp 97 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 pp 234 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 pp 253 255 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 pp 292 The Watchtower September 1 1989 page 29 a b c d e The Watchtower December 1 1982 page 23 a b c d e The Watchtower April 15 1996 page 24 Awake April 22 1989 pages 25 27 In fact the Towers 124 Columbia Heights 107 Columbia Heights and 119 Columbia Heights which accommodate nearly 2 000 of the family are connected by underground tunnels Centennial of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society 1984 pages 8 9 New Shipping Facilities of Jehovah s Witnesses Awake August 22 1987 pages 16 18 a b Jehovah s Witnesses sell the former Hotel Bossert Yearbook Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1988 page 25 Awake 1989 April 22 pp 23 24 a b Wallkill and Warwick Projects Moving Ahead JW org News May 13 2013 a b Awake February 22 1987 pages 25 27 Watchtower project grows in Patterson New York Times April 18 1983 1993 Retrieved October 3 2009 Watchtower Society may move some NY offices WCAX website March 26 2009 Retrieved October 3 2009 a b c A Witness to the future as Watchtower buys land upstate The Brooklyn Paper April 2 2009 Retrieved October 3 2009 Watchtower s move to Warwick Not anytime soon Brooklyn Daily Eagle October 24 2011 The Watchtower is getting tired of being shown the door in Brooklyn Heights The New York Observer October 25 2011 a b Historic Turning Point After Century in Brooklyn Watchtower Pulls Out of Heights Brooklyn Heights February 23 2010 The Witnesses Leave Then What Brooklyn Daily Eagle February 24 2010 Town OKs impact plan for Jehovah s Witnesses Times Herald Record July 17 2012 Witnesses to Relocate World Headquarters jw org News August 15 2012 Warwick OKs Watchtower Site Recordonline com Times Herald Record July 19 2013 Sunkin Alyssa August 25 2011 Watchtower Buys Another Parcel Times Herald Record Suffern tenants must move after Jehovah s Witnesses group buys building Lohud com June 12 2013 Jehovah s Witnesses buy Fishkill apartments Poughkeepie Journal December 22 2014 Increased Activity at United States Bethel Our Kingdom Ministry September 2003 a b c d e f Watchtower to sell 6 Brooklyn Heights properties Brooklyn Daily Eagle April 26 2007 Retrieved October 3 2009 a b c Selloff But Witnesses say they will remain kings of Kings The Brooklyn Paper May 12 2007 Retrieved October 3 2009 Yearbook 1991 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society page 10 Have a seat in the Standish The Brooklyn Paper December 15 2007 Retrieved October 3 2009 a b Different Building Same Buyer for Witnesses Group with big Brooklyn plan snaps up property Second Witnesses property fetches 4 1M Praise God Another Watchtower Property Sells Watchtower Sells Yet Another Heights Property Brownstoner Brooklyn Inside and Out November 30 2012 New York Post Brooklyn Blog May 8 2012 Brooklyn s Bossert Hotel could become a hotel again The Real Deal News Nov 12 2012 Chetrit Bistricer pay 81 million for Brooklyn s Bossert Hotel Jehovah s Witnesses Sell First Property for 7 1 million Latest Witnesses owned property in Brooklyn Heights hits the market THE REAL DEAL July 24 2012 Watchtower Sells 67 Remsen Street for 3 25 million Brooklyn Heights Blog October 10 2012 Witnesses put prime Dumbo site on the block Crain s New York Business June 4 2012 Jehovah s Witnesses Sell Latest Dumbo Development Site for 31M The Real Deal April 25 2013 a b c Brooklyn Bridge Park Developers Jostling for a piece of Brooklyn Bridge Park The Real Deal June 10 2013 Watchtower Society selling five more properties in Brooklyn NY THE REAL DEAL Sept 16 2011 Big Deal Jehovah s Witnesses List Prime Properties The New York Times City Room September 16 2011 Witnesses knocking on 375M bldg sale New York Post July 7 2013 Witnesses Sell Their Longest Held Property in Brooklyn Heights Jw org Retrieved May 7 2022 Jehovah s Witnesses sell 124 Columbia Heights to Florida Panthers owner Vincent Viola May 2 2016 Jehovah s Witnesses Brooklyn Headquarters for Sale The New York Times January 31 2016 Retrieved May 7 2022 Jehovah s Witnesses lock down deal for 700M Brooklyn plot New York Post April 16 2016 Jehovah s Witnesses Sell 25 30 Columbia Heights Buildings in Brooklyn New York Jw org August 5 2016 Retrieved May 7 2022 Nonko Emily August 4 2016 Jehovah s Witnesses Watchtower building in Brooklyn sells for 340M Curbed NY Ny curbed com Retrieved May 7 2022 Hallelujah Jehovah s Witnesses land sell off has Brooklyn dreaming big Crain s New York Business October 16 2011 No longer Vatican City for Watchtower Brooklyn watches jehovahs retreat Brooklyn Daily Eagle October 9 2013 Bible Truth Triumphs Amid Tradition The Watchtower May 15 1985 page 27 Your Will Be Done on Earth The Watchtower 1960 page 30 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 p 33 Building to Jehovah s Glory The Watchtower May 1 1979 pages 26 29 2012 