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Sneinton United Methodist Free Church, Nottingham
The design for this building was selected in a competion won by the Nottingham architect W.H. Higginbottom (1868-1929). He designed a number churches for both the UMFC and the Wesleyans...
Gorton United Methodist Free Church
The building was designed in 1902 by Manchester and Bolton architects Potts, Son , and Hennings. Edward Potts (1839-1909) was from a family who had been founding members of the...
Openshaw United Methodist Free Church
This building is a bit of a mystery. According to The Building News it was designed in 1904 by Manchester and Bolton architects Potts, Son , and Hennings, and could...
Bolton Gilnow Road United Methodist Free Church
As can be seen from the illustration this chapel was built on a steep slope, with the Sunday School being on a lower floor, entered from down the side ....
Bacup Waterside United Methodist Free Church
The Building News described this chapel as being picturesquely situated on the side of a hill. It was built on Burnley Road, Bacup next to an existing chapel which was...
Armley United Methodist Free Church
This chapel, in Hall Road Armley, Leeds, was designed by Walter Hanstock (1842-1900) of Batley. It was intended to be built in Leeds red pressed facing bricks with park Spring...
Waverley Park Methodist New Connexion chapel and schools
This chapel was the last one built by the MNC in London. The design by Robert Clamp of Woking was chosen in a limited competition. According to The Building News...
Longport Alexandra Road Methodist Free Church and Schools
This chapel was designed in 1901 to seat 250 people, but the partition between the church and assembly hall was collapsible, so that the accommodation could be augmented considerably if...
Batley Zion Methodist New Connexion chapel
This illustration originally appeared on page 195 of The centenary of the Methodist New Connexion 1797-1897 by T.D. Crothers, T. Rider, W. Longbottom and W.J. Townsend. London: Geo. Burroughs, 1897...
Dudley Wesley Methodist New Connexion chapel
This illustration oroginally appeared on page 212 of The centenary of the Methodist New Connexion 1797-1897 by T.D. Crothers, T. Rider, W. Longbottom and W.J. Townsend. London: Geo. Burroughs, 1897...
Sheffield South Street Methodist New Connexion chapel
This illustration originally appeared on page 65 of The centenary of the Methodist New Connexion 1797-1897 by T.D. Crothers, T. Rider, W. Longbottom and W.J. Townsend. London: Geo. Burroughs, 1897
Oswestry United Methodist Free Church
Oswestry United Methodist Free Church opened an iron tabernacle in Castle Street in 1868, having previously met in Gibraltar Place. By 1877 they had only 24 members, and . by...
Lightmoor Salem Methodist New Connexion chapel
Lightmoor Methodist New Connexion chapel was opened in 1865 although there had been a Methodist society there since 1849 The chapel was renovated in 1888 and again in 1896,. The...
Thornborrow, Henry of Peaselands, King's Meaburn (1784-1846)
Henry Thornborrow or Thornburrow ( contemporaries wrote down what they heard) farmed at Peaselands, near King’s Meaburn in Westmorland, with his sister Margaret. The family had become Methodists around 1800,...
Oakengates Bethesda United Methodist Free Church/Wesleyan Methodist chapel
Bethesda United Methodist Free Church was opened on 12th April 1863. In 1878 the chapel was sold to the Wesleyan Methodists, possibly on account of the area being industrial, and...
Wesleyan Reform Society (1849–1857)
Despite being instrumental in secession of 1,000 members to form the Protestant Methodists in 1828 and 21,000 to form the Wesleyan Association in 1837, Rev. Jabez Bunting did not mend...
Wesleyan Methodist Association (1835-1857)
The Wesleyan Association came into being through a proposal to establish a ‘theological institution’. In 1833 the Wesleyan Methodist Conference appointed a committee to draw up a plan for a...
The United Methodist Free Churches
This body was the product of a union of the Wesleyan Methodist Association and the Wesleyan Reform Society. The two denominations entered into negotiations in 1851 with agreement being reached...
Splitting hairs, or expressions of the nonconformist conscience?
The United Methodist Church was the result of the amalgamation of a number of groups which had split away from Wesleyan Methodism over a fifty year period. The reasons given...
Protestant Methodists (1827–1837)
The catalyst for the split in the Wesleyan Methodist Connexion which occurred in 1827 was a proposal to put an organ into the recently opened Brunswick Chapel in Leeds. This...
Methodist New Connexion
The New Connexion was inaugurated on 9 August 1797 at Ebenezer Chapel, Leeds by Alexander Kilham, William Thom, two other former Wesleyan Methodist itinerant preachers and thirteen laymen. Kilham had...
Shrewsbury Wesleyan Reform chapel
Following their split from the Wesleyan Methodist Connexion, a Wesleyan Reform society was established in Shrewsbury in 1850 and Shrewsbury Wesleyan Reform chapel opened in 1853. In time the society...
Oakengates Ebenezer Wesleyan Reform chapel
Oakengates Ebenezer chapel dates from 1855. Its building was a direct result of splits in the Wesleyan Methodist Connexion over who made the decisions and you can read some of...
Oakthorpe Silver Street Wesleyan Reform Chapel
Oakthorpe Silver Street Wesleyan Reform Chapel was marked on an OS map of 1900 but the building had become an institute by 1927-9 Sources OS 25 inch Derbyshire LXIII.7 1901-3...
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