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
Chapels and churches
next
Norfolk
next
A-K
A-K
Aylsham Wesleyan Reform Chapel, Norfolk
Following their secession from the Wesleyan chapel, Reformers met from March 1851 in a preaching room set up in a ...
Barroway Drove United Methodist Church, Norfolk
Barroway Drove is in the parish of Stow Bardolph. The chapel has, at various times, also been known as Bardolph ...
Castle Acre (Castleacre) Bible Christian Methodists
This West Country movement, which had split from the Primitive Methodists, opened their chapel on January 1st 1851, marking ‘the ...
Clenchwarton New Connexion and United Methodist Chapel, Norfolk
The Methodist New Connexion (King’s Lynn circuit) had a chapel in Clenchwarton by 1869. However, it is said that the ...
Crimplesham United Methodist Free Church, Norfolk
There is no record of a Wesleyan Society here from which the Free Methodists would have come; but come they ...
Cromer United Methodist Free Church, Norfolk
The Reformers were already occupying the Wesleyan chapel by 1851. They built their own around 1854 in what became Chapel ...
Dersingham Methodist New Connexion Chapel, Norfolk
Standing on Manor Road, this brick and carrstone chapel opened in 1851 as Methodist New Connexion; both the title and ...
Downham Market United Methodist Church, Norfolk
The Mount Tabor Chapel Standing on Bridge Street, this is a large edifice with an imposing, if timeworn, neo-classical façade. The ...
East Dereham United Methodist Church
East Dereham United Methodist chapel was on Norwich Road, on the corner with Bath Avenue. It opened in 1902 and, the ...
Fakenham United Methodist Free Church, Norfolk
By 1849, Reformers were dominant in Fakenham’s Wesleyan Society, and took full control of the Wesleyan chapel (former Congregational) in ...
Filby United Methodist Free Church
Joan Lee Saul has pieced together from a variety of sources the history of Methodism in Filby. You can read ...
Great Massingham United Methodist Free Church
Erected in 1853 on Station Road, this chapel was built by Reformers who seceded from the Wesleyan in the village. It ...
Harpley Methodist New Connexion Gospel Hall, Norfolk
A Wesleyan chapel of 1845 is recorded in the 1851 ecclesiastical census. The King’s Lynn Wesleyan Reform Society was active ...
Holt United Methodist Free Church, Norfolk
Holt’s Wesleyan Reformers were expelled from the Wesleyan Society in 1850. They temporarily used the former Wesleyan chapel of 1813, ...
King's Lynn New Connexion / United Methodist Chapel, Norfolk
The Methodist New Connexion had made its way into Lynn by 1854 and joined forces with the Wesleyan Reformers who, ...
King's Lynn United Methodist Free Church, Norfolk
Members of the King’s Lynn Wesleyan Methodist Association, which gave birth to Lynn’s Free Methodists, first occupied a chapel (unknown ...
King's Lynn Wesleyan Methodist Reform Chapels, Norfolk
The Lynn Wesleyan Reform Association separated from the Wesleyan body in 1849 and built their own chapel, the Ebenezer, on ...
Norfolk
Norfolk
A-K
L-Z