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses p 32 33 55 Brother Barry died on July 2 1999 while having a direct part in serving a district convention in Hawaii The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom October 1 1999 p 16 Booth died on January 8 1996 according to The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom June 15 1996 p 32 The meeting after Franz death occurred on December 30 1992 according to The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom March 15 1993 p 32 Amendments to Charter of Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania signed on November 22 1994 by Secretary Treasurer Lyman Alexander Swingle AT THE conclusion of the annual meeting of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania on October 7 2000 a special announcement was made M embers of the Governing Body of Jehovah s Witnesses who had been serving as directors and officers voluntarily stepped aside from the boards of directors of all the corporations used by the faithful and discreet slave in the United States Responsible brothers of the other sheep class were elected as replacements The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom January 15 2001 p 31 Exempt Organization Business Income Tax Return 2010 p 9 a b Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Nonprofit Corporation Information Update 2014 LARA Corporations Online Filing System Retrieved October 28 2023 Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Nonprofit Corporation Annual Report 2016 LARA Corporations Online Filing System October 12 2016 Retrieved October 28 2023 a b c Annual Report Required by Section 911 Act 162 Public Act of 1982 PDF LARA Corporations Online Filing System September 16 2019 Retrieved October 28 2023 A charter of incorporation for Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society was granted December 13 1884 The incorporators are the Directors named below Directors C T Russell Pres M F Russell Sec and Treas W C McMillan W I Mann Vice Pres J B Adamson J F Smith Zion s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence January 1885 p 1 reprints p 707 a b c d e f g h Organization of the Work The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence December 1 1916 p 391 reprints p 6024 Two days after his C T Russell s death the Board met and elected Brother A N Pierson as a member of the Board to fill the vacancy caused by Brother Russell s change The seven members of the Board as now constituted are A I Ritchie W E Van Amburgh H C Rockwell J D Wright I F Hoskins A N Pierson and J F Rutherford a b c d e f g h Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 p 65 2 So two days after Russell s death the board of directors met and elected A N Pierson to be a member The seven members of the board at that point were A I Ritchie W E Van Amburgh H C Rockwell J D Wright I F Hoskins A N Pierson and J F Rutherford a b c d The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence November 1 1917 p 330 The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence January 15 1918 p 23 a b c The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence January 15 1919 p 24 The Society s annual meeting in 1919 Jan 4 in Pittsburgh reelected J F Rutherford President and W E Van Amburgh Secretary Treasurer But the others elected to the Board of Directors viz C A Wise Vice President R H Barber were freer to carry out their responsibilities When the imprisoned leaders were released Barber resigned The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom October 15 1939 pp 316 317 a b The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence January 15 1920 p 30 a b I therefore take pleasure in nominating for Directors the following J F Rutherford C A Wise W E Van Amburgh A H Macmillan Hugo H Riemer J A Baeuerlein C H Anderson The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence December 15 1923 p 383 Pursuant to notice duly given as provided by law and by the charter and by laws of the Society the annual meeting of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society was held at Memorial Hall Pittsburgh Pa at ten o clock Monday November 1st 1926 Thereupon Brother C H Anderson arose and stated to the corporate members that he was so situated that he could not give personal attention to the duties as a member of the Board of Directors and therefore withdrew his name 1927 Year Book of the International Bible Students Association pp 33 34 and The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence December 1 1926 p 381 1930 Year Book of the International Bible Students Association p 17 Martin died at his post on September 23 1932 at the age of fifty four years God s Kingdom of a Thousand Years Has Approached pp 245 246 On October 31 1932 he Sullivan was made a member of the board of directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom September 15 1974 p 554 Year Book of Jehovah s Witnesses for 1936 pp 192 193 a b The corporation the WATCH TOWER BIBLE amp