The Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Treasure Coast has long been a spiritual home for liberal minded residents with a diverse array of beliefs, backgrounds and experiences – and an abiding commitment to inclusiveness.

In fact, our eclectic diversity is what helped the UUCTC grow from a small group of Martin County residents who met at each others’ homes into a solidly established congregation with a beautiful facility on a 4-acre campus that continues to grow and evolve.

in 1991, three residents saw the need for a UU Church in the area and placed a notice in the local paper inviting people of liberal religious values to meet at the home of Gretchen Hamme

rstein. That meeting took place February 21, 1992, and 14 people attended.  In October, 1993, a temporary Board of Directors was elected and on Easter Sunday 1994, the 35 members of Treasure Coast Unitarian Universalist Society held their charter meeting at the Martin County Library. Three years later, the ground was broken for the first of three phases of construction and in January, 2001, the doors to Heston Hall were opened to the public

We are a self-motivated spiritual group who think for ourselves, eschew dogma and recognize the value of wisdom gained through experience. We stand for love, justice and peace and have created a safe space where people of all faiths can engage in their search for religious truths and deep spiritual meaning.

In Unitarian Universalism, you can bring your whole self: your full identity, your questioning mind, your expansive heart.  Together, we create a force more powerful than one person or one belief system. As Unitarian Universalists, we do not have to check our personal background and beliefs at the door: we join together on a journey that honors everywhere we’ve been before.