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List of places of worship in London, 1804

This is a list of places of worship in London, 1804.

It is based on a list in A View of London, or, The Stranger's Guide through the British Metropolis (1804), headed "An Impartial List of the Principal Churches, Chapels, and Meeting-Houses". The choice lay in fact among Protestant places of worship. Some of the information was not quite current, ministers having died.[1]

The Guide excluded Quaker meeting-houses. "Stranger churches", Roman Catholic chapels, and synagogues were listed in The Picture of London (1807).[2]

Terminology at the time was variable: "meeting-house" and "chapel" were interchangeable, as were "Independent" and "congregational". Dissenters were usually classed under the "Three Denominations" (Presbyterian, Independent and Baptist). Methodists were sharply divided into the Calvinistic Methodists, who typically followed George Whitefield or preachers of the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion, and the Wesleyans. Unitarian congregations were only just being distinguished as anti-Trinitarians, from Arians. The New Jerusalem Church (Swedenborgians) was not included in the selections by the View.

A edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
St Ann Blackfriars Anglican William Goode the elder,[3] Payne
St Antholin, Watling Street[4] Anglican Henry Jerome de Salis (rector),[5] Henry Draper (curate),[6][7] George Bailey curate from 1808. The lecturers Draper, Wilkinson, Foster and Mann (a protégé of William Augustus Gunn) were suspected of sympathy with Methodism.[8] A William Mann was lecturer in Bermondsey in 1831.[9]
Aldermary Church Anglican Wilkinson
Adelphi Chapel, Strand ?congregational
Aldermanbury Postern Meeting-house Thomas Towle,[10] Joseph Barber[11]
Alie Street Meeting-house, Goodman's Fields Morgan, Shenston, Oates John Brittain Shenston was initially a General Baptist.[12]
Artillery Street Meeting-house, Bishopsgate Upton Later Baptist[13]
All Hallows, Lombard Street Anglican William Jarvis Abdy[14]

B edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Barbican Meeting-house Independent John Towers[15] Younger brother of Joseph Towers. Secession from Jewin Street.
Bartholomew Close Meeting-house Presbyterian William Braithwait[16]
Bentinck Chapel, Paddington Anglican[17] Basil Woodd[18]
Bishopsgate Church (St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate) Anglican Samuel Crowther[19][20]
Bow Church, Cheapside (St Mary Aldermary) Anglican[21] WJ Abdy
Bow Lane Meeting-house Secession Church William Jerment[22]
Dissenters' Chapel, Brentford Butts Nicholas T. Heineken[23]
Bury Street Meeting-house, St Mary Axe Independent Thomas Beck[24] Beck succeeded Samuel Morton Savage in 1788.[24] He was himself succeeded by Henry Heap.[25]
St Bartholomew's Meeting-house, West Smithfield Watkins, Mason
Battersea Meeting-house Baptist Joseph Hughes
Bethnal Green Meeting-house Congregational[26] John Kello[27] Kello succeeded John Walker in 1771, was minister to 1827.[26]

C edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Camden Chapel, Peckham Anglican foundation, Calvinistic Methodist[28] Founded late 1790s as a chapel-of-ease.[28]
Chapel Street, Soho Baptist[29] Thomas Stollery[29] Stollery (Stollerie) was originally an assistant to John Trotter in Swallow Street, leaving with some of the congregation.[30]
Colliers Rents, Long Lane, Southwark Independent[31] James Knight[31] Knight from 1791; John Rogers from 1745 to c.1791.[32]
City Chapel, Grub Street Independent John Bradford[33] Bradford was an Independent, there 1797 to 1805; his successor was William Wales Horne, a Baptist.[33]
Carey Street Meeting-house Independent[34] William Thorp[34] Predecessor Richard Winter; Thorp (1800–1805) was succeeded by Robert Winter.[34] Congregation founded by Thomas Bradbury in 1728.[35]
Cumberland Street Chapel John Brown[36] Calvinistic Methodist in the 1830s.[37]
City Road (Wesley's Chapel)
Church Street Chapel, Mile End Road Calvinist Methodist[38] John Cottingham[39] Founded as an Anglican chapel of ease, taken over by nonconformists by the 1790s; Cottingham was succeeded by George Evans in 1808.[38]
Carter Lane Meeting-house, Tooley Street Particular Baptist John Rippon[40] Preceded by John Gill (died 1771).[41]
Carter Lane, St Paul's English Presbyterian Tayler "...the most respectable meeting-house the dissenters have in the metropolis", according to the Anti-Jacobin.[42] According to the Unitarian Historical Society, this was the origins of the congregation that in 1862 removed to Islington and in the 21st century became New Unity.[43]
Crown Court Meeting-house or Chapel, Covent Garden Church of Scotland (Presbyterian) James Steven[44][45] Steven was at the Crown Court Chapel from 1787 to 1803.[46] Previously, William Cruden had been minister there, from 1773 to 1785.[47] Steven was succeeded in 1805 by George Greig.[48]
Camomile Street Meeting-house Reynolds, Charles Buck[49] Buck's congregation met there as a temporary measure, from 1802 to 1804, before moving to Wilson Street.[49]
Christ Church, Spitalfields Anglican Davies, Cecil
Christ Church, Newgate Street Crowder
Church Lane Meeting-house, Whitechapel D. Taylor
Clapham Church John Venn
Clapham Meeting-house Baptist John Ovington[50]
Clapham Independent Phillips

D edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Deptford Meeting-house Independent[51] Barker
Deptford, Church Street General Baptist William Moon[52] Joseph Brown died 1803
Dean Street Meeting-house, Tooley Street Baptist William Button[53] Button was minister from 1774 to 1813.[54]
Devonshire Square Meeting-house Particular Baptist[55] Timothy Thomas[55] Thomas was son of Joshua Thomas (DNB), and was minister from 1782, succeeding John Macgowan.[55]
St Dunstan's Fleet Street Anglican Henry George Watkins[56]
Dulwich Meeting-house

E edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Eagle Street Meeting-house Particular Baptist[57] Congregation of Andrew Gifford.[57] Joseph Ivimey from October 1804.[58]
Ebenezer Chapel Hammersmith Congregational[59] Built 1784.[59]
Ely Chapel, Holborn Anglican[60] Shepherd, William Mann[61] Medieval building.[60]
Elim Chapel, Fetter Lane Baptist[62] Abraham Austin[62] Austin from 1785; previously used by Calvinistic Methodists.[62]
East Lane Meeting-house, Walworth Baptist[63] Joseph Jenkins[63]
Essex Street Chapel Unitarian John Disney

F edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Fetter Lane Meeting-house Congregational[64] George Burder[64] Burder was minister from 1803.[64]
Fetter Lane Austin
Founder's Hall Anthony Crole[65] In Colebrook Row, Islington.[65]

G edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
St George's Southwark Anglican Draper, Payne
St George's Chapel, London Road Congregational[66] Thomas Harper[66]
St Giles in the Fields John Shephard[18] Holborn.[18]
Greenwich Chapel
Gate Street Chapel, Lincoln's Inn Fields Calvinistic Methodist[67] Griffith Williams[18] Thomas Stevenson, James Durrant (resigned 1839); congregation moved to Whitefield Chapel, Charles Street, Long Acre c.1842[67][68][69]
Green-walk Meeting-house, Blackfriars Road Baptist[70] James Upton[70] Upton died 1834.[70]
Gravel Lane Chapel, Wapping

H edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Haberdashers Almshouses Chapel Wilkinson
Hackney, Gravel Pits Independent/Unitarian Thomas Belsham, John Kentish[71] Kentish was afternoon preacher from 1795.[71]
Hampstead Meeting-house Wraith
Hanover Street, Long Acre Worthington, Winter
Highgate Meeting-house Porter
Highgate Presbyterian Pike
Hammersmith Meeting-house Porter
Hammersmith Independents Humphries
Hare-court Meeting-house, Aldersgate Street Webb
Highbury Chapel
Horsleydown Meeting-house Hunt
Hoxton Academy Meeting-house
Hoxton Chapel
Homerton Chapel Independent John Eyre[72] Previously known as Ram's Chapel. Eyre was an evangelical, ordained in the Church of England, associated with Trevecca College.[72]
Holywell Mount Chapel Platt
Hackney Meeting-house Independent[73] Samuel Palmer[73] Palmer came to Mare Street, Hackney in 1762, as assistant to William Hunt.[74] He moved the Mare Street congregation to St. Thomas's Square, in 1771, having become pastor in 1764. He was succeeded by Henry Forster Burder.[73][75]

I edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Islington Chapel Calvinistic Methodist Evan John Jones[76]
Islington Meeting-house Independent Nathaniel Jennings[77] Lower-Street Chapel, where Jennings was minister from 1768 to 1814.[77]

J edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Jewry Street Chapel Calvinistic Methodist[78] John Ball[79] After the tenure of William Aldridge to 1797, the chapel was held by Richard Povah to 1801; who was succeeded by Ball.[79] Ball died in 1811.[80]
Jamaica Row Meeting-house, Rotherhithe Baptist Phillips
Jamaica Row Meeting-house, Rotherhithe Independent John Townsend[18]
St John Horseleydown Anglican Abdy
St John's Wapping Anglican William Goode
St John's Chapel, Bedford Row Anglican Richard Cecil[81] Daniel Wilson in 1809.[18]
Jewin Street Meeting-house Timothy Priestley

K edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Kensington Chapel Congregational John Clayton, junior[82][83] Son of John Clayton (1754–1843).
Kingsland Road Meeting-house Independent John Campbell[84] Campbell was there from 1802.[84]
Kentish Town Meeting-house

L edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Lambeth Road Meeting-house Brackston
Lambeth Marsh Chapel Wesleyan John Edwards, lay preacher[85]
Leather Lane, Holborn William Hughes Hughes, minister 1798 to 1802, had in fact died by 1804. This was the congregation of Thomas Bayes, and had broken up.[86]
Lewisham Chapel
Little Wild Street Meeting-house Baptist[87] Benjamin Coxhead[87] Congregation founded by John Piggott[87]
Locke Chapel Scott
Lock's-fields Meeting-house Congregational York Street Chapel in Walworth was founded in 1790; "Lock's-fields Meeting-house" was the older name.[88][89] George Burder was preaching here in 1809.[18]
Long Acre Chapel Henry Foster, Edward Cuthbert[90]
St Lawrence's Guildhall Anglican Davies, Goode
London-stone Church, Cannon Street (St Swithin, London Stone) Foster
London Wall, Scots Church Henry Hunter Hunter had died in 1802.[91] Robert Young was there in 1809.[18]

M edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
St Margaret's Lothbury Anglican Carter, Armstrong
St Margaret Pattens, Rood Lane Anglican John Grose
Maze Pond Meeting-house Baptist[92] James Dore[92] Dore was minister from 1782, succeeding Benjamin Wallin.[92]
St Mary Magdalen's, Bermondsey Anglican Henry Cox Mason[93] Mason died in 1804, and was replaced by William Mann.[93][94]
St Mary Woolnoth, Lombard Street Anglican John Newton
St Mary Somerset's, Labour-in-vain-hill Anglican William Alphonsus Gunn, lecturer[95]
St Mary's Chapel, Broad Way, Westminster Davies
Miles Lane Meeting-house Secession Church[96] Easton The meeting-house had housed the Independent congregation of Stephen Addington, who died in 1796.[96]
Mill Yard Slater
Mitchell Street Meeting-house, Old Street Powell
St Mildred Bread Street Anglican John Neal Lake[97]
St Michael Crooked Lane Anglican Armstrong
Monkwell Street Lindsey

N edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
New Broad Street Meeting-house Benjamin Gaffee[98]
Newington Butts Chapel Poveh
Newington Green Church Shepherd
Newington, Stoke Hodgkins
Newington Green Chapel Independent/Unitarian Rochemont Barbauld,[99] Lindsey
New Road Chapel, St George's East Samuel Lyndall[100]
Nine Elms Meeting-house Opened 1797, near Vauxhall.[101]

O edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Old Ford Meeting-house Baptist William Newman[102]
Orange Street Chapel, Leicester Fields Congregational Taken over from the Church of England in 1787.[103]
Old Gravel Lane, Wapping Independent[104] N. Hill The congregation of David Jennings.[104]
Old Jewry Meeting-house Presbyterian Abraham Rees[105]
St Olave's, Southwark Anglican John Grose[106]

P edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Paddington Meeting-house None active in 1810.[107]
Paradise Chapel, Chelsea Isaac Picket,[108] Duncan, Buckland Registered for an Independent congregation in 1793.[109]
Parliament Court Chapel, Bishopsgate Street Universalist[110] William Vidler[110] Vidler was succeeded in 1817 by William Johnson Fox.[111]
Pavement Meeting-house, Moorfields William Wall[112]
St Paul's Shadwell Anglican William Winkworth[113]
Peckham Meeting-house Congregational William Bengo' Collyer[114] Later rebuilt as Hanover Chapel
Prince's Street Chapel, Westminster Unitarian Thomas Jervis[115] Jervis succeeded Andrew Kippis in 1796.[115]
Providence Chapel, Tichfield Street William Huntington
St Peter's Cornhill Basil Woodd,[116] Foster
Poplar Chapel

Q edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Queen Street Chapel, Bloomsbury Thomas Francklin had a proprietary chapel in Queen Street.[117]
Queen Street Chapel, Cheapside Anglican[118] Davis
Queen Street, Borough Shenstone

R edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Red Lion Court, Spitalfields Humphries
Red Cross Street Meeting-house Particular Baptist[119] John Wilson,[119] Robert Burnside During the 1790s the meeting-house was used by Swedenborgians. The Particular Baptist congregation of Currier's Hall, under Wilson then moved there, as did Burnside's. Wilson was dismissed in 1807, and his congregation dropped out; a Baptist secession from the Little Alie Street congregation (Shenstone) replaced it.[119]
Rose Lane Meeting-house, Radcliffe Baptist Thomas Williams[120] Williams was minister at Rose Lane for over 50 years.[120]
Rosemary Branch Meeting-house, Goodman's Fields Particular Baptist Abraham Booth[121] "Rosemary Branch Alley" was the old name: it had become known as Little Prescot Street by 1800.[122]

S edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Salters' Hall Presbyterian Winter, Hugh Worthington[123]
Shoreditch Workhouse Armstrong
Shore-place Meeting-house, Hackney Rance
Surrey Chapel Rowland Hill
Silver Street Meeting-house Calvinistic Methodist[124] Robert Caldwell[125] Caldwell succeeded Thomas Wills at Silver Street. He died in 1803.[125]
Sion Chapel, Whitechapel
St Saviour's Southwark Lady Huntingdon's Connexion William Winkworth[61] William Mann replaced Winkworth in 1804.[61]
St Thomas Mann
Spa Fields Chapel
St Thomas, Borough (Southwark) Unitarian John Kentish,[71] John Coates[126] Kentish from 1802.[71] The congregation founded by Nathaniel Vincent was initially Presbyterian.[126]
Stepney Meeting-house Independent George Ford[127] Ford succeeded Samuel Brewer in 1796.[127] Joseph Fletcher from 1823.[128]
Staining Lane Meeting-house Brooksbank
Swallow Street Meeting-house Scottish Presbyterian[129] John Trotter,[129] John Nicoll[18] Piccadilly.[18] Founded by James Anderson, a Scottish Presbyterian, who purchased a lease on a Huguenot chapel, and renewed it (1729);[130] or had a new meeting-house built.[131] The lease was bought in 1884 by Charles Voysey.[132]
Stratford Meeting-house Gould
Snowfields Chapel
Store Street Meeting-house, Bloomsbury John Martin
Somers Town Chapel Jerman

T edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Tabernacle, City Road
Tottenham Court Road Chapel Calvinistic Methodist
Trinity Chapel, Battle Bridge Sowerby

U edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Unicorn Yard, Tooley Street Particular Baptist Thomas Hutchings[133]
Union Street Meeting-house, Southwark Independent John Humphreys[134]
United Brethren's Chapel, Fetter Lane Moravian Christian Ignatius Latrobe[135] Latrobe succeeded his father Benjamin Latrobe, who died in 1786, but his work was not mainly centred on the chapel.[135]

W edit

Place of worship Denomination Preacher(s) Continuity and comments
Walthamstow Meeting-house Congregational[136] George Collison[137] In Marsh Street.[137]
Weigh House Meeting-house, Eastcheap Independent John Clayton[138]
Wells Street Meeting-house, Oxford Street Alexander Waugh[18]
White's Row Chapel Congregational[139] John Goode[139] Goode was minister from 1792 to 1826, succeeding Nathaniel Trotman, and being followed by Henry Towneley. The congregation moved in 1836, to Bury Street Chapel, building Bishopsgate Chapel.[139] Shortly afterwards Robert Crawford Dillon set up his new church in White's Row.[140]
Woolwich Chapel Calvinistic Methodist Joseph Piercy[141] Handed to his brother by William Piercy.[141]
Worship Street, Moorfields General Baptist.[142] John Evans,[142] Simpson

See also edit

Notes edit

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External links edit

  • A Hand-book to all places of Public Worship in London. 1848.