TRACT SOCIETY pursuant to its charter and by laws and the laws of the State of Pennsylvania held its annual meeting at Pittsburgh North Side Allegheny County Pennsylvania on the first day of October A D 1938 at which annual meeting a Board of Directors was elected as follows to wit J F Rutherford C A Wise W E Van Amburgh H H Riemer T J Sullivan Wm P Heath Jr and Grant Suiter to hold office for a period of three years or until their successors are duly elected 1939 Year Book of Jehovah s Witnesses p 195 Grant Suiter finished his earthly course the morning of November 22 and announcement of this was made to the Bethel family at Brooklyn and Watchtower Farms following morning worship and breakfast that morning The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom February 1 1984 p 9 No replacing director for Suiter was mentioned The following brethren were put in nomination J F Rutherford T J Sullivan N H Knorr Grant Suiter W E Van Amburgh W P Heath Jr H H Riemer 1942 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses p 227 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1975 p 196 On June 8 1977 after an illness of some months Nathan H Knorr president of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania since January 13 1942 succumbed at Watchtower Farms Wallkill New York Awake August 22 1977 p 29 No replacing director for Knorr was mentioned On January 13 1942 a special meeting was called of the board of directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society Pennsylvania corporation and the board of directors of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society Inc New York corporation A joint meeting was held at Brooklyn New York for the election of a president The boards of directors were notified of the passing of Brother J F Rutherford as president January 8 1942 and the purpose of this meeting was to fill this vacancy The joint boards unanimously elected Nathan H Knorr as president of both corporations This caused a vacancy in the office of vice president whereupon Hayden C Covington was unanimously elected as vice president of the two corporations 1943 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses p 225 In 1940 Hayden C Covington then the Society s legal counsel and one of the other sheep with the earthly hope was elected a director of the Society John 10 16 He served as the Society s vice president from 1942 to 1945 At that time Brother Covington stepped aside as a director The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah Kingdom January 1 2001 page 28 1945 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses p 192 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 p 622 3 In 1916 W E Van Amburgh declared This great worldwide work is not the work of one person It is God s work Although he saw others turn away he remained firm in that conviction right down till his death in 1947 at 83 years of age It was also announced that M G Henschel was elected by the board of directors to fill the vacancy made on the board by the death of W E Van Amburgh 1947 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses p 223 We would like to note here that John Otto Groh was elected a director of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania on April 5 1965 to fill the term of Brother H H Riemer who died March 31 1965 1966 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses p 289 IN THE early morning hours of Thursday January 23 1975 John Otto Groh ended forty one years of devoted service to Jehovah his God The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom March 15 1975 p 190 No replacing director for Groh was mentioned T J Sullivan who has been a faithful and beloved brother and director of the Society for approximately forty years had found it necessary to resign on September 5 1973 A few weeks earlier the board of directors had accepted his resignation so now it was necessary to recommend another director in his place W K Jackson s name was put in nomination On October 2 the members of the board of directors met for the purpose of electing officers for the ensuing year 1974 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses pp 257 258 William Kirk Jackson was born September 16 1901 at Galveston Texas After a lifetime of devoted service to Jehovah God he completed his earthly course on December 13 1981 The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom February 15 1982 p 15 No replacing director for Jackson was mentioned Rogerson 1969 p 25 Passed Beyond the Vail Zion s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence April 15 1906 p 126 reprints p 3765 ANOTHER member of the Board Brother William M Wright passed beyond the vail into the Most Holy we trust on April 3 a b c The Corporation is to be managed by a Board of Directors consisting of seven members and the names and residences of those already chosen directors are we give the names of the present board and officers as follows Charles T Russell