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List of places of worship in Hastings

The borough of Hastings, one of six local government districts in the English county of East Sussex, has 50 extant places of worship serving a wide range of religious denominations. A further 30 buildings formerly used for public worship, but now closed or used for other purposes, also exist. The borough is made up of the ancient port and seaside resort of Hastings, the neighbouring planned resort of St Leonards-on-Sea (united with its former rival in 1888)[1] and their 19th- and 20th-century suburbs, some of which (such as Ore and Hollington) were autonomous villages until they were absorbed into the growing urban area. Ancient churches existed in the Old Town of Hastings and in the villages, although some were lost in the medieval era; growth stimulated by transport improvements and the popularity of sea bathing encouraged a rush of church-building in the Victorian era; and more churches and congregations were established throughout the 20th century, despite periods of stagnation and decline.

All Saints Church, one of two surviving medieval churches in the centre of Hastings, overlooks the Old Town.

A majority of residents of Hastings identify themselves as Christian, and churches representing many Christian denominations exist in the town. The largest number of these belong to the Church of England, the country's officially established church. Roman Catholic and Protestant Nonconformist churches of many types are also prevalent, and St Leonards-on-Sea has a mosque. The spread of housing inland in the 20th century, in suburbs such as Silverhill Park, Broomgrove and the vastly expanded Hollington (which was transformed from a haphazard collection of cottages among fields into a 1960s council estate), resulted in the founding of new churches, partly offsetting the loss through demolition of others in Hastings town centre.

Historic England or its predecessor English Heritage have awarded listed status to 25 current and former church buildings in Hastings. A building is defined as "listed" when it is placed on a statutory register of buildings of "special architectural or historic interest" in accordance with the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.[2] The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, a Government department, is responsible for this; Historic England, a non-departmental public body, acts as an agency of the department to administer the process and advise the department on relevant issues.[3] There are three grades of listing status. Grade I, the highest, is defined as being of "exceptional interest"; Grade II* is used for "particularly important buildings of more than special interest"; and Grade II, the lowest, is used for buildings of "special interest".[4]

Overview of Hastings and its places of worship edit

 
Hastings' location within East Sussex
 
St Mary Star of the Sea Church has served Catholics in Hastings since 1883.

Hastings is a seaside town on the southeast coast of England, facing the English Channel. The borough covers 2,972.4 hectares (7,345 acres; 11.477 sq mi) and had a population of 90,254 at the time of the 2011 United Kingdom census.[5] Hastings is most famous for the battle fought nearby in 1066, in which William the Conqueror's Norman army defeated the English troops of King Harold II,[6] but its recorded history is much longer: fifth-century origins have been attributed, Roman settlement on the site has never been proved but is considered likely,[7] and a town had developed by 928, when it was important enough to have its own mint.[8][9] By the 12th century, it was the main member of the Cinque Ports, and its castle dominated the cliff below which the ancient settlement developed.[10][11] There were seven churches in 1291, when Pope Nicholas IV ordered a survey of all places of worship in England, but decline set in during the 14th century and two French raids wrecked the town. By 1801, just two of the old churches—All Saints and St Clement's—survived.[10]

The common thread throughout the town's history has been fishing: in 1329 a priest was threatened with excommunication for failing to pay the Bishop of Chichester the 2,000 herring demanded by custom,[12] and a beach-based fishing fleet still exists in the 21st century.[13] The fishermen even had their own church from 1854 until World War II: the rectors of All Saints and St Clement's got together to provide a chapel of ease on the beach to serve their spiritual needs. The former St Nicholas' Church is now Hastings Fishermen's Museum.[14] The town's focus moved away from this industry and towards tourism and leisure from the early 19th century, though, as development spread west from the old town.[15] Improved transport opened the town up to day-trippers, especially from London; sea-bathing, promenading and other seaside leisure activities became increasingly fashionable; and James Burton capitalised on the demand for growth by founding an entirely new town, St Leonards-on-Sea, immediately west of Hastings—spurring its older rival into further growth.[8] The population rose from 2,982 to 6,051 between 1801 and 1821,[15] and the need to build more churches was recognised. In 1824, St Mary-in-the-Castle Church, which took its dedication from a ruined collegiate church in the castle grounds, was the first new Anglican church to be built outside Hastings Old Town.[10] Development was so rapid that Holy Trinity Church, the second town church in Hastings, had to be crowded into a "crazy site" when it was built in the 1850s.[16] St Leonards-on-Sea gained its first Anglican church, St Leonard's, in 1837, followed by St Mary Magdalen's Church in 1852. Rapid population growth continued throughout the 19th century: for example, the 1871 census recorded 29,289 residents, and there were 65,528 in 1901.[17] In response to this, 27 churches were built in Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea in the second half of the century. Some were intended for high-class, fashionable visitors and residents; others were developed "with missionary zeal to bring some hope of redemption to working-class areas".[18]

In 1897, an Act of Parliament brought several surrounding villages into the borough of Hastings; nine years earlier the same had happened to St Leonards-on-Sea.[1] Places such as Ore and Hollington had become suburbanised but retained ancient churches as well as gaining new ones: Ore's 12th-century St Helen's Church was ruined in the 19th century, but a replacement was built nearby[19] and a second, Christ Church (distinguished by the "very naughty turret" on its roof), was provided to serve the village's Victorian suburbs;[20] and Hollington's 13th-century church in the middle of a wood[21] was later supplemented by a second Anglican church after the scattered village was redeveloped into Hastings' largest council estate.[22]

Organised worship by the Roman Catholic community dates back to 1848, when the now disused St Michael's Chapel in St Leonards-on-Sea was opened for public use.[23] Permanent churches were opened in both Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea in the 1880s: at Hastings, the very tall, complex Free Gothic Revival St Mary Star of the Sea Church (1881–83, by Basil Champneys) was partly funded by poet Coventry Patmore[24] while the much more austere Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs, St Leonards-on-Sea (1888–89, by Charles Alban Buckler) replaced an earlier building by the same architect which had been destroyed by fire in 1887.[25] Hollington's 20th-century growth prompted the construction of the Church of the Holy Redeemer in 1934 and its major extension 50 years later.[26] In the suburbs, a convent chapel built in 1924 was used for public worship in Clive Vale for a time[27] (the last regular public Masses were celebrated in 1988),[28] and two permanent churches were built. In 1963, a chapel of ease to St Mary, Star of the Sea was registered in Ore,[29] followed by an additional church in Bulverhythe the next year.[30] Both have now closed: the Church of the Holy Ghost at Bulverhythe, latterly served from St Leonards-on-Sea, was closed in 1988 and deregistered the following year,[31] while the Church of the Holy Apostles at Ore went out of use in 1994.[32]

 
The Unitarian (left) and Quaker (right) meeting houses stand close together on South Terrace.

The borough has an array of Nonconformist places of worship. Protestant Dissenters were not universally welcomed at first: the town's first Congregational chapel, planned in 1807, had to be built in London and taken to the town by sea because no local firm wanted to build it. The weatherboarded chapel's successor survived until 1972.[23][33] Other early chapels were built for Baptists: Ebenezer Chapel was established in 1817 (it is now a house,[24] but the congregation has moved to another building)[34] and another opened on Wellington Square for General Baptists in 1838.[24] Residents of St Leonards-on-Sea have been served by St Leonard's Baptist Church since 1882,[25] and a church was registered in Halton in 1957.[35] The early Congregational chapel, situated in the old town, was supplemented by churches at Robertson Street (1856; rebuilt 1884–85), St Leonards-on-Sea (1863), Mount Pleasant Road at Blacklands (1878–79), Clive Vale (1887) and Bulverhythe (1895).[36] All of these joined the United Reformed Church upon its formation in 1972 except St Leonards-on-Sea: this instead became a Congregational Federation church, but it closed in the early 21st century.[37] Clive Vale United Reformed Church is still open, as is the 1970s successor (St Mark's) to the chapel at Blacklands;[36] Robertson Street is now a Pentecostal church;[38] and Bulverhythe is in secular use as a hall.[36] The United Reformed Church was formed by a merger between the Congregational Church and Presbyterian Church of England, and the latter's St Luke's Church (1857) remains in use.[39]

The Methodist Statistical Returns published in 1947[note 1] recorded the existence of eight Methodist chapels in Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea, all but one of which were of Wesleyan origin. At that time, the Hastings Circuit was responsible for Central Methodist Church, a 750-capacity building in the town centre, and outlying chapels in the Old Town (Wesley Chapel; capacity 268 worshippers), Halton (the Calvert Memorial Church; 500), Hollington (300) and Ore (St Helen's Methodist Church; 220).[41] The St Leonards and Bexhill Circuit was responsible for former Wesleyan chapels at Norman Road and Park Road (with space for 550 and 450 worshippers respectively) and a chapel on Newgate Road (150) which was originally Primitive Methodist.[42] Of these, only the Calvert Memorial and Park Road churches remain open. William Willmer Pocock's Central Methodist Church of 1875, on a "distinctive corner site", was demolished in 1980.[39] Bourne Street is now in commercial use,[43] the church on Norman Road went out of religious use in 2008,[44] Hollington closed in 2016 and merged with Park Road Church to form the present St Leonards Methodist Church,[45] and St Helen's Methodist Church at Ore shut in the same year and its congregation now worship in a community centre.[46] The former Primitive Methodist chapel was the earliest closure, being converted into a hall for secular use in 1939.[39]

 
The distinctive Elim Pentecostal church was built in the 1980s.

Various Brethren groups have been prominent since the early 20th century. Rainbow Hall in Silverhill[47] (registered in 1930) was succeeded in 1962 by the present Alexandra Chapel for Christian (Open) Brethren.[48][49] The former Gospel hall at Castle Hill Road[50] no longer exists, but another on Stonefield Road (registered for marriages in 1947)[51] remains, although no longer in religious use. Brethren in St Leonards-on-Sea met in hired rooms in Cross Street[52] before moving to a Gospel hall on Norman Road by 1935[53] and then to a new building, the Ponswood Road Room, in 1953[54] (this building is now Ebenezer Baptist Church). A meeting room (no longer extant) was also registered on Stockleigh Road in 1966.[55] The Plymouth Brethren Christian Church sect use a meeting room (1972) off the Battle Road.[56]

Many other religious groups are represented in the borough. Quakers and Unitarians meet in buildings a short distance apart on South Terrace: the Quaker meeting house dates from 1864, while the Unitarian church was built three years later and opened in 1868.[39] The Salvation Army have met nearby since the 1880s; their citadel was enlarged in 1937, two years after a second was opened in a converted cinema in Ore.[57][58] Places of worship for Spiritualists and Seventh-day Adventists were registered in 1944[59] and 1968 respectively.[60] For Jehovah's Witnesses, Kingdom Halls were registered in St Leonards-on-Sea in 1976[61] (no longer in use), Hollington in 1988[62] and Ore in 2007.[63] An Elim Pentecostal church was registered in 1981, the His Place Community Church—an independent Pentecostal group founded in 1984—now use the former United Reformed church in Robertson Street,[38] and the Bethel Full Gospel Church (Assemblies of God Pentecostal) has occupied a building in Halton since 2003.[64] Latter-day Saints and Christian Scientists registered buildings in Hollington and Silverhill respectively in 1970;[65][66] the former was replaced by a permanent meetinghouse in 1990,[67] while the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea was dissolved in 1996 and the building is in alternative use.[66] Evangelical and non-denominational churches include The Tabernacle (1854),[39] The Independent Church (formerly Kenilworth Evangelical Mission; registered 1977)[68] The King's Church (registered 1995)[69] and Sonrise Church, which occupies a former Anglican church building;[70] another redundant Anglican church was converted into St Mary Magdalene's Greek Orthodox Church in the early 1980s.[27] Muslims converted a building in St Leonards-on-Sea into a mosque and community centre in the 1980s.[71]

Religious affiliation edit

According to the 2011 United Kingdom Census, 90,254 people lived in Hastings. Of these, 51.89% identified themselves as Christian, 1.28% were Muslim, 0.53% were Buddhist, 0.47% were Hindu, 0.16% were Jewish, 0.04% were Sikh, 0.74% followed another religion, 36.64% claimed no religious affiliation and 8.26% did not state their religion. The proportion of Christians was lower than that of England as a whole (59.38%), while affiliation with Buddhism and faiths in the "any other religion" category was more widespread in Hastings: the corresponding figures for England were 0.45% and 0.43% respectively. The proportion of people with no religious affiliation was also higher than the national figure of 24.74%. The other religions had much lower proportions of followers than in England overall: the corresponding national percentages were 5.02% for Islam, 1.52% for Hinduism, 0.79% for Sikhism and 0.49% for Judaism.[72][73]

Administration edit

All Anglican churches in Hastings are part of the Diocese of Chichester, whose cathedral is at Chichester,[74] and the Lewes and Hastings Archdeaconry—one of three subdivisions which make up the next highest level of administration.[75] In turn, this archdeaconry is divided into eight deaneries.[75] One of these, the Rural Deanery of Hastings, covers the whole borough and includes all 16 open Anglican churches. St Leonard's Church at St Leonards-on-Sea and All Souls Church at Clive Vale, both closed in the early 21st century, were also part of this Rural Deanery.[76]

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton, whose cathedral is at Arundel,[77] administers the borough's three Roman Catholic churches. All three—St Mary Star of the Sea at Hastings, St Thomas of Canterbury and the English Martyrs at St Leonards-on-Sea and the Church of the Holy Redeemer at Hollington—are part of the Eastbourne and St Leonards-on-Sea Deanery, one of 11 deaneries in the diocese. The churches at St Leonards-on-Sea and Hollington are part of a joint parish.[78]

The four United Reformed Churches in the borough as of 2011, at Robertson Street (now closed), Clive Vale, Silverhill and St Mark's, were part of the West Kent and East Sussex Synod Area of the Church—a group of 32 churches within the Southern Synod region.[79]

The Hastings, Bexhill & Rye Methodist Circuit, a circuit in the Methodist Church's South East District, covers 12 churches of that denomination in the Hastings area. Three of those are in the borough: the Calvert Memorial church at Halton, the church at St Helen's (now housed in Ore Community Centre following the closure of the chapel building in 2016),[46] and the former Park Road Church in Bohemia (now called St Leonards-on-Sea Methodist Church).[80]