list, places, worship, london, 1804, this, list, places, worship, london, 1804, based, list, view, london, stranger, guide, through, british, metropolis, 1804, headed, impartial, list, principal, churches, chapels, meeting, houses, choice, fact, among, protest. This is a list of places of worship in London 1804 It is based on a list in A View of London or The Stranger s Guide through the British Metropolis 1804 headed An Impartial List of the Principal Churches Chapels and Meeting Houses The choice lay in fact among Protestant places of worship Some of the information was not quite current ministers having died 1 The Guide excluded Quaker meeting houses Stranger churches Roman Catholic chapels and synagogues were listed in The Picture of London 1807 2 Terminology at the time was variable meeting house and chapel were interchangeable as were Independent and congregational Dissenters were usually classed under the Three Denominations Presbyterian Independent and Baptist Methodists were sharply divided into the Calvinistic Methodists who typically followed George Whitefield or preachers of the Countess of Huntingdon s Connexion and the Wesleyans Unitarian congregations were only just being distinguished as anti Trinitarians from Arians The New Jerusalem Church Swedenborgians was not included in the selections by the View Contents 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 ZA editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments St Ann Blackfriars Anglican William Goode the elder 3 Payne St Antholin Watling Street 4 Anglican Henry Jerome de Salis rector 5 Henry Draper curate 6 7 George Bailey curate from 1808 The lecturers Draper Wilkinson Foster and Mann a protege of William Augustus Gunn were suspected of sympathy with Methodism 8 A William Mann was lecturer in Bermondsey in 1831 9 Aldermary Church Anglican Wilkinson Adelphi Chapel Strand congregational Aldermanbury Postern Meeting house Thomas Towle 10 Joseph Barber 11 Alie Street Meeting house Goodman s Fields Morgan Shenston Oates John Brittain Shenston was initially a General Baptist 12 Artillery Street Meeting house Bishopsgate Upton Later Baptist 13 All Hallows Lombard Street Anglican William Jarvis Abdy 14 B editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Barbican Meeting house Independent John Towers 15 Younger brother of Joseph Towers Secession from Jewin Street Bartholomew Close Meeting house Presbyterian William Braithwait 16 Bentinck Chapel Paddington Anglican 17 Basil Woodd 18 Bishopsgate Church St Botolph without Bishopsgate Anglican Samuel Crowther 19 20 Bow Church Cheapside St Mary Aldermary Anglican 21 WJ Abdy Bow Lane Meeting house Secession Church William Jerment 22 Dissenters Chapel Brentford Butts Nicholas T Heineken 23 Bury Street Meeting house St Mary Axe Independent Thomas Beck 24 Beck succeeded Samuel Morton Savage in 1788 24 He was himself succeeded by Henry Heap 25 St Bartholomew s Meeting house West Smithfield Watkins Mason Battersea Meeting house Baptist Joseph Hughes Bethnal Green Meeting house Congregational 26 John Kello 27 Kello succeeded John Walker in 1771 was minister to 1827 26 C editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Camden Chapel Peckham Anglican foundation Calvinistic Methodist 28 Founded late 1790s as a chapel of ease 28 Chapel Street Soho Baptist 29 Thomas Stollery 29 Stollery Stollerie was originally an assistant to John Trotter in Swallow Street leaving with some of the congregation 30 Colliers Rents Long Lane Southwark Independent 31 James Knight 31 Knight from 1791 John Rogers from 1745 to c 1791 32 City Chapel Grub Street Independent John Bradford 33 Bradford was an Independent there 1797 to 1805 his successor was William Wales Horne a Baptist 33 Carey Street Meeting house Independent 34 William Thorp 34 Predecessor Richard Winter Thorp 1800 1805 was succeeded by Robert Winter 34 Congregation founded by Thomas Bradbury in 1728 35 Cumberland Street Chapel John Brown 36 Calvinistic Methodist in the 1830s 37 City Road Wesley s Chapel Church Street Chapel Mile End Road Calvinist Methodist 38 John Cottingham 39 Founded as an Anglican chapel of ease taken over by nonconformists by the 1790s Cottingham was succeeded by George Evans in 1808 38 Carter Lane Meeting house Tooley Street Particular Baptist John Rippon 40 Preceded by John Gill died 1771 41 Carter Lane St Paul s English Presbyterian Tayler the most respectable meeting house the dissenters have in the metropolis according to the Anti Jacobin 42 According to the Unitarian Historical Society this was the origins of the congregation that in 1862 removed to Islington and in the 21st century became New Unity 43 Crown Court Meeting house or Chapel Covent Garden Church of Scotland Presbyterian James Steven 44 45 Steven was at the Crown Court Chapel from 1787 to 1803 46 Previously William Cruden had been minister there from 1773 to 1785 