Skip to content
Websites in the network
Search:
My Methodist History
My Primitive Methodists
My United Methodists
My Wesleyan Methodists
Wesleys Oxford
My Methodist History
My Primitive Methodists
My United Methodists
My Wesleyan Methodists
Wesleys Oxford
Twitter
Facebook
Contact us
Search:
My United Methodists
Sharing Methodist family history, memorabilia and research
Home
About
People
Chapels
Places
Topics
Research
Add your story
You are here:
Home
next
Search results for ''
Search results for ''
Search:
Keywords
Rose Hill United Methodist Free Church
Although opened as a Wesleyan Methodist Chapel in 1836, this congregation aligned with the Reform movement and by the end of 1860 was listed on the Oxford United Methodist Free...
Chapels of the United Methodist Free Churches 1898
Lists of United Methodist chapels are not as common as for some denominations, so we are fortunate that the United Methodist Free Churches marked their Diamond Jubilee by publishing the...
Ripley Circuit Wesleyan Methodist Preachers' Plan 1853-1854
This plan, covering November 1853-January 1854, was for a Wesleyan Reformers Circuit. The title is a good indication that their aim was to reform Wesleyan Methodism rather than leave it....
1907 Minutes of the First Conference of the United Methodist Church
The Minutes of the First, or Uniting, Conference are packed full of key documents relating to the new body. The first pdf (pages 1-35) contains the text of the United...
Rochdale Baillie Street United Methodist Free Church
Known as the Cathedral of Lancashire Methodism, Baillie Street UMFC was built in the poorest part of the town opened in 1837 it was a single storey building but not...
The Arminian Methodist Connexion
This short-lived denomination originated with a division in the Derby Wesleyan Methodist Circuit (their alternative name was the ‘Derby Faith Folk’) in January 1832. It was apparently strongly revivalistic in...
Registered Methodist chapels 1867
From 1852, the Registrar General was supposed to produce a list of all buildings registered for public worship (which excluded the established church). The 1867 list appears to be the...
Registered Methodist chapels 1829
In 1829 the House of Commons requested that all counties and dioceses supply “Returns of the Number of Places of Worship, not of the Church of England, in each parish,...
The Registration for worship of Methodist chapels
English law is a law of exceptions, and when it comes to the law relating to public worship the default position is that there is a state church, and so...
Carfury Bible Christian Chapel Cornwall
Carfury Bible Christian Chapel, Cornwall 1821. Closed in 1971. Now a dwelling....
Former Chapels and preaching places in the Oxford area
Click on the locations below to link to information on our sister site, Wesleys Oxford. Kirtlington Lower Heyford Upper Heyford – probably a licensed meeting place, registered in 1849 and...
Oxford United Methodist Church Local Preachers group photograph
Follow this link to our sister site to see details of the photograph of local preachers in the Oxford United Methodist Circuit, taken in 1908....
Kidlington United Methodist Free Church
Methodists have been meeting in Kidlington since 1809, when a house was first licensed for worship in 1809. In 1846 a former malt house in Mill End belonging to Thomas...
Woodstock Olivet United Methodist Free Church
G G Banbury was instrumental in the building of this chapel (on the east side of Oxford Street, Woodstock). It opened in 1868. Following Methodist Union in 1932, the Olivet...
Wilmslow Methodist New Connexion, Water Lane
Wilmslow Methodist New Connexion Water Lane. This church has been demolished. Nick Capey commented on 23/03/2021 This chapel was located on what is now Hawthorn Street (at one time, Pepper...
Oxford City Centre United Methodist Free Church Chapels
Originally meeting in hired premises in Little Clarendon Street, then at New Inn Hall Street, in 1851 the congregation moved to a former schoolroom in Paradise Square. In 1872, they...
Oxford Circuit Wesleyan Reform Preachers' Plan 1856
The Wesleyan Reform movement nationally coincided with disputes around leadership and authority at the local level and several prominent Wesleyans, preachers among them, resigned. In this preaching plan from 1856,...
Lawley Bank Mount Gilead Methodist New Connexion chapel
Lawley Bank Methodist New Connexion chapel was built in 1838-9 and had seating for about 200 people. Although the chapel was renovated in 1891, it closed around the 1910-12 and...
Madeley Wood Zion Methodist New Connexion chapel
Zion Methodist New Connexion chapel in Madeley Wood was built in 1827. . It opened in 1828. It accommodated 160 people. The chapel was rebuilt in 1876 but closed in...
Hollinswood Methodist New Connexion chapel
Hollinswood Methodist New Connexion chapel was built in 1832, rebuilt on the same site in 1853/4 & extended in 1865. It was known later known as “Zoar”. As membership declined,...
Brandlee Methodist New Connexion chapel
Brandlee Methodist New Connexion chapel in Dawley Green was built in 1822 following a religious revival in the area. The chapel was known at different times as “Beulah” and “Mount...
Curtis, Jonathan Paul ' Methodism and abstinence : a history of the Methodist Church and teetotalism' (2016)
Please follow this link to see this Thesis written by Jonathan Paul Curtis in 2016; University of Exeter. An alternative link may be found here The thesis is mainly concerned...
Tent Methodists (1814-1832)
This short lived group exhibited two of the main characteristics of those who broke away, or were expelled, from Wesleyan Methodism: local autonomy, but more importantly a belief that Methodism...
PAGE:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Next >
Last >>