Current places of worship edit

Current places of worship
Name Image Location Denomination/
Affiliation
Grade Notes Refs
All Saints Church
(More images)
  Old Town
50°51′33″N 0°35′47″E / 50.8593°N 0.5964°E / 50.8593; 0.5964 (All Saints Church, Old Town)
Anglican II* The medieval town's "upper church", so called because of its hilltop position, is an early 15th-century Perpendicular Gothic structure of rubble and flint. William Butterfield's restoration of 1870 included a large east window. Titus Oates was a curate in the 17th century. [81][82]
[83][84]
[85][86]
Christ Church
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  Blacklands
50°52′01″N 0°34′40″E / 50.8669°N 0.5777°E / 50.8669; 0.5777 (Christ Church, Blacklands)
Anglican II* Henry Carpenter's Decorated Gothic church of 1881, for the high-class suburb of Blacklands, is dominated by its tower (completed in 1890) but has elaborate interior fittings, such as Hardman & Co.'s chancel work and a Carrara marble font depicting an angel bearing a shell. [23][81]
[20][87]
[88][89]
[90]
Christ Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′14″N 0°33′33″E / 50.8538°N 0.5593°E / 50.8538; 0.5593 (Christ Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Anglican II* Arthur Blomfield's tall, Early English-style church of 1875 (consecrated nine years later) replaced an earlier building which still stands on the south side. Always High church in its liturgical tradition, its first vicar Rev. Charles Lyndhurst Vaughan was key to the town's religious and social development. [23][81]
[20][91]
[92][93]
[94][95]
[96][97]
Holy Trinity Church
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′18″N 0°34′36″E / 50.8551°N 0.5767°E / 50.8551; 0.5767 (Holy Trinity Church, Hastings)
Anglican II* The second 19th-century Anglican church in Hastings was planned for Cambridge Road, but problems with the site caused Samuel Sanders Teulon to reconfigure his design to an awkward ("crazy", to Nikolaus Pevsner) location nearby. The stone and rubble exterior conceals a highly ornate interior. The dedication recalls a lost 12th-century priory nearby. [23][81]
[10][16]
[98][99]
[100][101]
[102]
St Clement's Church
(More images)
  Old Town
50°51′27″N 0°35′27″E / 50.8574°N 0.5909°E / 50.8574; 0.5909 (St Clement's Church, Old Town)
Anglican II* The "Town church" as it is known locally was rebuilt after the French attacks on Hastings in 1377 and restored in 1875 by William Butterfield, who did the same to neighbouring All Saints Church. The vast range of memorials in the Perpendicular Gothic church include one for the marriage of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Elizabeth Siddal. [81][82]
[103][104]
[105][106]
St John the Evangelist's Church
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  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′21″N 0°33′11″E / 50.8559°N 0.5530°E / 50.8559; 0.5530 (St John the Evangelist's Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Anglican II* Only the octagonal tower survived World War II bombing; the rest of Arthur Blomfield's 1881 brick and stone church serving Upper St Leonards was rebuilt by Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel in 1951. English Heritage describe it as a "particularly eclectic mix". [81][27]
[107][108]
[109][110]
[111][112]
St Matthew's Church
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  Silverhill
50°51′56″N 0°33′20″E / 50.8656°N 0.5556°E / 50.8656; 0.5556 (St Matthew's Church, Silverhill)
Anglican II* Founded on St Matthew's Day (21 September) 1860 and opened the following year, local architect George Voysey's original church was replaced by John Loughborough Pearson's much larger red-brick Gothic Revival structure in 1885. Internal features include Aston Webb's reredos and a sturdy king post nave roof of local timber. [81][27]
[113][114]
[115][116]
[117][118]
Christ Church
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′20″N 0°36′30″E / 50.8722°N 0.6082°E / 50.8722; 0.6082 (Christ Church, Ore)
Anglican II The rector of Ore helped to fund a new church in the village centre to serve the influx of working-class people in the mid-19th century. A.D. Gough's Decorated Gothic stone church dates from 1858 and is distinguished by a large bell turret, a feature described as "very naughty" by Pevsner. Bomb damage in 1943 was soon repaired. [23][81]
[20][119]
[120][121]
St Leonard's Church (Church in the Wood)
(More images)
  Hollington
50°52′27″N 0°32′17″E / 50.8743°N 0.5380°E / 50.8743; 0.5380 (St Leonard's Church (Church in the Wood), Hollington)
Anglican II A chapel stood on this isolated site in the middle of a wood in the 11th century, and the present building retains 13th-century work despite major restoration in 1865. The short tower is partly tile-hung and has a pyramid-shaped cap. Jean-Baptiste Capronnier designed the stained glass. [81][122]
[123][124]
[22][125]
[126][127]
[128]
Emmanuel Church
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  West Hill
50°51′42″N 0°35′21″E / 50.8616°N 0.5892°E / 50.8616; 0.5892 (Emmanuel Church, West Hill)
Anglican The local architecture firm of Jeffrey & Skiller designed and built the West Hill area's Anglican church in 1873. It stands at a high point in Hastings and has significant townscape presence. The stone Early English-style building lost its adjacent vicarage to a bomb in 1942. [23][81]
[129][130]
[131]
St Anne's Church
(More images)
  Hollington
50°52′20″N 0°32′36″E / 50.8723°N 0.5434°E / 50.8723; 0.5434 (St Anne's Church, Hollington)
Anglican The interwar and postwar expansion of Hollington, which by the 1960s had become Hastings' largest council estate, led to improved church provision in the form of this small flint and brick building, founded in 1956 and built over several years by the Brighton firm of Denman & Sons. It is in the parish of Church in the Wood. [81][121]
[132][133]
[134][135]
St Barnabas' Church
(More images)
  Broomgrove
50°52′25″N 0°35′37″E / 50.8736°N 0.5937°E / 50.8736; 0.5937 (St Barnabas' Church, Broomgrove)
Anglican Local architect Hector Sweatman's design for a new church in the parish of St Helen's in Ore was accepted in 1954, although proposals for a church on this site dated back to 1949. The brick building has flexible space for religious and community activities. [81][136]
[137][138]
[139]
St Ethelburga's Church
(More images)
  Bulverhythe
50°51′09″N 0°32′01″E / 50.8524°N 0.5337°E / 50.8524; 0.5337 (St Ethelburga's Church, Bulverhythe)
Anglican John B. Mendham's modest Gothic Revival church dates from 1929 and serves the Bulverhythe area of the seafront west of St Leonards-on-Sea in the far southwest of the borough. The brown-brick structure is dominated by a large Art Deco-style tower with thin pinnacles set below the top of the bell tower stage. [81][27]
[20][140]
[141]
St Helen's Church
(More images)
  St Helen's
50°52′55″N 0°35′14″E / 50.8820°N 0.5871°E / 50.8820; 0.5871 (St Helen's Church, St Helen's)
Anglican Built to replace its ruinous 12th-century predecessor nearby, this church was designed in 1869 by Edgar Brock, many of whose Sussex churches were executed in partnership with the Habershon brothers. The stone used to build it was quarried locally. Its distinctive spire was removed in 1966 and replaced with a small cap. [81][27]
[19][142]
[143][144]
[145][146]
St John the Evangelist's Church
(More images)
  Hollington
50°52′44″N 0°33′05″E / 50.8788°N 0.5513°E / 50.8788; 0.5513 (St John the Evangelist's Church, Hollington)
Anglican E. Alexander Wyon's Early English-style church dates from 1865 and was parished five years later. Blue and pale (Bath) stonework predominates. Local philanthropist Countess Waldegrave founded the church on land provided by local men who realised that Hollington's focus of development was moving away from Church in the Wood. [81][27]
[22][146]
[147][148]
St Peter and St Paul's Church
(More images)
  Silverhill Park
50°52′45″N 0°34′09″E / 50.8791°N 0.5692°E / 50.8791; 0.5692 (St Peter and St Paul's Church, Silverhill Park)
Anglican This small yellow-brick church, with a many-sided layout and a copper roof, was opened in 1969 on Parkstone Road in the postwar Silverhill Park estate. It is in the parish of St John the Evangelist, Hollington. [81][149]
[150][151]
[26]
Wellington Square Baptist Church
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′22″N 0°34′55″E / 50.8560°N 0.5819°E / 50.8560; 0.5819 (Wellington Square Baptist Church, Hastings)
Baptist II* Wellington Square was an early high-class residential development in Hastings: it was built on the site of some lime kilns in the 1820s. A Baptist church was integrated into it in 1838 and was registered for marriages in May 1841. Arched sash windows, stucco and an unbroken parapet and moulded cornice give a Neoclassical appearance. [36][81]
[24][152]
[153][154]
[155][156]
[157]
St Leonard's Baptist Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′24″N 0°33′42″E / 50.8566°N 0.5616°E / 50.8566; 0.5616 (St Leonards Baptist Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Baptist II Thomas Elworthy's Baptist church of 1882 is an ornate Classical/Italianate design with pairs of Corinthian pilasters on its three-bay façade, a balustrade at first-floor level, round-headed windows, an elaborate pediment and extensive use of terracotta decoration. The gallery inside is supported on slender iron columns. The chapel was registered for marriages in February 1885. [36][81]
[154][25]
[158][159]
[160]
Halton Baptist Church
(More images)
  Halton
50°52′06″N 0°36′04″E / 50.8682°N 0.6011°E / 50.8682; 0.6011 (Halton Baptist Church, Halton)
Baptist This modern Baptist church, built in the Vernacular style, stands on the Old London Road on the way to Ore village. It was registered for worship in April 1957 and for marriages 14 months later. [81][161]
[35][162]
[163]
Sonrise Church at St Peter's
(More images)
  Bohemia
50°51′39″N 0°33′41″E / 50.8608°N 0.5614°E / 50.8608; 0.5614 (St Peter's Church, Bohemia)
Evangelical II* Bohemia's former Anglican church is tall, long and lacks a spire or tower (one was planned). It was built in 1885 in the Early English style by James Brooks, and is red-brick inside and out—although much use is made of alabaster for wall finishes and internal fixtures. It was declared redundant by the Diocese of Chichester in November 2011 and has since been occupied by Sonrise Church, an independent Evangelical congregation (for whom it was registered for marriages in February 2016). [16][81]
[36][164]
[165][166]
[70][167]
[168]
King's Church
(More images)
  St Helen's
50°53′13″N 0°34′12″E / 50.8869°N 0.5699°E / 50.8869; 0.5699 (King's Church, St Helen's)
Evangelical This Evangelical church has its origins in a house church established in 1974. Terry Virgo, founder of the Newfrontiers movement, was involved later, and as the congregation grew it moved from Priory Road in Halton and took over a building previously used for indoor cricket. [81][169]
[69][170]
The Tabernacle
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′20″N 0°34′38″E / 50.8555°N 0.5771°E / 50.8555; 0.5771 (The Tabernacle, Hastings)
Evangelical Charles Pavey founded this church in the town centre in 1854 for an Independent Calvinistic congregation, for whom it was registered for marriages in April 1856. By the 1970s it had become a Free Evangelical church, and the interior fittings were reordered to cater for the different form of worship. The exterior is unchanged, however: the yellow-brick and stone building has a steeply gabled porch set below five tall lancet windows. In November 2018 the building was taken on by the Church Growth Trust with the aim of planting a new Evangelical church into it. [149][39]
[81][154]
[171][172]
[173][174]
Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′23″N 0°33′54″E / 50.8565°N 0.5649°E / 50.8565; 0.5649 (Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Roman Catholic II The Roman Catholic community moved from the chapel at the Holy Child of Jesus Convent into a new church nearby in 1866. It burnt down in 1887; Charles Alban Buckler's new Gothic Revival building was ready in 1889. Its plain ironstone and Bath stone exterior hides an elaborately decorated interior with rib vaults and wall murals. [36][81]
[16][175]
[176][177]
[178][25]
St Mary Star of the Sea Church
(More images)
  Old Town
50°51′34″N 0°35′40″E / 50.8594°N 0.5944°E / 50.8594; 0.5944 (St Mary Star of the Sea Church, Old Town)
Roman Catholic II In 1882 poet Coventry Patmore, living in Hastings at the time, commissioned his friend Basil Champneys to build a large, ornate church in memory of his wife. The Decorated/Perpendicular Gothic flint building, on a sloping site, has a crypt underneath and a very high east end with a large window. Inside, the nave continues into the chancel. There is a bellcote but no tower. [81][27]
[179][180]
[181][182]
[183][184]
[185][186]
[187][24]
Church of the Holy Redeemer
(More images)
  Hollington
50°52′42″N 0°33′14″E / 50.8782°N 0.5538°E / 50.8782; 0.5538 (Church of the Holy Redeemer, Hollington)
Roman Catholic The Roman Catholic Church serving Silverhill and Hollington was opened in 1934, although it was not licensed for marriages until March 1959—the year in which it was added to the parish of St Leonards-on-Sea. The plain brick Vernacular structure, designed by Wilfred Mangan, was greatly extended and reoriented in the 1980s. [81][26]
[188][189]
[190][191]
[192]
Clive Vale United Reformed Church
(More images)
  Clive Vale
50°51′58″N 0°36′16″E / 50.8660°N 0.6045°E / 50.8660; 0.6045 (Clive Vale United Reformed Church, Clive Vale)
United Reformed Church Founded as a Congregational church in 1887, this small red-brick chapel by Thomas Elworthy is in the Early English style and is distinguished by the unusual feature of a side porch. [36][81]
[171][193]
[194][195]
St Luke's United Reformed Church
(More images)
  Silverhill
50°52′10″N 0°33′26″E / 50.8695°N 0.5572°E / 50.8695; 0.5572 (St Luke's United Reformed Church, Silverhill)
United Reformed Church One of southeast England's first English Presbyterian churches was founded in 1853 when Silverhill was no more than a farm and some cottages. Henry Carpenter built a permanent church of stone in 1857, which grew rapidly: a tower and spire were built in 1865, and a chancel in 1909. The Great Storm of 1987 ripped off the spire, which has been replaced by a pyramidal cap. Under the name Silverhill Presbyterian Church it was registered for marriages in April 1871. [81][196]
[197][198]
[199][200]
[201][202]
[39]
St Mark's United Reformed Church
(More images)
  Blacklands
50°51′58″N 0°35′03″E / 50.8660°N 0.5841°E / 50.8660; 0.5841 (St Mark's United Reformed Church, Blacklands)
United Reformed Church According to Sussex church historian Robert Elleray, the predecessor of the present church was architect Thomas Elworthy's chef d'œuvre. It had a tower, spire and terracotta-edged red brickwork, but was demolished in 1972 to make way for a residential development with a church integrated into the ground floor. This was registered for worship and for marriages in November 1975. [36][81]
[149][203]
[204][205]
Kingdom Hall
(More images)
  Hollington
50°52′20″N 0°31′53″E / 50.8723°N 0.5315°E / 50.8723; 0.5315 (Kingdom Hall, Hollington)
Jehovah's Witnesses This modern Kingdom Hall stands on Churchwood Drive in the west of Hollington. It was opened on 12 March 1988 and was registered for worship and marriages two months later. The building can hold 250 people and is used by two Hastings-based Congregations of Jehovah's Witnesses: Central and Hollington. [81][62]
[206][207]
Hastings Old Town Kingdom Hall
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′31″N 0°36′41″E / 50.8753°N 0.6113°E / 50.8753; 0.6113 (Hastings Old Town Kingdom Hall, Ore)
Jehovah's Witnesses Newly built on Old Top Road in the Ore Valley area of the town, this Kingdom Hall was registered for marriages on 5 July 2007. It is used by the Hastings, Old Town Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses. [208][63]
Calvert Memorial Methodist Church
(More images)
  Halton
50°51′56″N 0°35′23″E / 50.8656°N 0.5896°E / 50.8656; 0.5896 (Calvert Memorial Methodist Church, Halton)
Methodist James Calvert, one of the first Christian missionaries to Fiji, was one of the founders of this church, and it now bears his name. The red-brick building, which replaced a tin tabernacle, is an Early English design and was opened in 1892. It was registered for marriages in March 1894. [81][39]
[209][210]
[211][212]
[213]
St Leonards-on-Sea Methodist Church
(More images)
  Bohemia
50°51′50″N 0°33′32″E / 50.8638°N 0.5588°E / 50.8638; 0.5588 (St Leonards-on-Sea Methodist Church, Bohemia)
Methodist The roots of Methodism in the Bohemia suburb can be traced to 1876, and four years later land was bought for the erection of a church. A school chapel elsewhere sufficed until 1891, when Philip Tree started building his Decorated Gothic-style design. Park Road Methodist Church, prominent on its corner site with its tower and stone spire, opened the following year and was registered for marriages in August 1893. In 2016 the members of the former Hollington Methodist Church (closed in August that year) joined this church, and with effect from 1 September 2016 its name was changed from Park Road Methodist Church to St Leonards-on-Sea Methodist Church. [81][39]
[211][214]
[215][45]
[216][217]
[218][196]
Calvary Chapel Hastings
(More images)
  Silverhill
50°52′14″N 0°33′26″E / 50.8705°N 0.5573°E / 50.8705; 0.5573 (Calvary Chapel Hastings, Silverhill)
Non-denominational St Matthew's Church founded a mission hall on Duke Road, Silverhill, in 1912. It was sold in 1958. In 1994, after a period as an artificial flower factory, it became the home of the St Leonards Assemblies of God Pentecostal Church, founded as a house church in 1985. It was registered by this group in August 1997 and operated under the name "His Place Community Church Centre" until 2014, when the congregation outgrew the building and moved to the former Robertson Street United Reformed Church in Hastings town centre. It was then taken over by Calvary Chapel Hastings, a nondenominational fellowship founded as a house church in 2006 and subsequently based in the Robsack Centre (click for image) at Hollington. [219][220]
[221][222]
[223][224]
[225][226]
The Independent Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′29″N 0°33′01″E / 50.8581°N 0.5502°E / 50.8581; 0.5502 (The Independent Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Non-denominational This tiny chapel, on Albany Road in Upper St Leonards, offers services in a charismatic evangelical style. It was originally registered as the Kenilworth Evangelical Mission and was registered for worship under that name in February 1977 and for marriages two years later. [68][227]
[228]
Hastings Citadel
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′31″N 0°34′55″E / 50.8585°N 0.5819°E / 50.8585; 0.5819 (Hastings Citadel, Hastings)
Salvation Army The 1880s brick building, registered for marriages in December 1932 and enlarged in 1937, has always been known as the "Iron Fort" locally. It was the focus of anti-Salvation Army riots as soon as it was founded: youths picked up on the ill-feeling displayed in other Sussex towns and formed their own "Skeleton Army" to attack the building and its members. [81][229]
[57][230]
[231]
Hastings Temple
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′16″N 0°36′25″E / 50.8712°N 0.6069°E / 50.8712; 0.6069 (Hastings Temple, Ore)
Salvation Army The Salvation Army established their second place of worship in Hastings in 1935, although it was not registered for marriages until September 1956. The small white-painted building opened as the Cynthia Cinema (advertised as "the cheapest, the cosiest and the best") in June 1913, but it lasted just ten years and was later used to store furniture. [81][58]
[232][233]
Bethel Full Gospel Church Centre   Halton
50°52′06″N 0°36′01″E / 50.8684°N 0.6003°E / 50.8684; 0.6003 (Bethel Full Gospel Church Centre, Halton)
Assemblies of God This Pentecostal group took over the former St Mary-of-the-Castle Church in Pelham Crescent in 1970, but did not have enough money to maintain the listed building. Hastings Borough Council later bought the building, and a new church centre was established on Priory Road in Halton. Until 1989 the building was registered as the Halton Baptist Mission Hall; then King's Church used it until 2001. The present congregation registered it in February 2003. [206][234]
[161][235]
[236][237]
[169][238]
[64]
Christ Apostolic Church Hastings
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′29″N 0°36′23″E / 50.8748°N 0.6063°E / 50.8748; 0.6063 (Christ Apostolic Church Hastings, Ore)
Christ Apostolic Church This small church on the Ore–Baldslow Road (The Ridge) was originally St Helen's Methodist Church. It probably dates from 1877, although the date on its foundation stone is now illegible and it was not registered for marriages until June 1923. The white-painted exterior hides red-brick walls. The windows are lancets. The slope of the land conceals a hall beneath the church. The chapel was closed in September 2016 and the Methodist congregation has since met at Ore Community Centre nearby. Christ Apostolic Church Hastings was founded in March 2008 and re-registered the chapel for its use in June 2021. [81][39]
[46][239]
[240][241]
[242][243]
[244]
Elim Church Centre
(More images)
  Blacklands
50°52′09″N 0°35′00″E / 50.8693°N 0.5834°E / 50.8693; 0.5834 (Elim Church Centre, Blacklands)
Elim Pentecostal The congregation, established in the 1950s, worshipped at a hall in the centre of Hastings until the 1980s, when they acquired a site on Elphinstone Avenue in Blacklands and built a permanent church. It was registered for worship and for marriages in August 1981. [81][149]
[245][246]
[247][248]
St Mary Magdalene's Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′12″N 0°33′54″E / 50.8532°N 0.5650°E / 50.8532; 0.5650 (St Mary Magdalen's Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Greek Orthodox II This Anglican church of 1852, on a prominent sloping corner site (a characteristic feature of churches in Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea), was one of Frederick Marrable's early works. The Decorated Gothic-style stone church has a tall turreted corner tower, added in 1872. Declared redundant by the Diocese of Chichester on 17 December 1980, it was sold to the Greek Orthodox Church and continues in use under the same dedication. It was registered for worship and for marriages in June 1998. [81][27]
[179][167]
[249][250]
[251][252]
[253][254]
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
(More images)
  Silverhill Park
50°52′51″N 0°33′11″E / 50.8808°N 0.5530°E / 50.8808; 0.5530 (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Silverhill Park)
Latter-day Saint Situated on Ledsham Avenue just off the main road to Battle, this meetinghouse is used by the Hastings Ward of the Maidstone Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It was registered for marriages in February 1990. [81][149]
[67][255]
[256][257]
Masjid al-Haq
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′08″N 0°33′27″E / 50.8523°N 0.5574°E / 50.8523; 0.5574 (Masjid al-Haq, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Muslim James Burton's plans for his St Leonards-on-Sea development included Mercatoria, an inland marketplace. This use did not last long, and in 1847 his son Decimus built a National School on the site. It was the area's only school for the next 26 years, and it was still used until a much larger building was opened elsewhere in the town in 1978. The East Sussex Islamic Association bought the building in the mid-1980s and converted it into a mosque. [81][71]
Alexandra Gospel Hall
(More images)
  Silverhill
50°52′13″N 0°33′29″E / 50.8702°N 0.5580°E / 50.8702; 0.5580 (Alexandra Gospel Hall, Silverhill)
Open Brethren This Gospel Hall, a Brethren place of worship, was built and registered in 1962 on Sedlescombe Road North, replacing a pair of houses on the site and succeeding an earlier meeting room elsewhere in Silverhill. Its small congregation was boosted in 1990 when members of the former Castle Hill Gospel Hall joined. [81][161]
[48][258]
[49]
His Place Church (Robertson Street United Reformed Church)
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′20″N 0°34′39″E / 50.8555°N 0.5776°E / 50.8555; 0.5776 (His Place Church (Robertson Street United Reformed Church), Hastings)
Pentecostal II Henry Ward's church of 1884–85 (but registered for marriages in April 1887) was built for the Congregational community in the town centre and replaced a Lombardo-Gothic predecessor of 1856 which stood on the same site. The Robertson Street frontage of Ward's tall Neoclassical/Renaissance building is surrounded by shops, but the façade on Cambridge Road is fully visible and spans five bays. The walls are of dark stone. Charles New, the most important figure in Hastings' Congregationalist community, was instrumental in getting the new church funded and built. The final service was held on 30 December 2012, and the building is now occupied by His Place Church, a Pentecostal group (who took ownership in November 2013), and the Opus Theatre. [36][81]
[154][259]
[260][261]
[262][263]
[264][265]
[171]
Meeting Hall
(More images)
  Hollington
50°53′08″N 0°32′40″E / 50.8856°N 0.5445°E / 50.8856; 0.5445 (Brethren Meeting Hall, Hollington)
Plymouth Brethren Christian Church This Brethren meeting room was registered for marriages in worship in January 1972 and for marriages in October 1998. [56][266]
Friends Meeting House
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′29″N 0°34′53″E / 50.8581°N 0.5815°E / 50.8581; 0.5815 (Friends Meeting House, Hastings)
Quaker Quakers in the Hastings area meet at this Renaissance-style building on South Terrace in the town centre. It was founded in 1864 and designed by William Beck in 1864–65. John Horniman, a Quaker tea trader who patented a new tea-packing process, donated some of the £1,420 cost of the meeting house, which opened on 12 January 1866. The altered front is stuccoed. [149][39]
[81][171]
[267][268]
[269]
Hastings Seventh-Day Adventist Community Church
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′21″N 0°36′35″E / 50.8725°N 0.6096°E / 50.8725; 0.6096 (Hastings Seventh-Day Adventist Community Church, Ore)
Seventh-day Adventist This small building used by the Seventh-day Adventist community of Hastings stands on the road to Fairlight. It was registered as a place of worship in April 1968. [81][149]
[60][270]
Christian Spiritualist Church
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′17″N 0°34′34″E / 50.8546°N 0.5762°E / 50.8546; 0.5762 (Christian Spiritualist Church, Hastings)
Spiritualist One of several Spiritualist churches in Sussex, this is based in buildings at Claremont, facing the sea near Holy Trinity Church. It was registered for marriages in August 1944. [149][271]
[59]
Ebenezer Baptist Church
(More images)
  Silverhill
50°52′02″N 0°33′16″E / 50.8672°N 0.5545°E / 50.8672; 0.5545 (Ebenezer Baptist Church, Silverhill)
Strict Baptist This small 1950s brick building on the Ponswood industrial estate was originally a Gospel Hall used by Plymouth Brethren, who registered it as the Ponswood Road Room in 1954. It is now aligned with the Gospel Standard Baptist movement. [149][272]
[34][273]
Hastings Unitarian Church
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′30″N 0°34′52″E / 50.8582°N 0.5812°E / 50.8582; 0.5812 (Hastings Unitarian Church, Hastings)
Unitarian Governor of Hong Kong, hyperpolyglot and Unitarian John Bowring founded this church on South Terrace in May 1868. The town's Unitarian community formed eight years earlier and previously met in a music hall and an inn. The building has a painted stucco façade and is a late example of Neoclassical architecture. A licence to solemnise marriages was granted in December 1872. [81][39]
[149][171]
[274][275]
[276][277]