47 Steven was succeeded in 1805 by George Greig 48 Camomile Street Meeting house Reynolds Charles Buck 49 Buck s congregation met there as a temporary measure from 1802 to 1804 before moving to Wilson Street 49 Christ Church Spitalfields Anglican Davies Cecil Christ Church Newgate Street Crowder Church Lane Meeting house Whitechapel D Taylor Clapham Church John Venn Clapham Meeting house Baptist John Ovington 50 Clapham Independent PhillipsD editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Deptford Meeting house Independent 51 Barker Deptford Church Street General Baptist William Moon 52 Joseph Brown died 1803 Dean Street Meeting house Tooley Street Baptist William Button 53 Button was minister from 1774 to 1813 54 Devonshire Square Meeting house Particular Baptist 55 Timothy Thomas 55 Thomas was son of Joshua Thomas DNB and was minister from 1782 succeeding John Macgowan 55 St Dunstan s Fleet Street Anglican Henry George Watkins 56 Dulwich Meeting houseE editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Eagle Street Meeting house Particular Baptist 57 Congregation of Andrew Gifford 57 Joseph Ivimey from October 1804 58 Ebenezer Chapel Hammersmith Congregational 59 Built 1784 59 Ely Chapel Holborn Anglican 60 Shepherd William Mann 61 Medieval building 60 Elim Chapel Fetter Lane Baptist 62 Abraham Austin 62 Austin from 1785 previously used by Calvinistic Methodists 62 East Lane Meeting house Walworth Baptist 63 Joseph Jenkins 63 Essex Street Chapel Unitarian John DisneyF editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Fetter Lane Meeting house Congregational 64 George Burder 64 Burder was minister from 1803 64 Fetter Lane Austin Founder s Hall Anthony Crole 65 In Colebrook Row Islington 65 G editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments St George s Southwark Anglican Draper Payne St George s Chapel London Road Congregational 66 Thomas Harper 66 St Giles in the Fields John Shephard 18 Holborn 18 Greenwich Chapel Gate Street Chapel Lincoln s Inn Fields Calvinistic Methodist 67 Griffith Williams 18 Thomas Stevenson James Durrant resigned 1839 congregation moved to Whitefield Chapel Charles Street Long Acre c 1842 67 68 69 Green walk Meeting house Blackfriars Road Baptist 70 James Upton 70 Upton died 1834 70 Gravel Lane Chapel WappingH editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Haberdashers Almshouses Chapel Wilkinson Hackney Gravel Pits Independent Unitarian Thomas Belsham John Kentish 71 Kentish was afternoon preacher from 1795 71 Hampstead Meeting house Wraith Hanover Street Long Acre Worthington Winter Highgate Meeting house Porter Highgate Presbyterian Pike Hammersmith Meeting house Porter Hammersmith Independents Humphries Hare court Meeting house Aldersgate Street Webb Highbury Chapel Horsleydown Meeting house Hunt Hoxton Academy Meeting house Hoxton Chapel Homerton Chapel Independent John Eyre 72 Previously known as Ram s Chapel Eyre was an evangelical ordained in the Church of England associated with Trevecca College 72 Holywell Mount Chapel Platt Hackney Meeting house Independent 73 Samuel Palmer 73 Palmer came to Mare Street Hackney in 1762 as assistant to William Hunt 74 He moved the Mare Street congregation to St Thomas s Square in 1771 having become pastor in 1764 He was succeeded by Henry Forster Burder 73 75 I editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Islington Chapel Calvinistic Methodist Evan John Jones 76 Islington Meeting house Independent Nathaniel Jennings 77 Lower Street Chapel where Jennings was minister from 1768 to 1814 77 J editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Jewry Street Chapel Calvinistic Methodist 78 John Ball 79 After the tenure of William Aldridge to 1797 the chapel was held by Richard Povah to 1801 who was succeeded by Ball 79 Ball died in 1811 80 Jamaica Row Meeting house Rotherhithe Baptist Phillips Jamaica Row Meeting house Rotherhithe Independent John Townsend 18 St John Horseleydown Anglican Abdy St John s Wapping Anglican William Goode St John s Chapel Bedford Row Anglican Richard Cecil 81 Daniel Wilson in 1809 18 Jewin Street Meeting house Timothy PriestleyK editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Kensington Chapel Congregational John Clayton junior 82 83 Son of John Clayton 1754 1843 Kingsland Road Meeting house Independent John Campbell 84 Campbell was there from 1802 84 Kentish Town Meeting houseL editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Lambeth Road Meeting house Brackston Lambeth Marsh Chapel Wesleyan John Edwards lay preacher 85 Leather Lane Holborn William Hughes Hughes minister 1798 to 1802 had in fact died by 1804 This was the congregation of Thomas Bayes and had broken up 86 Lewisham Chapel Little Wild Street Meeting house Baptist 87 Benjamin Coxhead 87 Congregation founded by John Piggott 87 Locke Chapel Scott Lock s fields Meeting house Congregational York