Warwickshire

Methodist New Connexion and United Methodist Free Church places of worship registered by 1867

Warwickshire - Methodist New Connexion chapels registered before 1867
This work incorporates historical material provided by the Great Britain Historical GIS Project and the University of Portsmouth through their web site A Vision of Britain through Time (https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/).
Warwickshire - United Methodist Free Church places of worship registered by 1867
This work incorporates historical material provided by the Great Britain Historical GIS Project and the University of Portsmouth through their web site A Vision of Britain through Time (https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/).

This is a list of chapels that had been registered by 1867, derived from ‘A list of places of meeting for public religious worship, certified to the Registrar General’.  Remember that registration was not compulsory. Evidence from other sources suggests that both denominations had another three chapels in the county. As registration was valid until cancelled, however, there may be duplication: i.e.  both the old and new chapels in a place may be listed, as with the Loveday Street chapel in Birmingham.  We have also discovered that the official location may not be the same as the name by which the chapel is commonly described.

In Warwickshire the Methodist New Connexion were restricted to Birmingham, whereas the United Methodist Free Churches had a wider presence.

Unless otherwise stated each of these places of worship is described as a chapel.

The numbers on the list relate to places, and match those on the map. The base map is provided under this licence

Use the search box to find out more about a chapel.

ChapelNotesDenominationRegistration District
Birmingham, Icknield Port RoadA room in the Globe WorksMNC1Birmingham
Birmingham, Mosely StreetMNC2Birmingham
Birmingham, Icknield Street, West LadywoodSchool and chapelMNC3Birmingham
Birmingham, Unett StreetMNC4Birmingham
Aston, Upper Trinity StreetWesleyan Reformers5Aston
Birmingham, Bath and Loveday StreetAssociation chapelUnited Methodist Free Churches6Birmingham
Birmingham, Loveday Street, Argyle RoomsMethodist Free Churches6Birmingham
Birmingham, Branston StreetWesleyan Reformers7Birmingham
Birmingham, Hope StreetWesleyan Reformers8Birmingham
Birmingham, Moor StreetMr Wilkins’s Building Society Club Room, back of Temperance HotelMethodist Free Churches9Birmingham
GlascoteA buildingUnited Methodist Free Churches10Tamworth
Leamington, Warwick StreetUnited Methodist Free Churches11Warwick
Nuneaton, Budgage Yard, Abbey StreetA building belonging to Thomas PayneFree Methodists12Nuneaton
Wilncote, EbenezerUnited Methodist Free Churches13Tamworth

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