Former places of worship edit

Former places of worship
Name Image Location Denomination/
Affiliation
Grade Notes Refs
All Souls Church
(More images)
  Clive Vale
50°52′02″N 0°36′25″E / 50.8673°N 0.6069°E / 50.8673; 0.6069 (Former All Souls Church, Clive Vale)
Anglican II* Arthur Blomfield built Clive Vale's Anglican church in a plain red-brick style in 1890. Its height is emphasised by the clerestory with triple lancet windows, some with stained glass by Heaton, Butler and Bayne. An elaborate reredos was added in 1897. The final service was on 4 November 2007, and the Diocese of Chichester declared it redundant on 15 February 2008. [23][20]
[278][279]
[280][281]
St Mary-in-the-Castle Church
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′20″N 0°35′05″E / 50.8556°N 0.5846°E / 50.8556; 0.5846 (Former St Mary-in-the-Castle Church, Hastings)
Anglican II* The successor to an 11th-century collegiate church inside Hastings Castle, this Classical stuccoed church with Ionic columns formed the centrepiece of Joseph Kay's Pelham Crescent residential development on the seafront. Springs flowed from the cliff behind into a total immersion baptismal pool—rare in an Anglican church. It closed in 1970 and is now an arts centre. [10][27]
[179][157]
[182][236]
[161][234]
[282][283]
[284][285]
St Helen's Church (original building)
(More images)
  St Helen's
50°52′47″N 0°35′11″E / 50.8796°N 0.5864°E / 50.8796; 0.5864 (Former St Helen's Church, St Helen's)
Anglican II The ruins of Ore's original parish church are in an overgrown wood, but the tower, nave and chancel walls and some windows can still be seen. The tower is 12th-century, and other surviving fabric is 14th- and 15th-century. Traces of an Easter Sepulchre remain as well. The church was damp, inconveniently sited and too small for the growing district, so the new St Helen's Church was built nearby in 1869. [136][286]
[287]
St Leonard's Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′05″N 0°33′05″E / 50.8513°N 0.5514°E / 50.8513; 0.5514 (St Leonard's Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Anglican II James Burton, the founder of St Leonards-on-Sea, built a seafront church for the new town in 1837. Five years later, the cliff behind collapsed and crushed the chancel; and in 1944 a freakish direct hit from a V-1 flying bomb, damaged by anti-aircraft fire, brought the whole church down. Giles and Adrian Gilbert Scott's neo-Gothic pale brick and stone design, executed in eight years from 1953, replaced it. [81][27]
[179][109]
[288][289]
[290][291]
[292][293]
[254]
St Nicholas' Church (Fishermen's Church)
(More images)
  Rock-a-Nore
50°51′22″N 0°35′43″E / 50.8561°N 0.5952°E / 50.8561; 0.5952 (Former St Nicholas' Church, Rock-a-Nore)
Anglican II The rector of St Clement's Church founded this small, plain stone church in 1854 on The Stade at Rock-a-Nore in an attempt to reach out to the town's fishermen, who attended church irregularly. The first service took place on 26 March that year. It was requisitioned and damaged in World War II, closed and bought by a trust who converted it into a fishing museum, which opened in 1956. [20][27]
[24][294]
[295][296]
[297]
Christ Church (original building)
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′13″N 0°33′35″E / 50.8535°N 0.5596°E / 50.8535; 0.5596 (Former Christ Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Anglican Built in 1860 as a working-class church, this Early English-style building used sandstone from an adjacent quarry, which then became the site of the new Christ Church in 1875. The original church then became the parish hall, hosted some activities for the nearby Christ Church School and was later turned into a theological centre. [23][92]
[93][298]
St Ethelburga's Mission Hall
(More images)
  Glyne Gap,
Bulverhythe
50°50′52″N 0°30′48″E / 50.8477°N 0.5133°E / 50.8477; 0.5133 (Former St Ethelburga's Mission Hall, Glyne Gap)
Anglican St Ethelburga's Church established a mission chapel and church hall at nearby Glyne Gap in 1932. A loan from the Board of Charity Commissioners in 1938 helped to fund it. The building, on the Bexhill Road, was acquired for use as a nursery school in 1997. [299][300]
St Wilfrid's Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′15″N 0°33′30″E / 50.8542°N 0.5584°E / 50.8542; 0.5584 (Former St Wilfrid's Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Anglican This was always an unparished mission church, and is no longer in religious use. For many years after its closure it housed the Chichester Diocesan Association for the Deaf. The Classical-style building is gabled, stuccoed and has a porch and pediment, and dates from the mid-1860s. [36][149]
Sandown Mission Hall Ore
50°52′15″N 0°36′14″E / 50.8707°N 0.6038°E / 50.8707; 0.6038 (Former Sandown Mission Hall, Ore)
Anglican The mission occupied a tin tabernacle at the corner of School Road and Sandown Road in Ore. It was built in late 1894 and formally opened on 5 December 1894 by Sir James Colquhoun, 5th Baronet. Initially run by a Mrs Holt, from 27 September 1902 it was taken over and run by nearby Christ Church. A newspaper report in 1933 described a recreation room for unemployed people having opened at the hall, and five years later a "new clubroom" was provided. The building was later used as an overflow classroom for a nearby primary school, but this ceased in July 1952. [301][302]
[303][304]
[305]
Bohemia Primitive Methodist Chapel
(More images)
  Bohemia
50°51′47″N 0°33′40″E / 50.8630°N 0.5611°E / 50.8630; 0.5611 (Former Bohemia Primitive Methodist Chapel, Bohemia)
Methodist This small Italianate chapel was built in the late 19th century for the Primitive Methodist community. A schoolroom was built during improvement work in 1895. It closed in 1939 and became Newgate Hall, which now houses a British Red Cross office. [39][306]
[307][308]
Bourne Street Wesleyan Methodist Church
(More images)
  Old Town
50°51′25″N 0°35′34″E / 50.8570°N 0.5927°E / 50.8570; 0.5927 (Former Bourne Street Wesleyan Methodist Church, Old Town)
Methodist The popular Hastings Theatre, in the heart of the Old Town, was sold to the Methodist community in 1834 after nine years of use. They demolished the Neoclassical structure in 1939 in favour of a plain red-brick building, which opened the following year. As Bourne Hall, it now houses a café and arts centre. [149][39]
[307][43]
[309][310]
Hollington Methodist Church
(More images)
  Hollington
50°52′42″N 0°32′59″E / 50.8782°N 0.5496°E / 50.8782; 0.5496 (Hollington Methodist Church, Hollington)
Methodist This was the fourth Methodist place of worship in Hollington: a cottage was used from 1823, a small chapel superseded it two years later and a larger building was provided in 1835. The building used by the congregation until its permanent closure in August 2016 dated from 1887 and survived bomb, storm and fire damage. The plain brick and stone church, which had been registered for marriages in March 1922, had arched windows. The members of Hollington Methodist Church joined the Park Road Methodist Church (now called St Leonards-on-Sea Methodist Church) at Bohemia. [81][39]
[22][147]
[45][310]
[311][312]
St Leonards Methodist Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′08″N 0°33′32″E / 50.8522°N 0.5589°E / 50.8522; 0.5589 (Former St Leonards Methodist Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Methodist J. Weir's Gothic Revival-style stone church of 1901, with a large tower topped by a spire, replaced an 1836 building on the same site. This was extended in 1862 but burnt down in 1900. The South East District of the Methodist Church authorised the closure of the church in April 2008, although its marriage registration had already been cancelled in October 2005. [39][308]
[196][44]
[313]
St Michael's Chapel (Holy Child Jesus Convent)   St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′16″N 0°34′00″E / 50.8545°N 0.5667°E / 50.8545; 0.5667 (Former St Michael's Chapel (Holy Child Jesus Convent), St Leonards-on-Sea)
Roman Catholic II* The convent was founded in about 1846, and Augustus Pugin started building this chapel in its grounds in 1848. His son Edward completed it. It was used (under the dedication St Michael and All Angels Church) for public Roman Catholic worship until 1868, when arguments over its ownership led to a new church being founded. The Gothic Revival building reverted to convent chapel status, and closed with the rest of the convent in 1974. [23][20]
[314][315]
[316][317]
[318]
Church of the Holy Apostles
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′24″N 0°36′37″E / 50.8732°N 0.6103°E / 50.8732; 0.6103 (Former Church of the Holy Apostles, Ore)
Roman Catholic This short-lived church was last listed in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton's annual directories in 1994, and in April of that year a planning application to convert the building into a doctor's surgery was approved. Its registration for worship, granted in February 1963, was formally cancelled in January 1998. [32][29]
[319][320]
Church of the Holy Ghost
(More images)
  Bulverhythe
50°51′05″N 0°31′34″E / 50.8514°N 0.5260°E / 50.8514; 0.5260 (Former Church of the Holy Ghost, Bulverhythe)
Roman Catholic Designed by B. Stevens and Partners, architects from Eastbourne, this church cost £40,000 and opened in 1964. It was registered for marriages in 1965 and was last used in 1988; it was later sold and is now a car parts centre. Early photographs show a deep porch along the whole façade. [149][31]
[321][322]
[323]
Our Lady of Missions Convent Chapel
(More images)
  Clive Vale
50°51′50″N 0°35′53″E / 50.8639°N 0.5980°E / 50.8639; 0.5980 (Former Our Lady of Missions Convent Chapel, Clive Vale)
Roman Catholic Like St Michael's Chapel at St Leonards-on-Sea, this convent chapel was used for public Roman Catholic worship for a time (under the name St Joseph's Chapel). John Hicks designed the stuccoed building in the Baroque style in 1924; the convent was founded in 1903 on the site of Frederick North MP's house. It is now the centrepiece of a sheltered housing complex. [27][324]
[325]
Gospel Mission Hall
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′10″N 0°33′27″E / 50.8527°N 0.5576°E / 50.8527; 0.5576 (Former Gospel Mission Hall, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Non-denominational This building on Kenilworth Road was registered for marriages between March 1920 and June 1982. It was built as a Primitive Methodist chapel in 1895 to the design of Philip Tree, in a distinctive style which combined elements of Arts and Crafts and Gothic Revival architecture. [196][326]
[327]
Mission Chapel
(More images)
  Ore
50°52′30″N 0°36′28″E / 50.8750°N 0.6077°E / 50.8750; 0.6077 (Former Mission Chapel, Ore)
Non-denominational A mission hall on Grove Road in the Redlake area of Ore was recorded on maps of various ages and by The London Gazette as a registered place of worship between May 1893 and April 1971, when its certification was cancelled. [328]
Railway Mission Hall
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′25″N 0°35′01″E / 50.8570°N 0.5836°E / 50.8570; 0.5836 (Former Railway Mission Hall, Hastings)
Non-denominational Tucked into one of the steep, staircase-flanked twittens that characterise inner Hastings, this chapel was built by the Railway Mission in 1891 to serve the religious needs of the town's railway workers. It later became the parish hall of St Mary-in-the-Castle Church, but is now disused. The red brick and stone building is in the Perpendicular Gothic style. [149][39]
[329]
Meeting Room   St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′07″N 0°33′36″E / 50.8519°N 0.5601°E / 50.8519; 0.5601 (Former Meeting Room, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Plymouth Brethren This was in use by Brethren from October 1934, when it was registered for worship, until the Ponswood Road Room in Silverhill replaced it in January 1954. It stood on Market Passage behind Norman Road. [53][54]
[330][272]
Stonefield Gospel Hall
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′26″N 0°35′02″E / 50.8572°N 0.5838°E / 50.8572; 0.5838 (Former Stonefield Gospel Hall, Hastings)
Plymouth Brethren This Gospel hall, no longer in religious use, stands on Stonefield Road and was registered for marriages in 1947. [51][331]
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea
(More images)
  Silverhill
50°52′02″N 0°33′17″E / 50.8671°N 0.5548°E / 50.8671; 0.5548 (Former First Church of Christ, Scientist, Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea, Silverhill)
Christian Scientist Christian Scientists in the borough worshipped in various premises, including part of a building in Cornwallis Gardens between 1946 and 1970, until a permanent church was built on Sedlescombe Road South. It was registered for worship between April 1970 and March 1996. It was converted into offices; permission to demolish the building was refused in 2018. [66][332]
[333][334]
St Leonards-on-Sea Congregational Church
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′17″N 0°33′33″E / 50.8548°N 0.5591°E / 50.8548; 0.5591 (Former St Leonards United Reformed Church, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Congregational Federation II To Robert Elleray, this is "one of the finest Nonconformist buildings in Sussex", but it lost its tall copper spire in the Great Storm of 1987 and was finally closed in 2008 after six years of disuse. The firm of Habershon and Brock designed it in 1863 for its Congregationalist founder James Griffin, and it was registered for marriages in June 1866. The sandstone for it was quarried at Ore. [36][298]
[25][335]
[336][337]
[338][339]
[37]
Kingdom Hall
(More images)
  St Leonards-on-Sea
50°51′19″N 0°33′21″E / 50.8552°N 0.5559°E / 50.8552; 0.5559 (Kingdom Hall, St Leonards-on-Sea)
Jehovah's Witnesses This Kingdom Hall was latterly used by the St Leonards-on-Sea Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses. The building was registered for marriages in May 1976 but is no longer in religious use. Attendances grew in 1998 when members of the Halton Kingdom Hall in St George's Road were displaced: their building was demolished to make way for Southern Water's large cross-town drainage tunnel. [149][61]
[340][341]
[342]
Bethel Full Gospel Church   Halton
50°51′54″N 0°35′27″E / 50.8649°N 0.5909°E / 50.8649; 0.5909 (Former Bethel Full Gospel Church, Halton)
Pentecostal This Pentecostalist group used this late 19th-century building, in the middle of a terrace of houses on St George's Road, before moving to Priory Road in Halton. It was registered for worship and for marriages between November 1971 and October 2001. [149][169]
[343][344]
St Mary's Chapel
(More images)
  Bulverhythe
50°50′49″N 0°30′37″E / 50.8469°N 0.5102°E / 50.8469; 0.5102 (Former St Mary's Chapel, Bulverhythe)
Pre-Reformation II Norman-era stones were incorporated into the rebuilt 13th-century parish church of Bulverhythe, which was a prebend of the original St Mary-in-the-Castle Church. The last record of worship taking place in the building was in 1372, after which it became derelict and collapsed. Parts of the flint and stone walls and foundations of the chancel survive. The parish existed in name only until the 19th century. [254][345]
[346]
Hastings Spiritualist Brotherhood Church
(More images)
  Hastings
50°51′27″N 0°35′00″E / 50.8575°N 0.5832°E / 50.8575; 0.5832 (Former Hastings Spiritualist Brotherhood Church, Hastings)
Spiritualist This church, on Portland Place in central Hastings, was part of the Spiritualists' National Union. It was registered for worship in June 1963 and for marriages in January 1971, but has now closed: planning permission for residential conversion was granted in April 2015. [81][149]
[347][348]
[349][350]
Ebenezer Particular Baptist Chapel
(More images)
  Old Town
50°51′31″N 0°35′46″E / 50.8585°N 0.5961°E / 50.8585; 0.5961 (Former Ebenezer Particular Baptist Chapel, Old Town)
Strict Baptist II Successor to a Strict Baptist chapel called Cow Lodge near the beach at Rock-a-Nore, this chapel was founded nearby in 1817 by a member of its congregation. It grew in popularity throughout the 19th century, and regular extensions were made; but it closed by the end of the 20th century and has been converted into a house. The Neoclassical structure retains its stuccoed façade, pilasters, pediment and cornice. [36][154]
[24][351]
[352][353]
Bulverhythe United Reformed Church
(More images)
  Bulverhythe
50°51′06″N 0°31′45″E / 50.8518°N 0.5293°E / 50.8518; 0.5293 (Former Bulverhythe United Reformed Church, Bulverhythe)
United Reformed Church J. Elworthy's Congregational mission church of 1895 was registered for marriages as Bulverhythe Congregational Mission Church in August 1936. Under its final name its registration was cancelled in September 1978. The Renaissance-style hall, of red brick with stuccoed dressings, is now called Hastleon Hall and is owned by an amateur dramatics group. [36][149]
[354][355]
[356][357]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The statistical return was compiled between 1940 and 1947 with the aim of documenting all Methodist chapels extant at that time: their location, previous affiliation prior to the Methodist Union of 1932, capacity, building materials and similar details.[40]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Manwaring Baines 1990, p. 45.
  2. ^ . The UK Statute Law Database. Ministry of Justice. 24 May 1990. Archived from the original on 18 April 2010. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  3. ^ . English Heritage. 2012. Archived from the original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  4. ^ . English Heritage. 2012. Archived from the original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  5. ^ "Population Density (QS102EW): Hastings". United Kingdom Census 2011 data. UKCensusData.com and Office for National Statistics. 2012. from the original on 29 March 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  6. ^ Marchant 1997, p. 1.
  7. ^ Marchant 1997, p. 2.
  8. ^ a b Elleray 1979, Introduction.
  9. ^ Salzman 1973, p. 8.
  10. ^ a b c d e Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 518.
  11. ^ Salzman 1973, p. 4.
  12. ^ Marchant 1997, p. 15.
  13. ^ Marchant 1997, p. 28.
  14. ^ Thornton 1987, p. 202.
  15. ^ a b Marchant 1997, p. 47.
  16. ^ a b c d Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 522.
  17. ^ Hastings Local History Group 2002, p. 5.
  18. ^ Hastings Local History Group 2002, p. 6.
  19. ^ a b Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 577.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 520.
  21. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 528.
  22. ^ a b c d Various authors 2003, p. 36.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Elleray 2004, p. 27.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 430.
  25. ^ a b c d e Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 456.
  26. ^ a b c Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 470.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Elleray 2004, p. 28.
  28. ^ Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 1988, p. 35.
  29. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 68957; Name: Church of the Holy Apostles; Address: Fairlight Road, Ore; Denomination: Roman Catholics; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 4 February 1963; Date deregistered (as recorded on original certificate): 16 January 1998). Retrieved 30 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/138)
  30. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 69517; Name: Church of the Holy Ghost; Address: Junction Of Harley Shute And Bexhill Roads, St Leonards On Sea; Denomination: Roman Catholics; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 21 April 1964). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/140)
  31. ^ a b Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 1988, p. 47.
  32. ^ a b Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 1994, p. 42.
  33. ^ Thornton 1987, p. 119.
  34. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 81416; Name: Ebenezer Baptist Chapel; Address: Ponswood Road, Silverhill, St Leonards-on-Sea, Hastings; Denomination: Strict Baptists). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  35. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 66076; Name: Halton Baptist Church; Address: Old London Road, Hastings; Denomination: Baptists; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 5 April 1957). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/133)
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Elleray 2004, p. 29.
  37. ^ a b Historic England (2021). "Congregational Church of St Leonard, Including Attached Walls and Piers, London Road, St Leonards on Sea, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II) (1390718)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  38. ^ a b "Hastings revivalists find new home". Heart Publications. 5 December 2013. from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Elleray 2004, p. 30.
  40. ^ "Methodist Church Buildings: Statistical Returns, including seating accommodation, as at July 1st 1940". My Methodist History. Methodist Church of Great Britain. 12 April 2017. from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  41. ^ Methodist Church of Great Britain 1947, p. 152.
  42. ^ Methodist Church of Great Britain 1947, p. 153.