President W C McMillan Henry Weber Vice President J B Adamson Maria F Russell Sec y amp Treas Simon O Blunden Rose J Ball A Conspiracy Exposed extra edition of Zion s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence April 25 1894 p 56 Pilgrim Brother Henry Weber has passed beyond the vail to be forever with the Lord We rejoice on his behalf He finished his earthly course on Thursday January 21st at 2 15 p m at his home Oakland Md and was buried on Saturday the 23rd Hence although we will sadly miss our dear brother as a friend and as a pilgrim and as a Vice President of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society nevertheless we sorrow not as others who have less substantial hopes Entered into his Rest Zion s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence February 1 1904 reprints p 3314 a b c d e The Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence November 1 1917 p 328 329 a b c d e A charter of incorporation for Zion s Watch Tower Tract Society was granted December 13 1884 The incorporators are the Directors named below Directors C T Russell Pres M F Russell Sec and Treas W C McMillan W I Mann Vice Pres J B Adamson J F Smith Zion s Watch Tower and Herald of Christ s Presence January 1885 p 1 reprints p 707 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1975 pp 65 66 During the trouble in 1894 Mrs C T Russell the former Maria Frances Ackley whom Russell had married in 1879 undertook a tour from New York to Chicago meeting with Bible Students along the way and speaking in her husband s behalf Being an educated intelligent woman she was well received when visiting the congregations at that time Mrs Russell was a director of the Watch Tower Society and served as its secretary and treasurer for some years Maria Frances Ackley had become a colaborer and a contributor of articles to the Watch Tower magazine Nearly eighteen years later in 1897 due to Watch Tower Society members objecting to a woman s teaching and being a member of the board of directors contrary to 1 Timothy 2 12 Russell and his wife disagreed about the management of the journal Zion s Watch Tower Thereupon she voluntarily separated herself The Watchtower Announcing Jehovah s Kingdom January 15 1955 p 46 Franz 2007 pp 614 654 Franz 2007 pp 69 124 You Must Be Holy Because Jehovah Is Holy The Watchtower February 15 1976 pp 119 125 as cited by R Franz In Search if Christian Freedom page 107 Would not a failure to respond to direction from God through his organization really indicate a rejection of divine rulership Do not be quickly shaken from your reason The Watchtower March 15 1986 pp 10 15 At which table are you feeding The Watchtower July 1 1994 pp 8 13 Franz 2007 pp 391 431 Gruss 2003 pp 110 114 Holden 2002 p 32Bibliography editPenton James M 1997 Apocalypse Delayed The Story of Jehovah s Witnesses 2nd ed University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 7973 3 Rogerson Alan 1969 Millions Now Living Will Never Die Constable London Wills Tony 2006 A People For His Name Lulu Enterprises ISBN 978 1 4303 0100 4 Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1975 1975 Yearbook of Jehovah s Witnesses Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1959 Jehovah s Witnesses in the Divine Purpose Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1993 Jehovah s Witnesses Proclaimers of God s Kingdom Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society Macmillan A H 1957 Faith on the March Prentice Hall Archived from the original on September 7 2009 Retrieved October 4 2009 Rutherford J F August 1 1917a Harvest Siftings PDF Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society Archived from the original PDF on July 15 2011 Retrieved July 19 2009 Rutherford J F October 1 1917b Harvest Siftings Part II PDF Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society Archived from the original PDF on July 15 2011 Retrieved July 19 2009 Pierson A N et al September 1 1917 Light After Darkness PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 15 2011 Retrieved July 21 2009 Johnson Paul S L November 1 1917 Harvest Siftings Reviewed PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 15 2011 Retrieved July 21 2009 Grizzuti Harrison Barbara 1978 Visions of Glory A History and a Memory of Jehovah s Witnesses Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7091 8013 5 Gruss Edmond C 2003 The Four Presidents of the Watch Tower Society Xulon Press ISBN 1 59467 131 1 Holden Andrew 2002 Jehovah s Witnesses Portrait of a Contemporary Religious Movement Routledge ISBN 0 415 26609 2 Franz Raymond 2007 Crisis of Conscience Commentary Press ISBN 978 0 914675 23 5 Botting Heather Gary Botting 1984 The Orwellian World of Jehovah s Witnesses University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 6545 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania amp oldid 1189443771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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