New Barnet Methodist Chapel
New Barnet Methodist Chapel | |
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51°38′58.31″N 0°10′31.17″W / 51.6495306°N 0.1753250°W | |
Location | New Barnet, London |
Country | England |
Denomination | Methodist |
History | |
Founded | 1880 |
Architecture | |
Demolished | 1963 |
New Barnet Methodist Chapel was a Methodist chapel that once existed on the corner of Station Road and Lyonsdown Road in New Barnet, London.
History
[edit]The chapel opened in 1880 and replaced a temporary building elsewhere.[1] Some £4,000 was raised for its construction, with an additional £3,000 contribution from the Methodist Chapel Building Fund, making the newly established suburb of New Barnet one of the better off circuits and contrasting with poorer areas that struggled to raise the necessary monies for chapel building.[2] It was demolished in 1963[1] and replaced with an office building known as Kingmaker House.
The minister in the 1940s was Frederick Howell Everson, a Methodist author and former journalist.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Taylor, Pamela, & Joanna Corden. (1994) Barnet, Edgware, Hadley and Totteridge: A pictorial history. Chichester: Phillimore. Image caption 83. ISBN 0850339189
- ^ Michael R. Watts (2015). The Dissenters: The crisis and conscience of nonconformity. Clarendon Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-19-822969-8.
51°38′58.31″N 0°10′31.17″W / 51.6495306°N 0.1753250°W