  43. ^ a b "Wesleyan Chapel (Hastings)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 23 September 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  44. ^ a b . Minutes of the South East District Representative Spring Synod. Methodist Church (South East District). 19 April 2008. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  45. ^ a b c "St Leonards church set to close after more than 120 years". Hastings & St. Leonards Observer. Johnston Press. 20 April 2016. from the original on 1 January 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  46. ^ a b c "Welcome to the St Helens Methodist Church, Hastings website". St Helens Methodist Church, Hastings. 2018. from the original on 1 January 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  47. ^ s.n. 1933, p. 38.
  48. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 68599; Name: Alexandra Chapel; Address: Sedlescombe Road North, Silverhill, St Leonard's-on-Sea; Denomination: Christian Brethren; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 2 April 1962). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/138)
  49. ^ a b "No. 42645". The London Gazette. 10 April 1962. p. 2949.
  50. ^ s.n. 1933, p. 25.
  51. ^ a b "No. 38019". The London Gazette. 18 July 1947. p. 3382.
  52. ^ s.n. 1933, p. 29.
  53. ^ a b s.n. 1935, p. 34.
  54. ^ a b Trowbridge 1953, p. 24.
  55. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 70560; Name: Meeting Room; Address: Adjoining 10 Stockleigh Road, St Leonards on Sea; Denomination: Christian Brethren; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 7 July 1966; Date deregistered (as recorded on original certificate): 27 March 1980). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/142)
  56. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 72807; Name: Meeting Hall; Address: Corner of Beauharrow and Battle Roads, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Brethren; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 21 January 1972). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/146)
  57. ^ a b Elleray 1979, §111.
  58. ^ a b Brooks 2004, §§90, 91.
  59. ^ a b "No. 36425". The London Gazette. 14 March 1944. p. 1237.
  60. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 71342; Name: Seventh Day Adventist Meeting Place; Address: 14 Fairlight Road, Hastings; Denomination: Seventh Day Adventists; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 3 April 1968). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/143)
  61. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 74324; Name: Kingdom Hall; Address: Stockleigh Road, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Jehovah's Witnesses; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 13 May 1976). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/149)
  62. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 77616; Name: Kingdom Hall; Address: Church Wood Drive, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Jehovah's Witnesses; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 17 May 1988). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/156)
  63. ^ a b "No. 58424". The London Gazette. 17 August 2007. p. 12004.
  64. ^ a b "No. 56997". The London Gazette. 11 July 2003. p. 8660.
  65. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 72071; Name: Hastings Chapel; Address: 2 Ledsham Avenue, St Leonards on Sea; Denomination: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 18 March 1970; Date deregistered (as recorded on original certificate): 21 March 1990). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/145)
  66. ^ a b c Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 72096; Name: First Church of Christ, Scientist, Hastings and St Leonards-On-Sea; Address: 10/12 Sedlescombe Road South, St Leonards on Sea; Denomination: Christian Scientists; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 13 April 1970; Date deregistered (as recorded on original certificate): 6 March 1996). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/145)
  67. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 78077; Name: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Hastings Chapel; Address: Ledsham Avenue, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 29 January 1990). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/157)
  68. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 74547; Name: Kenilworth Evangelical Mission; Address: Albany Road, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Evangelical Mission; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 23 February 1977). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/150)
  69. ^ a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 79346; Name: The Hastings Centre; Address: The Ridge, Hastings; Denomination: Kings Church; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 17 October 1995). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/159)
  70. ^ a b "No. 61504". The London Gazette. 19 February 2016. p. 3499.
  71. ^ a b Brooks 2004, §§3, 16, 17.
  72. ^ "Religion (KS209EW): England". United Kingdom Census 2011 data. UKCensusData.com and Office for National Statistics. 2012. from the original on 14 May 2019. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  73. ^ "Religion (KS209EW): Hastings". United Kingdom Census 2011 data. UKCensusData.com and Office for National Statistics. 2012. from the original on 2 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  74. ^ . Diocese of Chichester. 2012. Archived from the original on 19 July 2013. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  75. ^ a b . Diocese of Chichester. 2010. Archived from the original on 26 August 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  76. ^ . A Church Near You website. Archbishops' Council. 2012. Archived from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  77. ^ Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 2020, p. 45.
  78. ^ Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 2020, p. 43.
  79. ^ . URC Southern Synod. 28 September 2010. Archived from the original (DOC) on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  80. ^ "Hastings, Bexhill & Rye Methodist Circuit". Hastings, Bexhill & Rye Methodist Circuit. 2018. from the original on 1 January 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  81. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at . Hastings Borough Council. 2013. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  82. ^ a b Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 519.
  83. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of All Saints, All Saints' Street (east side), Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1353127)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  84. ^ Wales 1998, p. 31.
  85. ^ Elleray 1979, §8.
  86. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 424–425.
  87. ^ Historic England (2021). "Christ Church, Laton Road, Blacklands, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1286964)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  88. ^ Elleray 1981, §125.
  89. ^ Allen, John (8 February 2010). . Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  90. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 426–427.
  91. ^ Historic England (2021). "Christ Church and St Mary Magdalen, London Road, St Leonards, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1286965)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  92. ^ a b Marchant 1997, p. 33.
  93. ^ a b Brooks 2004, §§24, 25.
  94. ^ Wales 1998, p. 49.
  95. ^ Elleray 1979, §§155, 156.
  96. ^ Elleray 1981, §§119, 120.
  97. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 451.
  98. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of the Holy Trinity, Robertson Street (north side), Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1043423)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  99. ^ Elleray 1979, §85.
  100. ^ Elleray 1981, §§110–112.
  101. ^ "Holy Trinity (Hastings, Holy Trinity)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 31 January 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  102. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 428–429.
  103. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of St Clement, Swan Terrace, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1286732)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  104. ^ Wales 1998, p. 30.
  105. ^ Elleray 1979, §§12, 13.
  106. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 427–428.
  107. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 520–521.
  108. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of St John the Evangelist, Upper Maze Hill, St Leonards on Sea, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1043400)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  109. ^ a b Wales 1998, p. 48.
  110. ^ Elleray 1979, §157.
  111. ^ Elleray 1981, §121.
  112. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 453.
  113. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 521–522.
  114. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of St Matthew, St Matthew's Road, Silverhill, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1192138)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  115. ^ Brooks 2004, §§66, 67.
  116. ^ Elleray 1981, §124.
  117. ^ Buckle 2003, pp. 24–25, 35.
  118. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 455.
  119. ^ Historic England (2021). "Christ Church, Old London Road (west side), Ore, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II) (1043454)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  120. ^ Brooks 2004, §§88, 89.
  121. ^ a b Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 468.
  122. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 538–539.
  123. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of St Leonard in the Wood, Church Wood Road, Hollington, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II) (1353148)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  124. ^ Wales 1998, p. 124.
  125. ^ Various authors 2003, pp. 5–9.
  126. ^ Elleray 1979, §166.
  127. ^ "St Leonard (The Church in the Wood) (Hollington)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
  128. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 469–470.
  129. ^ Elleray 1979, §126.
  130. ^ Elleray 1981, §116.
  131. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 428.
  132. ^ Allen, John (19 January 2009). . Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  133. ^ . A Church Near You website. Archbishops' Council. 2009. Archived from the original on 19 September 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  134. ^ "St Anne (Hollington)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  135. ^ Various authors 2003, pp. 33–34.
  136. ^ a b Allen, John (3 April 2010). . Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  137. ^ Allen, John (26 April 2010). . Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  138. ^ . A Church Near You website. Archbishops' Council. 2008. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  139. ^ "St Barnabas (Ore)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 31 January 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  140. ^ Allen, John (24 April 2010). . Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  141. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 451–453.
  142. ^ Brooks 2004, §73.
  143. ^ Elleray 1979, §§171, 172.
  144. ^ Elleray 1981, §129.
  145. ^ "St Helen (Ore)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  146. ^ a b Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 469.
  147. ^ a b Various authors 2003, p. 10.
  148. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 539.
  149. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Anon. 1975, p. 36.
  150. ^ Allen, John (21 January 2009). . Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  151. ^ . A Church Near You website. Archbishops' Council. 2008. Archived from the original on 31 January 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  152. ^ Historic England (2021). "Baptist Church, Wellington Square (north west side), Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1286663)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  153. ^ Elleray 1979, §35.
  154. ^ a b c d e Stell 2002, p. 342.
  155. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 56902; Name: Baptist Church; Address: Wellington Square, Hastings; Denomination: Baptists). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  156. ^ "No. 19978". The London Gazette. 14 May 1841. p. 1225.
  157. ^ a b Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 526.
  158. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 27859; Name: Baptist Church; Address: Chapel Park Road, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Baptists). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  159. ^ "No. 25448". The London Gazette. 3 March 1885. p. 924.
  160. ^ Historic England (2021). "St Leonards Baptist Church, Chapel Park Road, St Leonards, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II) (1043667)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  161. ^ a b c d Anon. 1975, p. 35.
  162. ^ "Halton Baptist Church (Ore, Christ Church)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 11 August 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  163. ^ "No. 41434". The London Gazette. 1 July 1958. p. 4159.
  164. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of St Peter, St Peter's Road, Bohemia, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II*) (1353235)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  165. ^ Elleray 1979, §161.
  166. ^ Elleray 1981, §122.
  167. ^ a b (PDF). Church of England. 21 February 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 May 2012. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  168. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 455–456.
  169. ^ a b c "No. 56384". The London Gazette. 8 November 2001. p. 13157.
  170. ^ . King's Church Hastings. 2010. Archived from the original on 22 September 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  171. ^ a b c d e Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 431.
  172. ^ Willis, Garryl (8 November 2018). "Solution to gift us the church building in Hastings. FRESH gospel ministry ahead – November 2018". Church Growth Trust. from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  173. ^ "No. 21879". The London Gazette. 22 April 1856. p. 1509.
  174. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 7253; Name: Tabernacle; Address: Cambridge Road, Hastings; Denomination: Independents). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  175. ^ Historic England (2021). "Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and the English Martyrs, Magdalen Road (west side), St Leonards, Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II) (1391831)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  176. ^ "St Leonards-on-Sea – St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs". Catholic Trust for England and Wales and English Heritage. 2011. from the original on 31 March 2021. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  177. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 31803; Name: St Thomas and the English Martyrs; Address: Magdalen Road, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  178. ^ "No. 25838". The London Gazette. 17 July 1888. p. 3894.
  179. ^ a b c d Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 521.
  180. ^ Historic England (2021). "Roman Catholic Church of St Mary Star of the Sea, High Street (south east side), Hastings, East Sussex (Grade II) (1191229)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  181. ^ Marchant 1997, p. 122.
  182. ^ a b Wales 1998, p. 32.
  183. ^ Elleray 1979, §§20, 21.
  184. ^ Elleray 1981, §126.
  185. ^ "Hastings – St Mary Star of the Sea". Catholic Trust for England and Wales and English Heritage. 2011. from the original on 31 March 2021. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  186. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 27361; Name: St Mary Star of the Sea; Address: High Street, Hastings; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  187. ^ "No. 25202". The London Gazette. 26 October 1883. p. 5097.
  188. ^ "Hollington – The Holy Redeemer". Catholic Trust for England and Wales and English Heritage. 2011. from the original on 31 March 2021. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  189. ^ "Holy Redeemer (Hollington, St John the Evangelist)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  190. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 55500; Name: Church of the Holy Redeemer; Address: Upper Church Road, Hollington; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  191. ^ "No. 41656". The London Gazette. 13 March 1959. p. 1746.
  192. ^ Buckle 2003, p. 56.
  193. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 76378; Name: Clive Vale United Reformed Church; Address: Edwin Road, Clive Vale, Hastings; Denomination: United Reformed Church; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 4 August 1983). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/153)
  194. ^ "No. 51808". The London Gazette. 13 July 1989. p. 8219.
  195. ^ "Clive Vale Church (Ore, Christ Church)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  196. ^ a b c d Antram & Pevsner 2013, p. 457.
  197. ^ Brooks 2004, §§41, 50, 51.
  198. ^ Elleray 1979, §163.
  199. ^ Elleray 1981, §138.
  200. ^ Buckle 2003, pp. 12, 20.
  201. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 23397; Name: St Luke's; Address: Silverhill, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: United Reformed Church). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  202. ^ "No. 23731". The London Gazette. 25 April 1871. p. 2032.
  203. ^ "St Mark (Hastings, Christ Church & St Andrew)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 28 March 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  204. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 74167; Name: St Mark's United Reformed Church; Address: Hughenden Court, Hughenden Place, Hastings; Denomination: United Reformed Church; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 11 November 1975). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/149)
  205. ^ "No. 46743". The London Gazette. 20 November 1975. p. 14715.
  206. ^ a b . The Hastings Chronicle. 2010. Archived from the original on 17 April 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  207. ^ "No. 51360". The London Gazette. 7 June 1988. p. 6645.
  208. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 81864; Name: Hastings Old Town Kingdom Hall; Address: 25 Old Top Road, Hastings; Denomination: Jehovah's Witnesses). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  209. ^ "Calvert Memorial Methodist Church (Hastings, Emmanuel)". Sussex On-line Parish Clerks (OPC). 2010. from the original on 1 January 2019. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  210. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 33285; Name: Calvert Memorial Church; Address: Mount Pleasant Road, Hastings; Denomination: Methodist Church). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  211. ^ a b Foord 2017, pp. 12, 13.
  212. ^ "No. 26493". The London Gazette. 9 March 1894. p. 1456.
  213. ^ Antram & Pevsner 2013, pp. 430–431.
  214. ^ Elleray 1981, §137.
  215. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 33292; Name: Methodist Chapel; Address: Upper Park Road, St Leonards-on-Sea; Denomination: Methodist Church). Retrieved 24 September 2012. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  216. ^ "St Leonards-on-Sea Methodist Church". Hastings, Bexhill & Rye Methodist Circuit. 2018. from the original on 1 January 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  217. ^ Elleray 1979, §162.
  218. ^ "No. 26433". The London Gazette. 18 August 1893. p. 4717.
  219. ^ . Hastings Churches Together. 2007. Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  220. ^ Buckle 2003, pp. 50, 69–70.
  221. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 79765; Name: His Place Community Church; Address: Duke Road, St Leonards; Denomination: Assemblies Of God; Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 27 August 1997). Retrieved 27 March 2021. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/160)
  222. ^ "No. 54891". The London Gazette. 12 September 1997. p. 10383.
  223. ^ "Calvary Chapel Hastings". East Sussex Community Information Service. East Sussex County Council Library and Information Services. 2021. from the original on 30 March 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  224. ^ "Who We Are". Calvary Chapel Hastings. 2021. from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  225. ^ . Calvary Chapel Radio. 2010. Archived from the original on 18 May 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  226. ^ "Notice of Sale". Hastings & St Leonards Observer. No. 7146. Hastings. 26 April 1958. p. 10. Retrieved 3 October 2022 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  227. ^ . Hastings Churches Together. 2007. Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  228. ^ "No. 47776". The London Gazette. 20 February 1979. p. 2360.
  229. ^ Marchant 1997, p. 40.
  230. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 52585; Name: Salvation Army Citadel; Address: St Andrew's Square, Hastings; Denomination: Salvation Army). Retrieved 24 Septe