Street Chapel in Walworth was founded in 1790 Lock s fields Meeting house was the older name 88 89 George Burder was preaching here in 1809 18 Long Acre Chapel Henry Foster Edward Cuthbert 90 St Lawrence s Guildhall Anglican Davies Goode London stone Church Cannon Street St Swithin London Stone Foster London Wall Scots Church Henry Hunter Hunter had died in 1802 91 Robert Young was there in 1809 18 M editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments St Margaret s Lothbury Anglican Carter Armstrong St Margaret Pattens Rood Lane Anglican John Grose Maze Pond Meeting house Baptist 92 James Dore 92 Dore was minister from 1782 succeeding Benjamin Wallin 92 St Mary Magdalen s Bermondsey Anglican Henry Cox Mason 93 Mason died in 1804 and was replaced by William Mann 93 94 St Mary Woolnoth Lombard Street Anglican John Newton St Mary Somerset s Labour in vain hill Anglican William Alphonsus Gunn lecturer 95 St Mary s Chapel Broad Way Westminster Davies Miles Lane Meeting house Secession Church 96 Easton The meeting house had housed the Independent congregation of Stephen Addington who died in 1796 96 Mill Yard Slater Mitchell Street Meeting house Old Street Powell St Mildred Bread Street Anglican John Neal Lake 97 St Michael Crooked Lane Anglican Armstrong Monkwell Street LindseyN editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments New Broad Street Meeting house Benjamin Gaffee 98 Newington Butts Chapel Poveh Newington Green Church Shepherd Newington Stoke Hodgkins Newington Green Chapel Independent Unitarian Rochemont Barbauld 99 Lindsey New Road Chapel St George s East Samuel Lyndall 100 Nine Elms Meeting house Opened 1797 near Vauxhall 101 O editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Old Ford Meeting house Baptist William Newman 102 Orange Street Chapel Leicester Fields Congregational Taken over from the Church of England in 1787 103 Old Gravel Lane Wapping Independent 104 N Hill The congregation of David Jennings 104 Old Jewry Meeting house Presbyterian Abraham Rees 105 St Olave s Southwark Anglican John Grose 106 P editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Paddington Meeting house None active in 1810 107 Paradise Chapel Chelsea Isaac Picket 108 Duncan Buckland Registered for an Independent congregation in 1793 109 Parliament Court Chapel Bishopsgate Street Universalist 110 William Vidler 110 Vidler was succeeded in 1817 by William Johnson Fox 111 Pavement Meeting house Moorfields William Wall 112 St Paul s Shadwell Anglican William Winkworth 113 Peckham Meeting house Congregational William Bengo Collyer 114 Later rebuilt as Hanover Chapel Prince s Street Chapel Westminster Unitarian Thomas Jervis 115 Jervis succeeded Andrew Kippis in 1796 115 Providence Chapel Tichfield Street William Huntington St Peter s Cornhill Basil Woodd 116 Foster Poplar ChapelQ editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Queen Street Chapel Bloomsbury Thomas Francklin had a proprietary chapel in Queen Street 117 Queen Street Chapel Cheapside Anglican 118 Davis Queen Street Borough ShenstoneR editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Red Lion Court Spitalfields Humphries Red Cross Street Meeting house Particular Baptist 119 John Wilson 119 Robert Burnside During the 1790s the meeting house was used by Swedenborgians The Particular Baptist congregation of Currier s Hall under Wilson then moved there as did Burnside s Wilson was dismissed in 1807 and his congregation dropped out a Baptist secession from the Little Alie Street congregation Shenstone replaced it 119 Rose Lane Meeting house Radcliffe Baptist Thomas Williams 120 Williams was minister at Rose Lane for over 50 years 120 Rosemary Branch Meeting house Goodman s Fields Particular Baptist Abraham Booth 121 Rosemary Branch Alley was the old name it had become known as Little Prescot Street by 1800 122 S editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Salters Hall Presbyterian Winter Hugh Worthington 123 Shoreditch Workhouse Armstrong Shore place Meeting house Hackney Rance Surrey Chapel Rowland Hill Silver Street Meeting house Calvinistic Methodist 124 Robert Caldwell 125 Caldwell succeeded Thomas Wills at Silver Street He died in 1803 125 Sion Chapel Whitechapel St Saviour s Southwark Lady Huntingdon s Connexion William Winkworth 61 William Mann replaced Winkworth in 1804 61 St Thomas Mann Spa Fields Chapel St Thomas Borough Southwark Unitarian John Kentish 71 John Coates 126 Kentish from 1802 71 The congregation founded by Nathaniel Vincent was initially Presbyterian 126 Stepney Meeting house Independent George Ford 127 Ford succeeded Samuel Brewer in 1796 127 Joseph Fletcher from 1823 128 Staining Lane Meeting house Brooksbank Swallow Street Meeting house Scottish Presbyterian 129 John Trotter 129 John Nicoll 18 Piccadilly 18 Founded by James Anderson a Scottish Presbyterian who purchased a lease on a