[3] Other founders and officers included ministers and reformers Adin Ballou[4] and Walter Walsh,[5] American Red Cross founder Clara Barton,[6] politician and author Belva Ann Lockwood, reformer Lucretia Mott,[7] Nobel Peace Prize winner Frédéric Passy,[8] editor Mary L. F. Ormsby,[9] and politician and educator John Wesley Hoyt.
[11] The UPU's motto was: "Remove the causes and abolish the custom of war, establish and live the principles of peace.
"[12] On a hill overlooking the Mystic River near Mystic, Connecticut, the UPU owned a grove and built a "Peace Temple" that could seat 1,000 people for annual summer gatherings that attracted such noted speakers as William Lloyd Garrison and Julia Ward Howe.
The grove eventually was mortgaged to pay for UPU programs and publications and then sold in 1914 to Mary Jobe Akeley.
[13] The property is now maintained as the Peace Sanctuary nature preserve, open daily from dawn to dusk.