list, places, worship, hastings, borough, hastings, local, government, districts, english, county, east, sussex, extant, places, worship, serving, wide, range, religious, denominations, further, buildings, formerly, used, public, worship, closed, used, other, . The borough of Hastings one of six local government districts in the English county of East Sussex has 50 extant places of worship serving a wide range of religious denominations A further 30 buildings formerly used for public worship but now closed or used for other purposes also exist The borough is made up of the ancient port and seaside resort of Hastings the neighbouring planned resort of St Leonards on Sea united with its former rival in 1888 1 and their 19th and 20th century suburbs some of which such as Ore and Hollington were autonomous villages until they were absorbed into the growing urban area Ancient churches existed in the Old Town of Hastings and in the villages although some were lost in the medieval era growth stimulated by transport improvements and the popularity of sea bathing encouraged a rush of church building in the Victorian era and more churches and congregations were established throughout the 20th century despite periods of stagnation and decline All Saints Church one of two surviving medieval churches in the centre of Hastings overlooks the Old Town Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates A majority of residents of Hastings identify themselves as Christian and churches representing many Christian denominations exist in the town The largest number of these belong to the Church of England the country s officially established church Roman Catholic and Protestant Nonconformist churches of many types are also prevalent and St Leonards on Sea has a mosque The spread of housing inland in the 20th century in suburbs such as Silverhill Park Broomgrove and the vastly expanded Hollington which was transformed from a haphazard collection of cottages among fields into a 1960s council estate resulted in the founding of new churches partly offsetting the loss through demolition of others in Hastings town centre Historic England or its predecessor English Heritage have awarded listed status to 25 current and former church buildings in Hastings A building is defined as listed when it is placed on a statutory register of buildings of special architectural or historic interest in accordance with the Planning Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas Act 1990 2 The Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport a Government department is responsible for this Historic England a non departmental public body acts as an agency of the department to administer the process and advise the department on relevant issues 3 There are three grades of listing status Grade I the highest is defined as being of exceptional interest Grade II is used for particularly important buildings of more than special interest and Grade II the lowest is used for buildings of special interest 4 Contents 1 Overview of Hastings and its places of worship 2 Religious affiliation 3 Administration 4 Current places of worship 5 Former places of worship 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 BibliographyOverview of Hastings and its places of worship edit nbsp Hastings location within East Sussex nbsp St Mary Star of the Sea Church has served Catholics in Hastings since 1883 Hastings is a seaside town on the southeast coast of England facing the English Channel The borough covers 2 972 4 hectares 7 345 acres 11 477 sq mi and had a population of 90 254 at the time of the 2011 United Kingdom census 5 Hastings is most famous for the battle fought nearby in 1066 in which William the Conqueror s Norman army defeated the English troops of King Harold II 6 but its recorded history is much longer fifth century origins have been attributed Roman settlement on the site has never been proved but is considered likely 7 and a town had developed by 928 when it was important enough to have its own mint 8 9 By the 12th century it was the main member of the Cinque Ports and its castle dominated the cliff below which the ancient settlement developed 10 11 There were seven churches in 1291 when Pope Nicholas IV ordered a survey of all places of worship in England but decline set in during the 14th century and two French raids wrecked the town By 1801 just two of the old churches All Saints and St Clement s survived 10 The common thread throughout the town s history has been fishing in 1329 a priest was threatened with excommunication for failing to pay the Bishop of Chichester the 2 000 herring demanded by custom 12 and a beach based fishing fleet still exists in the 21st century 13 The fishermen even had their own church from 1854 until World War II the rectors of All Saints and St Clement s got together to provide a chapel of ease on the beach to serve their spiritual needs The former St Nicholas Church is now Hastings Fishermen s Museum 14 The town s focus moved away from this industry and towards tourism and leisure from the early 19th century though as development spread west from the old town 15 Improved transport opened the town up to day trippers especially from London sea bathing promenading and other seaside leisure activities became increasingly fashionable and James Burton capitalised on the demand for growth by founding an entirely new town St Leonards on Sea immediately west of Hastings spurring its older rival into further growth 8 The population rose from 2 982 to 6 051 between 1801 and 1821 15 and the need to build more churches was recognised In 1824 St Mary in the Castle Church which took its dedication from a ruined collegiate church in the castle grounds was the first new Anglican church to be built outside Hastings Old Town 10 Development was so rapid that Holy Trinity Church the second town church in Hastings had to be crowded into a crazy site when it was built in the 1850s 16 St Leonards on Sea gained its first Anglican church St Leonard s in 1837 followed by St Mary Magdalen s Church in 1852 Rapid population growth continued throughout the 19th century for example the 1871 census recorded 29 289 residents and there were 65 528 in 1901 17 In response to this 27 churches were built in Hastings and St Leonards on Sea in the second half of the century Some were intended for high class fashionable visitors and residents others were developed with missionary zeal to bring some hope of redemption to working class areas 18 In 1897 an Act of Parliament brought several surrounding villages into the borough of Hastings nine years earlier the same had happened to St Leonards on Sea 1 Places such as Ore and Hollington had become suburbanised but retained ancient churches as well as gaining new ones Ore s 12th century St Helen s Church was ruined in the 19th century but a replacement was built nearby 19 and a second Christ Church distinguished by the very naughty turret on its roof was provided to serve the village s Victorian suburbs 20 and Hollington s 13th century church in the middle of a wood 21 was later supplemented by a second Anglican church after the scattered village was redeveloped into Hastings largest council estate 22 Organised worship by the Roman Catholic community dates back to 1848 when the now disused St Michael s Chapel in St Leonards on Sea was opened for public use 23 Permanent churches were opened in both Hastings and St Leonards on Sea in the 1880s at Hastings the very tall complex Free Gothic Revival St Mary Star of the Sea Church 1881 83 by Basil Champneys was partly funded by poet Coventry Patmore 24 while the much more austere Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs St Leonards on Sea 1888 89 by Charles Alban Buckler replaced an earlier building by the same architect which had been destroyed by fire in 1887 25 Hollington s 20th century growth prompted the construction of the Church of the Holy Redeemer in 1934 and its major extension 50 years later 26 In the suburbs a convent chapel built in 1924 was used for public worship in Clive Vale for a time 27 the last regular public Masses were celebrated in 1988 28 and two permanent churches were built In 1963 a chapel of ease to St Mary Star of the Sea was registered in Ore 29 followed by an additional church in Bulverhythe the next year 30 Both have now closed the Church of the Holy Ghost at Bulverhythe latterly served from St Leonards on Sea was closed in 1988 and deregistered the following year 31 while the Church of the Holy Apostles at Ore went out of use in 1994 32 nbsp The Unitarian left and Quaker right meeting houses stand close together on South Terrace The borough has an array of Nonconformist places of worship Protestant Dissenters were not universally welcomed at first the town s first Congregational chapel planned in 1807 had to be built in London and taken to the town by sea because no local firm wanted to build it The weatherboarded chapel s successor survived until 1972 23 33 Other early chapels were built for Baptists Ebenezer Chapel was established in 1817 it is now a house 24 but the congregation has moved to another building 34 and another opened on Wellington Square for General Baptists in 1838 24 Residents of St Leonards on Sea have been served by St Leonard s Baptist Church since 1882 25 and a church was registered in Halton in 1957 35 The early Congregational chapel situated in the old town was supplemented by churches at Robertson Street 1856 rebuilt 1884 85 St Leonards on Sea 1863 Mount Pleasant Road at Blacklands 1878 79 Clive Vale 1887 and Bulverhythe 1895 36 All of these joined the United Reformed Church upon its formation in 1972 except St Leonards on Sea this instead became a Congregational Federation church but it closed in the early 21st century 37 Clive Vale United Reformed Church is still open as is the 1970s successor St Mark s to the chapel at Blacklands 36 Robertson Street is now a Pentecostal church 38 and Bulverhythe is in secular use as a hall 36 The United Reformed Church was formed by a merger between the Congregational Church and Presbyterian Church of England and the latter s St Luke s Church 1857 remains in use 39 The Methodist Statistical Returns published in 1947 note 1 recorded the existence of eight Methodist chapels in Hastings and St Leonards on Sea all but one of which were of Wesleyan origin At that time the Hastings Circuit was responsible for Central Methodist Church a 750 capacity building in the town centre and outlying chapels in the Old Town Wesley Chapel capacity 268 worshippers Halton the Calvert Memorial Church 500 Hollington 300 and Ore St Helen s Methodist Church 220 41 The St Leonards and Bexhill Circuit was responsible for former Wesleyan chapels at Norman Road and Park Road with space for 550 and 450 worshippers respectively and a chapel on Newgate Road 150 which was originally Primitive Methodist 42 Of these only the Calvert Memorial and Park Road churches remain open William Willmer Pocock s Central Methodist Church of 1875 on a distinctive corner site was demolished in 1980 39 Bourne Street is now in commercial use 43 the church on Norman Road went out of religious use in 2008 44 Hollington closed in 2016 and merged with Park Road Church to form the present St Leonards Methodist Church 45 and St Helen s Methodist Church at Ore shut in the same year and its congregation now worship in a community centre 46 The former Primitive Methodist chapel was the earliest closure being converted into a hall for secular use in 1939 39 nbsp The distinctive Elim Pentecostal church was built in the 1980s Various Brethren groups have been prominent since the early 20th century Rainbow Hall in Silverhill 47 registered in 1930 was succeeded in 1962 by the present Alexandra Chapel for Christian Open Brethren 48 49 The former Gospel hall at Castle Hill Road 50 no longer exists but another on Stonefield Road registered for marriages in 1947 51 remains although no longer in religious use Brethren in St Leonards on Sea met in hired rooms in Cross Street 52 before moving to a Gospel hall on Norman Road by 1935 53 and then to a new building the Ponswood Road Room in 1953 54 this building is now Ebenezer Baptist Church A meeting room no longer extant was also registered on Stockleigh Road in 1966 55 The Plymouth Brethren Christian Church sect use a meeting room 1972 off the Battle Road 56 Many other religious groups are represented in the borough Quakers and Unitarians meet in buildings a short distance apart on South Terrace the Quaker meeting house dates from 1864 while the Unitarian church was built three years later and opened in 1868 39 The Salvation Army have met nearby since the 1880s their citadel was enlarged in 1937 two years after a second was opened in a converted cinema in Ore 57 58 Places of worship for Spiritualists and Seventh day Adventists were registered in 1944 59 and 1968 respectively 60 For Jehovah s Witnesses Kingdom Halls were registered in St Leonards on Sea in 1976 61 no longer in use Hollington in 1988 62 and Ore in 2007 63 An Elim Pentecostal church was registered in 1981 the His Place Community Church an independent Pentecostal group founded in 1984 now use the former United Reformed church in Robertson Street 38 and the Bethel Full Gospel Church Assemblies of God Pentecostal has occupied a building in Halton since 2003 64 Latter day Saints and Christian Scientists registered buildings in Hollington and Silverhill respectively in 1970 65 66 the former was replaced by a permanent meetinghouse in 1990 67 while the First Church of Christ Scientist Hastings and St Leonards on Sea was dissolved in 1996 and the building is in alternative use 66 Evangelical and non denominational churches include The Tabernacle 1854 39 The Independent Church formerly Kenilworth Evangelical Mission registered 1977 68 The King s Church registered 1995 69 and Sonrise Church which occupies a former Anglican church building 70 another redundant Anglican church was converted into St Mary Magdalene s Greek Orthodox Church in the early 1980s 27 Muslims converted a building in St Leonards on Sea into a mosque and community centre in the 1980s 71 Religious affiliation editAccording to the 2011 United Kingdom Census 90 254 people lived in Hastings Of these 51 89 identified themselves as Christian 1 28 were Muslim 0 53 were Buddhist 0 47 were Hindu 0 16 were Jewish 0 04 were Sikh 0 74 followed another religion 36 64 claimed no religious affiliation and 8 26 did not state their religion The proportion of Christians was lower than that of England as a whole 59 38 while affiliation with Buddhism and faiths in the any other religion category was more widespread in Hastings the corresponding figures for England were 0 45 and 0 43 respectively The proportion of people with no religious affiliation was also higher than the national figure of 24 74 The other religions had much lower proportions of followers than in England overall the corresponding national percentages were 5 02 for Islam 1 52 for Hinduism 0 79 for Sikhism and 0 49 for Judaism 72 73 Administration editAll Anglican churches in Hastings are part of the Diocese of Chichester whose cathedral is at Chichester 74 and the Lewes and Hastings Archdeaconry one of three subdivisions which make up the next highest level of administration 75 In turn this archdeaconry is divided into eight deaneries 75 One of these the Rural Deanery of Hastings covers the whole borough and includes all 16 open Anglican churches St Leonard s Church at St Leonards on Sea and All Souls Church at Clive Vale both closed in the early 21st century were also part of this Rural Deanery 76 The Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton whose cathedral is at Arundel 77 administers the borough s three Roman Catholic churches All three St Mary Star of the Sea at Hastings St Thomas of Canterbury and the English Martyrs at St Leonards on Sea and the Church of the Holy Redeemer at Hollington are part of the Eastbourne and St Leonards on Sea Deanery one of 11 deaneries in the diocese The churches at St Leonards on Sea and Hollington are part of a joint parish 78 The four United Reformed Churches in the borough as of 2011 at Robertson Street now closed Clive Vale Silverhill and St Mark s were part of the West Kent and East Sussex Synod Area of the Church a group of 32 churches within the Southern Synod region 79 The Hastings Bexhill amp Rye Methodist Circuit a circuit in the Methodist Church s South East District covers 12 churches of that denomination in the Hastings area Three of those are in the borough the Calvert Memorial church at Halton the church at St Helen s now housed in Ore Community Centre following the closure of the chapel building in 2016 46 and the former Park Road Church in Bohemia now called St Leonards on Sea Methodist Church 80 Current places of worship editCurrent places of worship Name Image Location Denomination Affiliation Grade Notes RefsAll Saints Church More images nbsp Old Town50 51 33 N 0 35 47 E 50 8593 N 0 5964 E 50 8593 0 5964 All Saints Church Old Town Anglican II The medieval town s upper church so called because of its hilltop position is an early 15th century Perpendicular Gothic structure of rubble and flint William Butterfield s restoration of 1870 included a large east window Titus Oates was a curate in the 17th century 81 82 83 84 85 86 Christ Church More images nbsp Blacklands50 52 01 N 0 34 40 E 50 8669 N 0 5777 E 50 8669 0 5777 Christ Church Blacklands Anglican II Henry Carpenter s Decorated Gothic church of 1881 for the high class suburb of Blacklands is dominated by its tower completed in 1890 but has elaborate interior fittings such as Hardman amp Co s chancel work and a Carrara marble font depicting an angel bearing a shell 23 81 20 87 88 89 90 Christ Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 14 N 0 33 33 E 50 8538 N 0 5593 E 50 8538 0 5593 Christ Church St Leonards on Sea Anglican II Arthur Blomfield s tall Early English style church of 1875 consecrated nine years later replaced an earlier building which still stands on the south side Always High church in its liturgical tradition its first vicar Rev Charles Lyndhurst Vaughan was key to the town s religious and social development 23 81 20 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 Holy Trinity Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 18 N 0 34 36 E 50 8551 N 0 5767 E 50 8551 0 5767 Holy Trinity Church Hastings Anglican II The second 19th century Anglican church in Hastings was planned for Cambridge Road but problems with the site caused Samuel Sanders Teulon to reconfigure his design to an awkward crazy to Nikolaus Pevsner location nearby The stone and rubble exterior conceals a highly ornate interior The dedication recalls a lost 12th century priory nearby 23 81 10 16 98 99 100 101 102 St Clement s Church More images nbsp Old Town50 51 27 N 0 35 27 E 50 8574 N 0 5909 E 50 8574 0 5909 St Clement s Church Old Town Anglican II The Town church as it is known locally was rebuilt after the French attacks on Hastings in 1377 and restored in 1875 by William Butterfield who did the same to neighbouring All Saints Church The vast range of memorials in the Perpendicular Gothic church include one for the marriage of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Elizabeth Siddal 81 82 103 104 105 106 St John the Evangelist s Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 21 N 0 33 11 E 50 8559 N 0 5530 E 50 8559 0 5530 St John the Evangelist s Church St Leonards on Sea Anglican II Only the octagonal tower survived World War II bombing the rest of Arthur Blomfield s 1881 brick and stone church serving Upper St Leonards was rebuilt by Harry Stuart Goodhart Rendel in 1951 English Heritage describe it as a particularly eclectic mix 81 27 107 108 109 110 111 112 St Matthew s Church More images nbsp Silverhill50 51 56 N 0 33 20 E 50 8656 N 0 5556 E 50 8656 0 5556 St Matthew s Church Silverhill Anglican II Founded on St Matthew s Day 21 September 1860 and opened the following year local architect George Voysey s original church was replaced by John Loughborough Pearson s much larger red brick Gothic Revival structure in 1885 Internal features include Aston Webb s reredos and a sturdy king post nave roof of local timber 81 27 113 114 115 116 117 118 Christ Church More images nbsp Ore50 52 20 N 0 36 30 E 50 8722 N 0 6082 E 50 8722 0 6082 Christ Church Ore Anglican II The rector of Ore helped to fund a new church in the village centre to serve the influx of working class people in the mid 19th century A D Gough s Decorated Gothic stone church dates from 1858 and is distinguished by a large bell turret a feature described as very naughty by Pevsner Bomb damage in 1943 was soon repaired 23 81 20 119 120 121 St Leonard s Church Church in the Wood More images nbsp Hollington50 52 27 N 0 32 17 E 50 8743 N 0 5380 E 50 8743 0 5380 St Leonard s Church Church in the Wood Hollington Anglican II A chapel stood on this isolated site in the middle of a wood in the 11th century and the present building retains 13th century work despite major restoration in 1865 The short tower is partly tile hung and has a pyramid shaped cap Jean Baptiste Capronnier designed the stained glass 81 122 123 124 22 125 126 127 128 Emmanuel Church More images nbsp West Hill50 51 42 N 0 35 21 E 50 8616 N 0 5892 E 50 8616 0 5892 Emmanuel Church West Hill Anglican The local architecture firm of Jeffrey amp Skiller designed and built the West Hill area s Anglican church in 1873 It stands at a high point in Hastings and has significant townscape presence The stone Early English style building lost its adjacent vicarage to a bomb in 1942 23 81 129 130 131 St Anne s Church More images nbsp Hollington50 52 20 N 0 32 36 E 50 8723 N 0 5434 E 50 8723 0 5434 St Anne s Church Hollington Anglican The interwar and postwar expansion of Hollington which by the 1960s had become Hastings largest council estate led to improved church provision in the form of this small flint and brick building founded in 1956 and built over several years by the Brighton firm of Denman amp Sons It is in the parish of Church in the Wood 81 121 132 133 134 135 St Barnabas Church More images nbsp Broomgrove50 52 25 N 0 35 37 E 50 8736 N 0 5937 E 50 8736 0 5937 St Barnabas Church Broomgrove Anglican Local architect Hector Sweatman s design for a new church in the parish of St Helen s in Ore was accepted in 1954 although proposals for a church on this site dated back to 1949 The brick building has flexible space for religious and community activities 81 136 137 138 139 St Ethelburga s Church More images nbsp Bulverhythe50 51 09 N 0 32 01 E 50 8524 N 0 5337 E 50 8524 0 5337 St Ethelburga s Church Bulverhythe Anglican John B Mendham s modest Gothic Revival church dates from 1929 and serves the Bulverhythe area of the seafront west of St Leonards on Sea in the far southwest of the borough The brown brick structure is dominated by a large Art Deco style tower with thin pinnacles set below the top of the bell tower stage 81 27 20 140 141 St Helen s Church More images nbsp St Helen s50 52 55 N 0 35 14 E 50 8820 N 0 5871 E 50 8820 0 5871 St Helen s Church St Helen s Anglican Built to replace its ruinous 12th century predecessor nearby this church was designed in 1869 by Edgar Brock many of whose Sussex churches were executed in partnership with the Habershon brothers The stone used to build it was quarried locally Its distinctive spire was removed in 1966 and replaced with a small cap 81 27 19 142 143 144 145 146 St John the Evangelist s Church More images nbsp Hollington50 52 44 N 0 33 05 E 50 8788 N 0 5513 E 50 8788 0 5513 St John the Evangelist s Church Hollington Anglican E Alexander Wyon s Early English style church dates from 1865 and was parished five years later Blue and pale Bath stonework predominates Local philanthropist Countess Waldegrave founded the church on land provided by local men who realised that Hollington s focus of development was moving away from Church in the Wood 81 27 22 146 147 148 St Peter and St Paul s Church More images nbsp Silverhill Park50 52 45 N 0 34 09 E 50 8791 N 0 5692 E 50 8791 0 5692 St Peter and St Paul s Church Silverhill Park Anglican This small yellow brick church with a many sided layout and a copper roof was opened in 1969 on Parkstone Road in the postwar Silverhill Park estate It is in the parish of St John the Evangelist Hollington 81 149 150 151 26 Wellington Square Baptist Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 22 N 0 34 55 E 50 8560 N 0 5819 E 50 8560 0 5819 Wellington Square Baptist Church Hastings Baptist II Wellington Square was an early high class residential development in Hastings it was built on the site of some lime kilns in the 1820s A Baptist church was integrated into it in 1838 and was registered for marriages in May 1841 Arched sash windows stucco and an unbroken parapet and moulded cornice give a Neoclassical appearance 36 81 24 152 153 154 155 156 157 St Leonard s Baptist Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 24 N 0 33 42 E 50 8566 N 0 5616 E 50 8566 0 5616 St Leonards Baptist Church St Leonards on Sea Baptist II Thomas Elworthy s Baptist church of 1882 is an ornate Classical Italianate design with pairs of Corinthian pilasters on its three bay facade a balustrade at first floor level round headed windows an elaborate pediment and extensive use of terracotta decoration The gallery inside is supported on slender iron columns The chapel was registered for marriages in February 1885 36 81 154 25 158 159 160 Halton Baptist Church More images nbsp Halton50 52 06 N 0 36 04 E 50 8682 N 0 6011 E 50 8682 0 6011 Halton Baptist Church Halton Baptist This modern Baptist church built in the Vernacular style stands on the Old London Road on the way to Ore village It was registered for worship in April 1957 and for marriages 14 months later 81 161 35 162 163 Sonrise Church at St Peter s More images nbsp Bohemia50 51 39 N 0 33 41 E 50 8608 N 0 5614 E 50 8608 0 5614 St Peter s Church Bohemia Evangelical II Bohemia s former Anglican church is tall long and lacks a spire or tower one was planned It was built in 1885 in the Early English style by James Brooks and is red brick inside and out although much use is made of alabaster for wall finishes and internal fixtures It was declared redundant by the Diocese of Chichester in November 2011 and has since been occupied by Sonrise Church an independent Evangelical congregation for whom it was registered for marriages in February 2016 16 81 36 164 165 166 70 167 168 King s Church More images nbsp St Helen s50 53 13 N 0 34 12 E 50 8869 N 0 5699 E 50 8869 0 5699 King s Church St Helen s Evangelical This Evangelical church has its origins in a house church established in 1974 Terry Virgo founder of the Newfrontiers movement was involved later and as the congregation grew it moved from Priory Road in Halton and took over a building previously used for indoor cricket 81 169 69 170 The Tabernacle More images nbsp Hastings50 51 20 N 0 34 38 E 50 8555 N 0 5771 E 50 8555 0 5771 The Tabernacle Hastings Evangelical Charles Pavey founded this church in the town centre in 1854 for an Independent Calvinistic congregation for whom it was registered for marriages in April 1856 By the 1970s it had become a Free Evangelical church and the interior fittings were reordered to cater for the different form of worship The exterior is unchanged however the yellow brick and stone building has a steeply gabled porch set below five tall lancet windows In November 2018 the building was taken on by the Church Growth Trust with the aim of planting a new Evangelical church into it 149 39 81 154 171 172 173 174 Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 23 N 0 33 54 E 50 8565 N 0 5649 E 50 8565 0 5649 Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs St Leonards on Sea Roman Catholic II The Roman Catholic community moved from the chapel at the Holy Child of Jesus Convent into a new church nearby in 1866 It burnt down in 1887 Charles Alban Buckler s new Gothic Revival building was ready in 1889 Its plain ironstone and Bath stone exterior hides an elaborately decorated interior with rib vaults and wall murals 36 81 16 175 176 177 178 25 St Mary Star of the Sea Church More images nbsp Old Town50 51 34 N 0 35 40 E 50 8594 N 0 5944 E 50 8594 0 5944 St Mary Star of the Sea Church Old Town Roman Catholic II In 1882 poet Coventry Patmore living in Hastings at the time commissioned his friend Basil Champneys to build a large ornate church in memory of his wife The Decorated Perpendicular Gothic flint building on a sloping site has a crypt underneath and a very high east end with a large window Inside the nave continues into the chancel There is a bellcote but no tower 81 27 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 24 Church of the Holy Redeemer More images nbsp Hollington50 52 42 N 0 33 14 E 50 8782 N 0 5538 E 50 8782 0 5538 Church of the Holy Redeemer Hollington Roman Catholic The Roman Catholic Church serving Silverhill and Hollington was opened in 1934 although it was not licensed for marriages until March 1959 the year in which it was added to the parish of St Leonards on Sea The plain brick Vernacular structure designed by Wilfred Mangan was greatly extended and reoriented in the 1980s 81 26 188 189 190 191 192 Clive Vale United Reformed Church More images nbsp Clive Vale50 51 58 N 0 36 16 E 50 8660 N 0 6045 E 50 8660 0 6045 Clive Vale United Reformed Church Clive Vale United Reformed Church Founded as a Congregational church in 1887 this small red brick chapel by Thomas Elworthy is in the Early English style and is distinguished by the unusual feature of a side porch 36 81 171 193 194 195 St Luke s United Reformed Church More images nbsp Silverhill50 52 10 N 0 33 26 E 50 8695 N 0 5572 E 50 8695 0 5572 St Luke s United Reformed Church Silverhill United Reformed Church One of southeast England s first English Presbyterian churches was founded in 1853 when Silverhill was no more than a farm and some cottages Henry Carpenter built a permanent church of stone in 1857 which grew rapidly a tower and spire were built in 1865 and a chancel in 1909 The Great Storm of 1987 ripped off the spire which has been replaced by a pyramidal cap Under the name Silverhill Presbyterian Church it was registered for marriages in April 1871 81 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 39 St Mark s United Reformed Church More images nbsp Blacklands50 51 58 N 0 35 03 E 50 8660 N 0 5841 E 50 8660 0 5841 St Mark s United Reformed Church Blacklands United Reformed Church According to Sussex church historian Robert Elleray the predecessor of the present church was architect Thomas Elworthy s chef d œuvre It had a tower spire and terracotta edged red brickwork but was demolished in 1972 to make way for a residential development with a church integrated into the ground floor This was registered for worship and for marriages in November 1975 36 81 149 203 204 205 Kingdom Hall More images nbsp Hollington50 52 20 N 0 31 53 E 50 8723 N 0 5315 E 50 8723 0 5315 Kingdom Hall Hollington Jehovah s Witnesses This modern Kingdom Hall stands on Churchwood Drive in the west of Hollington It was opened on 12 March 1988 and was registered for worship and marriages two months later The building can hold 250 people and is used by two Hastings based Congregations of Jehovah s Witnesses Central and Hollington 81 62 206 207 Hastings Old Town Kingdom Hall More images nbsp Ore50 52 31 N 0 36 41 E 50 8753 N 0 6113 E 50 8753 0 6113 Hastings Old Town Kingdom Hall Ore Jehovah s Witnesses Newly built on Old Top Road in the Ore Valley area of the town this Kingdom Hall was registered for marriages on 5 July 2007 It is used by the Hastings Old Town Congregation of Jehovah s Witnesses 208 63 Calvert Memorial Methodist Church More images nbsp Halton50 51 56 N 0 35 23 E 50 8656 N 0 5896 E 50 8656 0 5896 Calvert Memorial Methodist Church Halton Methodist James Calvert one of the first Christian missionaries to Fiji was one of the founders of this church and it now bears his name The red brick building which replaced a tin tabernacle is an Early English design and was opened in 1892 It was registered for marriages in March 1894 81 39 209 210 211 212 213 St Leonards on Sea Methodist Church More images nbsp Bohemia50 51 50 N 0 33 32 E 50 8638 N 0 5588 E 50 8638 0 5588 St Leonards on Sea Methodist Church Bohemia Methodist The roots of Methodism in the Bohemia suburb can be traced to 1876 and four years later land was bought for the erection of a church A school chapel elsewhere sufficed until 1891 when Philip Tree started building his Decorated Gothic style design Park Road Methodist Church prominent on its corner site with its tower and stone spire opened the following year and was registered for marriages in August 1893 In 2016 the members of the former Hollington Methodist Church closed in August that year joined this church and with effect from 1 September 2016 its name was changed from Park Road Methodist Church to St Leonards on Sea Methodist Church 81 39 211 214 215 45 216 217 218 196 Calvary Chapel Hastings More images nbsp Silverhill50 52 14 N 0 33 26 E 50 8705 N 0 5573 E 50 8705 0 5573 Calvary Chapel Hastings Silverhill Non denominational St Matthew s Church founded a mission hall on Duke Road Silverhill in 1912 It was sold in 1958 In 1994 after a period as an artificial flower factory it became the home of the St Leonards Assemblies of God Pentecostal Church founded as a house church in 1985 It was registered by this group in August 1997 and operated under the name His Place Community Church Centre until 2014 when the congregation outgrew the building and moved to the former Robertson Street United Reformed Church in Hastings town centre It was then taken over by Calvary Chapel Hastings a nondenominational fellowship founded as a house church in 2006 and subsequently based in the Robsack Centre click for image at Hollington 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 The Independent Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 29 N 0 33 01 E 50 8581 N 0 5502 E 50 8581 0 5502 The Independent Church St Leonards on Sea Non denominational This tiny chapel on Albany Road in Upper St Leonards offers services in a charismatic evangelical style It was originally registered as the Kenilworth Evangelical Mission and was registered for worship under that name in February 1977 and for marriages two years later 68 227 228 Hastings Citadel More images nbsp Hastings50 51 31 N 0 34 55 E 50 8585 N 0 5819 E 50 8585 0 5819 Hastings Citadel Hastings Salvation Army The 1880s brick building registered for marriages in December 1932 and enlarged in 1937 has always been known as the Iron Fort locally It was the focus of anti Salvation Army riots as soon as it was founded youths picked up on the ill feeling displayed in other Sussex towns and formed their own Skeleton Army to attack the building and its members 81 229 57 230 231 Hastings Temple More images nbsp Ore50 52 16 N 0 36 25 E 50 8712 N 0 6069 E 50 8712 0 6069 Hastings Temple Ore Salvation Army The Salvation Army established their second place of worship in Hastings in 1935 although it was not registered for marriages until September 1956 The small white painted building opened as the Cynthia Cinema advertised as the cheapest the cosiest and the best in June 1913 but it lasted just ten years and was later used to store furniture 81 58 232 233 Bethel Full Gospel Church Centre nbsp Halton50 52 06 N 0 36 01 E 50 8684 N 0 6003 E 50 8684 0 6003 Bethel Full Gospel Church Centre Halton Assemblies of God This Pentecostal group took over the former St Mary of the Castle Church in Pelham Crescent in 1970 but did not have enough money to maintain the listed building Hastings Borough Council later bought the building and a new church centre was established on Priory Road in Halton Until 1989 the building was registered as the Halton Baptist Mission Hall then King s Church used it until 2001 The present congregation registered it in February 2003 206 234 161 235 236 237 169 238 64 Christ Apostolic Church Hastings More images nbsp Ore50 52 29 N 0 36 23 E 50 8748 N 0 6063 E 50 8748 0 6063 Christ Apostolic Church Hastings Ore Christ Apostolic Church This small church on the Ore Baldslow Road The Ridge was originally St Helen s Methodist Church It probably dates from 1877 although the date on its foundation stone is now illegible and it was not registered for marriages until June 1923 The white painted exterior hides red brick walls The windows are lancets The slope of the land conceals a hall beneath the church The chapel was closed in September 2016 and the Methodist congregation has since met at Ore Community Centre nearby Christ Apostolic Church Hastings was founded in March 2008 and re registered the chapel for its use in June 2021 81 39 46 239 240 241 242 243 244 Elim Church Centre More images nbsp Blacklands50 52 09 N 0 35 00 E 50 8693 N 0 5834 E 50 8693 0 5834 Elim Church Centre Blacklands Elim Pentecostal The congregation established in the 1950s worshipped at a hall in the centre of Hastings until the 1980s when they acquired a site on Elphinstone Avenue in Blacklands and built a permanent church It was registered for worship and for marriages in August 1981 81 149 245 246 247 248 St Mary Magdalene s Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 12 N 0 33 54 E 50 8532 N 0 5650 E 50 8532 0 5650 St Mary Magdalen s Church St Leonards on Sea Greek Orthodox II This Anglican church of 1852 on a prominent sloping corner site a characteristic feature of churches in Hastings and St Leonards on Sea was one of Frederick Marrable s early works The Decorated Gothic style stone church has a tall turreted corner tower added in 1872 Declared redundant by the Diocese of Chichester on 17 December 1980 it was sold to the Greek Orthodox Church and continues in use under the same dedication It was registered for worship and for marriages in June 1998 81 27 179 167 249 250 251 252 253 254 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints More images nbsp Silverhill Park50 52 51 N 0 33 11 E 50 8808 N 0 5530 E 50 8808 0 5530 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Silverhill Park Latter day Saint Situated on Ledsham Avenue just off the main road to Battle this meetinghouse is used by the Hastings Ward of the Maidstone Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints It was registered for marriages in February 1990 81 149 67 255 256 257 Masjid al Haq More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 08 N 0 33 27 E 50 8523 N 0 5574 E 50 8523 0 5574 Masjid al Haq St Leonards on Sea Muslim James Burton s plans for his St Leonards on Sea development included Mercatoria an inland marketplace This use did not last long and in 1847 his son Decimus built a National School on the site It was the area s only school for the next 26 years and it was still used until a much larger building was opened elsewhere in the town in 1978 The East Sussex Islamic Association bought the building in the mid 1980s and converted it into a mosque 81 71 Alexandra Gospel Hall More images nbsp Silverhill50 52 13 N 0 33 29 E 50 8702 N 0 5580 E 50 8702 0 5580 Alexandra Gospel Hall Silverhill Open Brethren This Gospel Hall a Brethren place of worship was built and registered in 1962 on Sedlescombe Road North replacing a pair of houses on the site and succeeding an earlier meeting room elsewhere in Silverhill Its small congregation was boosted in 1990 when members of the former Castle Hill Gospel Hall joined 81 161 48 258 49 His Place Church Robertson Street United Reformed Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 20 N 0 34 39 E 50 8555 N 0 5776 E 50 8555 0 5776 His Place Church Robertson Street United Reformed Church Hastings Pentecostal II Henry Ward s church of 1884 85 but registered for marriages in April 1887 was built for the Congregational community in the town centre and replaced a Lombardo Gothic predecessor of 1856 which stood on the same site The Robertson Street frontage of Ward s tall Neoclassical Renaissance building is surrounded by shops but the facade on Cambridge Road is fully visible and spans five bays The walls are of dark stone Charles New the most important figure in Hastings Congregationalist community was instrumental in getting the new church funded and built The final service was held on 30 December 2012 and the building is now occupied by His Place Church a Pentecostal group who took ownership in November 2013 and the Opus Theatre 36 81 154 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 171 Meeting Hall More images nbsp Hollington50 53 08 N 0 32 40 E 50 8856 N 0 5445 E 50 8856 0 5445 Brethren Meeting Hall Hollington Plymouth Brethren Christian Church This Brethren meeting room was registered for marriages in worship in January 1972 and for marriages in October 1998 56 266 Friends Meeting House More images nbsp Hastings50 51 29 N 0 34 53 E 50 8581 N 0 5815 E 50 8581 0 5815 Friends Meeting House Hastings Quaker Quakers in the Hastings area meet at this Renaissance style building on South Terrace in the town centre It was founded in 1864 and designed by William Beck in 1864 65 John Horniman a Quaker tea trader who patented a new tea packing process donated some of the 1 420 cost of the meeting house which opened on 12 January 1866 The altered front is stuccoed 149 39 81 171 267 268 269 Hastings Seventh Day Adventist Community Church More images nbsp Ore50 52 21 N 0 36 35 E 50 8725 N 0 6096 E 50 8725 0 6096 Hastings Seventh Day Adventist Community Church Ore Seventh day Adventist This small building used by the Seventh day Adventist community of Hastings stands on the road to Fairlight It was registered as a place of worship in April 1968 81 149 60 270 Christian Spiritualist Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 17 N 0 34 34 E 50 8546 N 0 5762 E 50 8546 0 5762 Christian Spiritualist Church Hastings Spiritualist One of several Spiritualist churches in Sussex this is based in buildings at Claremont facing the sea near Holy Trinity Church It was registered for marriages in August 1944 149 271 59 Ebenezer Baptist Church More images nbsp Silverhill50 52 02 N 0 33 16 E 50 8672 N 0 5545 E 50 8672 0 5545 Ebenezer Baptist Church Silverhill Strict Baptist This small 1950s brick building on the Ponswood industrial estate was originally a Gospel Hall used by Plymouth Brethren who registered it as the Ponswood Road Room in 1954 It is now aligned with the Gospel Standard Baptist movement 149 272 34 273 Hastings Unitarian Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 30 N 0 34 52 E 50 8582 N 0 5812 E 50 8582 0 5812 Hastings Unitarian Church Hastings Unitarian Governor of Hong Kong hyperpolyglot and Unitarian John Bowring founded this church on South Terrace in May 1868 The town s Unitarian community formed eight years earlier and previously met in a music hall and an inn The building has a painted stucco facade and is a late example of Neoclassical architecture A licence to solemnise marriages was granted in December 1872 81 39 149 171 274 275 276 277 Former places of worship editFormer places of worship Name Image Location Denomination Affiliation Grade Notes RefsAll Souls Church More images nbsp Clive Vale50 52 02 N 0 36 25 E 50 8673 N 0 6069 E 50 8673 0 6069 Former All Souls Church Clive Vale Anglican II Arthur Blomfield built Clive Vale s Anglican church in a plain red brick style in 1890 Its height is emphasised by the clerestory with triple lancet windows some with stained glass by Heaton Butler and Bayne An elaborate reredos was added in 1897 The final service was on 4 November 2007 and the Diocese of Chichester declared it redundant on 15 February 2008 23 20 278 279 280 281 St Mary in the Castle Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 20 N 0 35 05 E 50 8556 N 0 5846 E 50 8556 0 5846 Former St Mary in the Castle Church Hastings Anglican II The successor to an 11th century collegiate church inside Hastings Castle this Classical stuccoed church with Ionic columns formed the centrepiece of Joseph Kay s Pelham Crescent residential development on the seafront Springs flowed from the cliff behind into a total immersion baptismal pool rare in an Anglican church It closed in 1970 and is now an arts centre 10 27 179 157 182 236 161 234 282 283 284 285 St Helen s Church original building More images nbsp St Helen s50 52 47 N 0 35 11 E 50 8796 N 0 5864 E 50 8796 0 5864 Former St Helen s Church St Helen s Anglican II The ruins of Ore s original parish church are in an overgrown wood but the tower nave and chancel walls and some windows can still be seen The tower is 12th century and other surviving fabric is 14th and 15th century Traces of an Easter Sepulchre remain as well The church was damp inconveniently sited and too small for the growing district so the new St Helen s Church was built nearby in 1869 136 286 287 St Leonard s Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 05 N 0 33 05 E 50 8513 N 0 5514 E 50 8513 0 5514 St Leonard s Church St Leonards on Sea Anglican II James Burton the founder of St Leonards on Sea built a seafront church for the new town in 1837 Five years later the cliff behind collapsed and crushed the chancel and in 1944 a freakish direct hit from a V 1 flying bomb damaged by anti aircraft fire brought the whole church down Giles and Adrian Gilbert Scott s neo Gothic pale brick and stone design executed in eight years from 1953 replaced it 81 27 179 109 288 289 290 291 292 293 254 St Nicholas Church Fishermen s Church More images nbsp Rock a Nore50 51 22 N 0 35 43 E 50 8561 N 0 5952 E 50 8561 0 5952 Former St Nicholas Church Rock a Nore Anglican II The rector of St Clement s Church founded this small plain stone church in 1854 on The Stade at Rock a Nore in an attempt to reach out to the town s fishermen who attended church irregularly The first service took place on 26 March that year It was requisitioned and damaged in World War II closed and bought by a trust who converted it into a fishing museum which opened in 1956 20 27 24 294 295 296 297 Christ Church original building More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 13 N 0 33 35 E 50 8535 N 0 5596 E 50 8535 0 5596 Former Christ Church St Leonards on Sea Anglican Built in 1860 as a working class church this Early English style building used sandstone from an adjacent quarry which then became the site of the new Christ Church in 1875 The original church then became the parish hall hosted some activities for the nearby Christ Church School and was later turned into a theological centre 23 92 93 298 St Ethelburga s Mission Hall More images nbsp Glyne Gap Bulverhythe50 50 52 N 0 30 48 E 50 8477 N 0 5133 E 50 8477 0 5133 Former St Ethelburga s Mission Hall Glyne Gap Anglican St Ethelburga s Church established a mission chapel and church hall at nearby Glyne Gap in 1932 A loan from the Board of Charity Commissioners in 1938 helped to fund it The building on the Bexhill Road was acquired for use as a nursery school in 1997 299 300 St Wilfrid s Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 15 N 0 33 30 E 50 8542 N 0 5584 E 50 8542 0 5584 Former St Wilfrid s Church St Leonards on Sea Anglican This was always an unparished mission church and is no longer in religious use For many years after its closure it housed the Chichester Diocesan Association for the Deaf The Classical style building is gabled stuccoed and has a porch and pediment and dates from the mid 1860s 36 149 Sandown Mission Hall Ore50 52 15 N 0 36 14 E 50 8707 N 0 6038 E 50 8707 0 6038 Former Sandown Mission Hall Ore Anglican The mission occupied a tin tabernacle at the corner of School Road and Sandown Road in Ore It was built in late 1894 and formally opened on 5 December 1894 by Sir James Colquhoun 5th Baronet Initially run by a Mrs Holt from 27 September 1902 it was taken over and run by nearby Christ Church A newspaper report in 1933 described a recreation room for unemployed people having opened at the hall and five years later a new clubroom was provided The building was later used as an overflow classroom for a nearby primary school but this ceased in July 1952 301 302 303 304 305 Bohemia Primitive Methodist Chapel More images nbsp Bohemia50 51 47 N 0 33 40 E 50 8630 N 0 5611 E 50 8630 0 5611 Former Bohemia Primitive Methodist Chapel Bohemia Methodist This small Italianate chapel was built in the late 19th century for the Primitive Methodist community A schoolroom was built during improvement work in 1895 It closed in 1939 and became Newgate Hall which now houses a British Red Cross office 39 306 307 308 Bourne Street Wesleyan Methodist Church More images nbsp Old Town50 51 25 N 0 35 34 E 50 8570 N 0 5927 E 50 8570 0 5927 Former Bourne Street Wesleyan Methodist Church Old Town Methodist The popular Hastings Theatre in the heart of the Old Town was sold to the Methodist community in 1834 after nine years of use They demolished the Neoclassical structure in 1939 in favour of a plain red brick building which opened the following year As Bourne Hall it now houses a cafe and arts centre 149 39 307 43 309 310 Hollington Methodist Church More images nbsp Hollington50 52 42 N 0 32 59 E 50 8782 N 0 5496 E 50 8782 0 5496 Hollington Methodist Church Hollington Methodist This was the fourth Methodist place of worship in Hollington a cottage was used from 1823 a small chapel superseded it two years later and a larger building was provided in 1835 The building used by the congregation until its permanent closure in August 2016 dated from 1887 and survived bomb storm and fire damage The plain brick and stone church which had been registered for marriages in March 1922 had arched windows The members of Hollington Methodist Church joined the Park Road Methodist Church now called St Leonards on Sea Methodist Church at Bohemia 81 39 22 147 45 310 311 312 St Leonards Methodist Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 08 N 0 33 32 E 50 8522 N 0 5589 E 50 8522 0 5589 Former St Leonards Methodist Church St Leonards on Sea Methodist J Weir s Gothic Revival style stone church of 1901 with a large tower topped by a spire replaced an 1836 building on the same site This was extended in 1862 but burnt down in 1900 The South East District of the Methodist Church authorised the closure of the church in April 2008 although its marriage registration had already been cancelled in October 2005 39 308 196 44 313 St Michael s Chapel Holy Child Jesus Convent nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 16 N 0 34 00 E 50 8545 N 0 5667 E 50 8545 0 5667 Former St Michael s Chapel Holy Child Jesus Convent St Leonards on Sea Roman Catholic II The convent was founded in about 1846 and Augustus Pugin started building this chapel in its grounds in 1848 His son Edward completed it It was used under the dedication St Michael and All Angels Church for public Roman Catholic worship until 1868 when arguments over its ownership led to a new church being founded The Gothic Revival building reverted to convent chapel status and closed with the rest of the convent in 1974 23 20 314 315 316 317 318 Church of the Holy Apostles More images nbsp Ore50 52 24 N 0 36 37 E 50 8732 N 0 6103 E 50 8732 0 6103 Former Church of the Holy Apostles Ore Roman Catholic This short lived church was last listed in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton s annual directories in 1994 and in April of that year a planning application to convert the building into a doctor s surgery was approved Its registration for worship granted in February 1963 was formally cancelled in January 1998 32 29 319 320 Church of the Holy Ghost More images nbsp Bulverhythe50 51 05 N 0 31 34 E 50 8514 N 0 5260 E 50 8514 0 5260 Former Church of the Holy Ghost Bulverhythe Roman Catholic Designed by B Stevens and Partners architects from Eastbourne this church cost 40 000 and opened in 1964 It was registered for marriages in 1965 and was last used in 1988 it was later sold and is now a car parts centre Early photographs show a deep porch along the whole facade 149 31 321 322 323 Our Lady of Missions Convent Chapel More images nbsp Clive Vale50 51 50 N 0 35 53 E 50 8639 N 0 5980 E 50 8639 0 5980 Former Our Lady of Missions Convent Chapel Clive Vale Roman Catholic Like St Michael s Chapel at St Leonards on Sea this convent chapel was used for public Roman Catholic worship for a time under the name St Joseph s Chapel John Hicks designed the stuccoed building in the Baroque style in 1924 the convent was founded in 1903 on the site of Frederick North MP s house It is now the centrepiece of a sheltered housing complex 27 324 325 Gospel Mission Hall More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 10 N 0 33 27 E 50 8527 N 0 5576 E 50 8527 0 5576 Former Gospel Mission Hall St Leonards on Sea Non denominational This building on Kenilworth Road was registered for marriages between March 1920 and June 1982 It was built as a Primitive Methodist chapel in 1895 to the design of Philip Tree in a distinctive style which combined elements of Arts and Crafts and Gothic Revival architecture 196 326 327 Mission Chapel More images nbsp Ore50 52 30 N 0 36 28 E 50 8750 N 0 6077 E 50 8750 0 6077 Former Mission Chapel Ore Non denominational A mission hall on Grove Road in the Redlake area of Ore was recorded on maps of various ages and by The London Gazette as a registered place of worship between May 1893 and April 1971 when its certification was cancelled 328 Railway Mission Hall More images nbsp Hastings50 51 25 N 0 35 01 E 50 8570 N 0 5836 E 50 8570 0 5836 Former Railway Mission Hall Hastings Non denominational Tucked into one of the steep staircase flanked twittens that characterise inner Hastings this chapel was built by the Railway Mission in 1891 to serve the religious needs of the town s railway workers It later became the parish hall of St Mary in the Castle Church but is now disused The red brick and stone building is in the Perpendicular Gothic style 149 39 329 Meeting Room nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 07 N 0 33 36 E 50 8519 N 0 5601 E 50 8519 0 5601 Former Meeting Room St Leonards on Sea Plymouth Brethren This was in use by Brethren from October 1934 when it was registered for worship until the Ponswood Road Room in Silverhill replaced it in January 1954 It stood on Market Passage behind Norman Road 53 54 330 272 Stonefield Gospel Hall More images nbsp Hastings50 51 26 N 0 35 02 E 50 8572 N 0 5838 E 50 8572 0 5838 Former Stonefield Gospel Hall Hastings Plymouth Brethren This Gospel hall no longer in religious use stands on Stonefield Road and was registered for marriages in 1947 51 331 First Church of Christ Scientist Hastings and St Leonards on Sea More images nbsp Silverhill50 52 02 N 0 33 17 E 50 8671 N 0 5548 E 50 8671 0 5548 Former First Church of Christ Scientist Hastings and St Leonards on Sea Silverhill Christian Scientist Christian Scientists in the borough worshipped in various premises including part of a building in Cornwallis Gardens between 1946 and 1970 until a permanent church was built on Sedlescombe Road South It was registered for worship between April 1970 and March 1996 It was converted into offices permission to demolish the building was refused in 2018 66 332 333 334 St Leonards on Sea Congregational Church More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 17 N 0 33 33 E 50 8548 N 0 5591 E 50 8548 0 5591 Former St Leonards United Reformed Church St Leonards on Sea Congregational Federation II To Robert Elleray this is one of the finest Nonconformist buildings in Sussex but it lost its tall copper spire in the Great Storm of 1987 and was finally closed in 2008 after six years of disuse The firm of Habershon and Brock designed it in 1863 for its Congregationalist founder James Griffin and it was registered for marriages in June 1866 The sandstone for it was quarried at Ore 36 298 25 335 336 337 338 339 37 Kingdom Hall More images nbsp St Leonards on Sea50 51 19 N 0 33 21 E 50 8552 N 0 5559 E 50 8552 0 5559 Kingdom Hall St Leonards on Sea Jehovah s Witnesses This Kingdom Hall was latterly used by the St Leonards on Sea Congregation of Jehovah s Witnesses The building was registered for marriages in May 1976 but is no longer in religious use Attendances grew in 1998 when members of the Halton Kingdom Hall in St George s Road were displaced their building was demolished to make way for Southern Water s large cross town drainage tunnel 149 61 340 341 342 Bethel Full Gospel Church nbsp Halton50 51 54 N 0 35 27 E 50 8649 N 0 5909 E 50 8649 0 5909 Former Bethel Full Gospel Church Halton Pentecostal This Pentecostalist group used this late 19th century building in the middle of a terrace of houses on St George s Road before moving to Priory Road in Halton It was registered for worship and for marriages between November 1971 and October 2001 149 169 343 344 St Mary s Chapel More images nbsp Bulverhythe50 50 49 N 0 30 37 E 50 8469 N 0 5102 E 50 8469 0 5102 Former St Mary s Chapel Bulverhythe Pre Reformation II Norman era stones were incorporated into the rebuilt 13th century parish church of Bulverhythe which was a prebend of the original St Mary in the Castle Church The last record of worship taking place in the building was in 1372 after which it became derelict and collapsed Parts of the flint and stone walls and foundations of the chancel survive The parish existed in name only until the 19th century 254 345 346 Hastings Spiritualist Brotherhood Church More images nbsp Hastings50 51 27 N 0 35 00 E 50 8575 N 0 5832 E 50 8575 0 5832 Former Hastings Spiritualist Brotherhood Church Hastings Spiritualist This church on Portland Place in central Hastings was part of the Spiritualists National Union It was registered for worship in June 1963 and for marriages in January 1971 but has now closed planning permission for residential conversion was granted in April 2015 81 149 347 348 349 350 Ebenezer Particular Baptist Chapel More images nbsp Old Town50 51 31 N 0 35 46 E 50 8585 N 0 5961 E 50 8585 0 5961 Former Ebenezer Particular Baptist Chapel Old Town Strict Baptist II Successor to a Strict Baptist chapel called Cow Lodge near the beach at Rock a Nore this chapel was founded nearby in 1817 by a member of its congregation It grew in popularity throughout the 19th century and regular extensions were made but it closed by the end of the 20th century and has been converted into a house The Neoclassical structure retains its stuccoed facade pilasters pediment and cornice 36 154 24 351 352 353 Bulverhythe United Reformed Church More images nbsp Bulverhythe50 51 06 N 0 31 45 E 50 8518 N 0 5293 E 50 8518 0 5293 Former Bulverhythe United Reformed Church Bulverhythe United Reformed Church J Elworthy s Congregational mission church of 1895 was registered for marriages as Bulverhythe Congregational Mission Church in August 1936 Under its final name its registration was cancelled in September 1978 The Renaissance style hall of red brick with stuccoed dressings is now called Hastleon Hall and is owned by an amateur dramatics group 36 149 354 355 356 357 See also edit nbsp Media related to Places of worship in Hastings at Wikimedia Commons List of demolished places of worship in East SussexNotes edit The statistical return was compiled between 1940 and 1947 with the aim of documenting all Methodist chapels extant at that time their location previous affiliation prior to the Methodist Union of 1932 capacity building materials and similar details 40 References edit a b Manwaring Baines 1990 p 45 Planning Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas Act 1990 c 9 The UK Statute Law Database Ministry of Justice 24 May 1990 Archived from the original on 18 April 2010 Retrieved 29 March 2010 What English Heritage Does English Heritage 2012 Archived from the original on 5 January 2013 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Listed Buildings English Heritage 2012 Archived from the original on 5 January 2013 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Population Density QS102EW Hastings United Kingdom Census 2011 data UKCensusData com and Office for National Statistics 2012 Archived from the original on 29 March 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Marchant 1997 p 1 Marchant 1997 p 2 a b Elleray 1979 Introduction Salzman 1973 p 8 a b c d e Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 518 Salzman 1973 p 4 Marchant 1997 p 15 Marchant 1997 p 28 Thornton 1987 p 202 a b Marchant 1997 p 47 a b c d Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 522 Hastings Local History Group 2002 p 5 Hastings Local History Group 2002 p 6 a b Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 577 a b c d e f g h Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 520 Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 528 a b c d Various authors 2003 p 36 a b c d e f g h i j Elleray 2004 p 27 a b c d e f g Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 430 a b c d e Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 456 a b c Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 470 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Elleray 2004 p 28 Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 1988 p 35 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 68957 Name Church of the Holy Apostles Address Fairlight Road Ore Denomination Roman Catholics Date registered as recorded on original certificate 4 February 1963 Date deregistered as recorded on original certificate 16 January 1998 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 138 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 69517 Name Church of the Holy Ghost Address Junction Of Harley Shute And Bexhill Roads St Leonards On Sea Denomination Roman Catholics Date registered as recorded on original certificate 21 April 1964 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 140 a b Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 1988 p 47 a b Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 1994 p 42 Thornton 1987 p 119 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 81416 Name Ebenezer Baptist Chapel Address Ponswood Road Silverhill St Leonards on Sea Hastings Denomination Strict Baptists Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 66076 Name Halton Baptist Church Address Old London Road Hastings Denomination Baptists Date registered as recorded on original certificate 5 April 1957 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 133 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Elleray 2004 p 29 a b Historic England 2021 Congregational Church of St Leonard Including Attached Walls and Piers London Road St Leonards on Sea Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1390718 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b Hastings revivalists find new home Heart Publications 5 December 2013 Archived from the original on 28 September 2020 Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Elleray 2004 p 30 Methodist Church Buildings Statistical Returns including seating accommodation as at July 1st 1940 My Methodist History Methodist Church of Great Britain 12 April 2017 Archived from the original on 28 September 2020 Retrieved 22 November 2020 Methodist Church of Great Britain 1947 p 152 Methodist Church of Great Britain 1947 p 153 a b Wesleyan Chapel Hastings Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 23 September 2020 Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b The Methodist Church South East District Representative Spring Synod 19 April 2008 Minutes of the South East District Representative Spring Synod Methodist Church South East District 19 April 2008 Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 Retrieved 6 May 2010 a b c St Leonards church set to close after more than 120 years Hastings amp St Leonards Observer Johnston Press 20 April 2016 Archived from the original on 1 January 2019 Retrieved 31 December 2018 a b c Welcome to the St Helens Methodist Church Hastings website St Helens Methodist Church Hastings 2018 Archived from the original on 1 January 2019 Retrieved 31 December 2018 s n 1933 p 38 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 68599 Name Alexandra Chapel Address Sedlescombe Road North Silverhill St Leonard s on Sea Denomination Christian Brethren Date registered as recorded on original certificate 2 April 1962 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 138 a b No 42645 The London Gazette 10 April 1962 p 2949 s n 1933 p 25 a b No 38019 The London Gazette 18 July 1947 p 3382 s n 1933 p 29 a b s n 1935 p 34 a b Trowbridge 1953 p 24 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 70560 Name Meeting Room Address Adjoining 10 Stockleigh Road St Leonards on Sea Denomination Christian Brethren Date registered as recorded on original certificate 7 July 1966 Date deregistered as recorded on original certificate 27 March 1980 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 142 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 72807 Name Meeting Hall Address Corner of Beauharrow and Battle Roads St Leonards on Sea Denomination Brethren Date registered as recorded on original certificate 21 January 1972 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 146 a b Elleray 1979 111 a b Brooks 2004 90 91 a b No 36425 The London Gazette 14 March 1944 p 1237 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 71342 Name Seventh Day Adventist Meeting Place Address 14 Fairlight Road Hastings Denomination Seventh Day Adventists Date registered as recorded on original certificate 3 April 1968 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 143 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 74324 Name Kingdom Hall Address Stockleigh Road St Leonards on Sea Denomination Jehovah s Witnesses Date registered as recorded on original certificate 13 May 1976 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 149 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 77616 Name Kingdom Hall Address Church Wood Drive St Leonards on Sea Denomination Jehovah s Witnesses Date registered as recorded on original certificate 17 May 1988 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 156 a b No 58424 The London Gazette 17 August 2007 p 12004 a b No 56997 The London Gazette 11 July 2003 p 8660 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 72071 Name Hastings Chapel Address 2 Ledsham Avenue St Leonards on Sea Denomination Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Date registered as recorded on original certificate 18 March 1970 Date deregistered as recorded on original certificate 21 March 1990 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 145 a b c Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 72096 Name First Church of Christ Scientist Hastings and St Leonards On Sea Address 10 12 Sedlescombe Road South St Leonards on Sea Denomination Christian Scientists Date registered as recorded on original certificate 13 April 1970 Date deregistered as recorded on original certificate 6 March 1996 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 145 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 78077 Name The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Hastings Chapel Address Ledsham Avenue St Leonards on Sea Denomination Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Date registered as recorded on original certificate 29 January 1990 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 157 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 74547 Name Kenilworth Evangelical Mission Address Albany Road St Leonards on Sea Denomination Evangelical Mission Date registered as recorded on original certificate 23 February 1977 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 150 a b Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 79346 Name The Hastings Centre Address The Ridge Hastings Denomination Kings Church Date registered as recorded on original certificate 17 October 1995 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 159 a b No 61504 The London Gazette 19 February 2016 p 3499 a b Brooks 2004 3 16 17 Religion KS209EW England United Kingdom Census 2011 data UKCensusData com and Office for National Statistics 2012 Archived from the original on 14 May 2019 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Religion KS209EW Hastings United Kingdom Census 2011 data UKCensusData com and Office for National Statistics 2012 Archived from the original on 2 January 2021 Retrieved 2 January 2021 A little bit of history Diocese of Chichester 2012 Archived from the original on 19 July 2013 Retrieved 19 January 2013 a b Deaneries in the Diocese of Chichester Diocese of Chichester 2010 Archived from the original on 26 August 2012 Retrieved 20 July 2011 Hastings A Church Near You website Archbishops Council 2012 Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 2020 p 45 Diocese of Arundel and Brighton 2020 p 43 Synod Areas URC Southern Synod 28 September 2010 Archived from the original DOC on 7 October 2011 Retrieved 20 July 2011 Hastings Bexhill amp Rye Methodist Circuit Hastings Bexhill amp Rye Methodist Circuit 2018 Archived from the original on 1 January 2019 Retrieved 31 December 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at Places of Worship Hastings Borough Council 2013 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 a b Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 519 Historic England 2021 Church of All Saints All Saints Street east side Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1353127 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Wales 1998 p 31 Elleray 1979 8 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 424 425 Historic England 2021 Christ Church Laton Road Blacklands Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1286964 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Elleray 1981 125 Allen John 8 February 2010 Hastings Christ Church Blacklands Laton Road Sussex Parish Churches website Sussex Parish Churches www sussexparishchurches org Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 426 427 Historic England 2021 Christ Church and St Mary Magdalen London Road St Leonards Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1286965 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b Marchant 1997 p 33 a b Brooks 2004 24 25 Wales 1998 p 49 Elleray 1979 155 156 Elleray 1981 119 120 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 451 Historic England 2021 Church of the Holy Trinity Robertson Street north side Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1043423 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Elleray 1979 85 Elleray 1981 110 112 Holy Trinity Hastings Holy Trinity Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 428 429 Historic England 2021 Church of St Clement Swan Terrace Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1286732 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Wales 1998 p 30 Elleray 1979 12 13 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 427 428 Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 pp 520 521 Historic England 2021 Church of St John the Evangelist Upper Maze Hill St Leonards on Sea Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1043400 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b Wales 1998 p 48 Elleray 1979 157 Elleray 1981 121 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 453 Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 pp 521 522 Historic England 2021 Church of St Matthew St Matthew s Road Silverhill Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1192138 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Brooks 2004 66 67 Elleray 1981 124 Buckle 2003 pp 24 25 35 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 455 Historic England 2021 Christ Church Old London Road west side Ore Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1043454 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Brooks 2004 88 89 a b Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 468 Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 pp 538 539 Historic England 2021 Church of St Leonard in the Wood Church Wood Road Hollington Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1353148 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Wales 1998 p 124 Various authors 2003 pp 5 9 Elleray 1979 166 St Leonard The Church in the Wood Hollington Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Retrieved 10 May 2010 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 469 470 Elleray 1979 126 Elleray 1981 116 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 428 Allen John 19 January 2009 Hastings St Anne Chambers Road Sussex Parish Churches website Sussex Parish Churches www sussexparishchurches org Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Hollington A Church Near You website Archbishops Council 2009 Archived from the original on 19 September 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2010 St Anne Hollington Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Various authors 2003 pp 33 34 a b Allen John 3 April 2010 Hastings 1 St Helen Ore old and new and 2 St Barnabas Sussex Parish Churches website Sussex Parish Churches www sussexparishchurches org Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Allen John 26 April 2010 Architects and Artists S Sussex Parish Churches website Sussex Parish Churches www sussexparishchurches org Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Ore A Church Near You website Archbishops Council 2008 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 St Barnabas Ore Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Allen John 24 April 2010 Hastings St Ethelburga Filsham Road Sussex Parish Churches website Sussex Parish Churches www sussexparishchurches org Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 451 453 Brooks 2004 73 Elleray 1979 171 172 Elleray 1981 129 St Helen Ore Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 a b Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 469 a b Various authors 2003 p 10 Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 539 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Anon 1975 p 36 Allen John 21 January 2009 Hastings St Peter and St Paul Parkstone Road Sussex Parish Churches website Sussex Parish Churches www sussexparishchurches org Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2010 St John the Evangelist Hollington A Church Near You website Archbishops Council 2008 Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Historic England 2021 Baptist Church Wellington Square north west side Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1286663 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Elleray 1979 35 a b c d e Stell 2002 p 342 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 56902 Name Baptist Church Address Wellington Square Hastings Denomination Baptists Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates No 19978 The London Gazette 14 May 1841 p 1225 a b Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 526 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 27859 Name Baptist Church Address Chapel Park Road St Leonards on Sea Denomination Baptists Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates No 25448 The London Gazette 3 March 1885 p 924 Historic England 2021 St Leonards Baptist Church Chapel Park Road St Leonards Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1043667 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b c d Anon 1975 p 35 Halton Baptist Church Ore Christ Church Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 11 August 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2021 No 41434 The London Gazette 1 July 1958 p 4159 Historic England 2021 Church of St Peter St Peter s Road Bohemia Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1353235 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Elleray 1979 161 Elleray 1981 122 a b The Church of England Statistics amp Information Lists by diocese of closed church buildings Diocese of Chichester PDF Church of England 21 February 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 16 May 2012 Retrieved 5 November 2020 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 455 456 a b c No 56384 The London Gazette 8 November 2001 p 13157 Our History King s Church Hastings 2010 Archived from the original on 22 September 2010 Retrieved 8 May 2010 a b c d e Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 431 Willis Garryl 8 November 2018 Solution to gift us the church building in Hastings FRESH gospel ministry ahead November 2018 Church Growth Trust Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Retrieved 30 March 2021 No 21879 The London Gazette 22 April 1856 p 1509 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 7253 Name Tabernacle Address Cambridge Road Hastings Denomination Independents Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates Historic England 2021 Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and the English Martyrs Magdalen Road west side St Leonards Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1391831 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 St Leonards on Sea St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs Catholic Trust for England and Wales and English Heritage 2011 Archived from the original on 31 March 2021 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 31803 Name St Thomas and the English Martyrs Address Magdalen Road St Leonards on Sea Denomination Roman Catholics Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates No 25838 The London Gazette 17 July 1888 p 3894 a b c d Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 521 Historic England 2021 Roman Catholic Church of St Mary Star of the Sea High Street south east side Hastings East Sussex Grade II 1191229 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2021 Marchant 1997 p 122 a b Wales 1998 p 32 Elleray 1979 20 21 Elleray 1981 126 Hastings St Mary Star of the Sea Catholic Trust for England and Wales and English Heritage 2011 Archived from the original on 31 March 2021 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 27361 Name St Mary Star of the Sea Address High Street Hastings Denomination Roman Catholics Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates No 25202 The London Gazette 26 October 1883 p 5097 Hollington The Holy Redeemer Catholic Trust for England and Wales and English Heritage 2011 Archived from the original on 31 March 2021 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Holy Redeemer Hollington St John the Evangelist Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 55500 Name Church of the Holy Redeemer Address Upper Church Road Hollington Denomination Roman Catholics Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates No 41656 The London Gazette 13 March 1959 p 1746 Buckle 2003 p 56 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 76378 Name Clive Vale United Reformed Church Address Edwin Road Clive Vale Hastings Denomination United Reformed Church Date registered as recorded on original certificate 4 August 1983 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 153 No 51808 The London Gazette 13 July 1989 p 8219 Clive Vale Church Ore Christ Church Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2021 a b c d Antram amp Pevsner 2013 p 457 Brooks 2004 41 50 51 Elleray 1979 163 Elleray 1981 138 Buckle 2003 pp 12 20 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 23397 Name St Luke s Address Silverhill St Leonards on Sea Denomination United Reformed Church Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates No 23731 The London Gazette 25 April 1871 p 2032 St Mark Hastings Christ Church amp St Andrew Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 28 March 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 74167 Name St Mark s United Reformed Church Address Hughenden Court Hughenden Place Hastings Denomination United Reformed Church Date registered as recorded on original certificate 11 November 1975 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 149 No 46743 The London Gazette 20 November 1975 p 14715 a b Key events 1980 onwards The Hastings Chronicle 2010 Archived from the original on 17 April 2010 Retrieved 8 May 2010 No 51360 The London Gazette 7 June 1988 p 6645 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 81864 Name Hastings Old Town Kingdom Hall Address 25 Old Top Road Hastings Denomination Jehovah s Witnesses Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates Calvert Memorial Methodist Church Hastings Emmanuel Sussex On line Parish Clerks OPC 2010 Archived from the original on 1 January 2019 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 33285 Name Calvert Memorial Church Address Mount Pleasant Road Hastings Denomination Methodist Church Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates a b Foord 2017 pp 12 13 No 26493 The London Gazette 9 March 1894 p 1456 Antram amp Pevsner 2013 pp 430 431 Elleray 1981 137 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 33292 Name Methodist Chapel Address Upper Park Road St Leonards on Sea Denomination Methodist Church Retrieved 24 September 2012 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates St Leonards on Sea Methodist Church Hastings Bexhill amp Rye Methodist Circuit 2018 Archived from the original on 1 January 2019 Retrieved 31 December 2018 Elleray 1979 162 No 26433 The London Gazette 18 August 1893 p 4717 Church detail His Place Community Church Centre Hastings Churches Together 2007 Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Buckle 2003 pp 50 69 70 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 79765 Name His Place Community Church Address Duke Road St Leonards Denomination Assemblies Of God Date registered as recorded on original certificate 27 August 1997 Retrieved 27 March 2021 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 160 No 54891 The London Gazette 12 September 1997 p 10383 Calvary Chapel Hastings East Sussex Community Information Service East Sussex County Council Library and Information Services 2021 Archived from the original on 30 March 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Who We Are Calvary Chapel Hastings 2021 Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Churches in Fellowship With Calvary Chapel UK amp Ireland Calvary Chapel Radio 2010 Archived from the original on 18 May 2010 Retrieved 8 May 2010 Notice of Sale Hastings amp St Leonards Observer No 7146 Hastings 26 April 1958 p 10 Retrieved 3 October 2022 via British Newspaper Archive Church detail The Independent Church Hastings Churches Together 2007 Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 31 March 2021 No 47776 The London Gazette 20 February 1979 p 2360 Marchant 1997 p 40 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 52585 Name Salvation Army Citadel Address St Andrew s Square Hastings Denomination Salvation Army Retrieved 24 Septe, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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