Huguenot chapel and renewed it 1729 130 or had a new meeting house built 131 The lease was bought in 1884 by Charles Voysey 132 Stratford Meeting house Gould Snowfields Chapel Store Street Meeting house Bloomsbury John Martin Somers Town Chapel JermanT editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Tabernacle City Road Tottenham Court Road Chapel Calvinistic Methodist Trinity Chapel Battle Bridge SowerbyU editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Unicorn Yard Tooley Street Particular Baptist Thomas Hutchings 133 Union Street Meeting house Southwark Independent John Humphreys 134 United Brethren s Chapel Fetter Lane Moravian Christian Ignatius Latrobe 135 Latrobe succeeded his father Benjamin Latrobe who died in 1786 but his work was not mainly centred on the chapel 135 W editPlace of worship Denomination Preacher s Continuity and comments Walthamstow Meeting house Congregational 136 George Collison 137 In Marsh Street 137 Weigh House Meeting house Eastcheap Independent John Clayton 138 Wells Street Meeting house Oxford Street Alexander Waugh 18 White s Row Chapel Congregational 139 John Goode 139 Goode was minister from 1792 to 1826 succeeding Nathaniel Trotman and being followed by Henry Towneley The congregation moved in 1836 to Bury Street Chapel building Bishopsgate Chapel 139 Shortly afterwards Robert Crawford Dillon set up his new church in White s Row 140 Woolwich Chapel Calvinistic Methodist Joseph Piercy 141 Handed to his brother by William Piercy 141 Worship Street Moorfields General Baptist 142 John Evans 142 SimpsonSee also editList of places of worship in London 1738Notes edit A View of London or The Stranger s Guide through the British Metropolis 1804 pp 25 28 John Feltham 1807 The Picture of London for 1807 pp 376 7 William Goode hymntime com Retrieved 13 August 2015 Parish Church St Antholin With St John The Baptist Upon Walbrook CCEd Location ID 11563 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 April 2017 De Salis Henry Jerome 1777 1810 CCEd Person ID 56186 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 April 2017 Draper Henry 1791 1818 CCEd Person ID 10684 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 April 2017 The British Critic Vol 29 F and C Rivington 1807 p 215 Retrieved 13 August 2015 The Anti Jacobin Review and Magazine J Whittle 1803 p 530 Mann William 1831 1831 CCEd Person ID 82219 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 April 2017 The Evangelical Magazine and Missionary Chronicle 1818 pp 277 8 Walter Wilson 1808 The history and antiquities of dissenting churches and meeting houses in London Westminster and Southwark printed for the author sold by W Button p 532 Walter Wilson 1808 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting houseHouses in London Westminster and Southwark Printed for the author pp 186 A hand book to all places of public worship in London 1848 p 16 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Abdy William Jarvis 1777 1823 CCEd Person ID 1164 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Walter Wilson 1810 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Printed for the author p 222 Walter Wilson 1810 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Printed for the author p 387 Leigh S 1830 Leigh s New Picture of London Or a Luminous Guide to the Stranger On All Subjects Connected with General Information Business Or Amusement Leigh p 162 Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k The Watchman or Theological inspector afterw The Christian watchman 1809 pp 39 40 Josiah Pratt John Henry Pratt 1849 Memoir of the Rev Josiah Pratt Late Vicar of St Stephens s Seeleys p 53 The Gentleman s Magazine and Historical Chronicle E Cave 1801 pp 381 The Christian Observer 1825 p 269 A Biographical Dictionary of the Living Authors of Great Britain and Ireland Henry Colburn 1816 p 179 Ralph Griffiths George Edward Griffiths 1803 The Monthly Review R Griffiths p 33 a b Walter Wilson 1808 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Published by the author p 327 Thomas Milner 1834 The Life Times and Correspondence of the Rev Isaac Watts Simpkin and Marshall p 722 a b T F T Baker ed 1998 Bethnal Green Protestant Nonconformity A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 11 Stepney Bethnal Green Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 8 December 2013 The Law Journal Vol 6 J W Paget 1828 pp 2 20 Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b Edward Wedlake Brayley Gideon Mantell 1850 A Topographical History of Surrey G Willis pp 512 3 a b Baptist Magazine and Literary Review J Burditt and W Button 1821 p 357 Walter Wilson 1 October 2001 History amp Antiquities of the Dissenting Churches The Baptist Standard Bearer Inc p 50 ISBN 978 1 57978 618 2 a b Malcolm Bull s Calderdale Companion K freepages history rootsweb ancestry com Retrieved 13 August 2015 Cleal Edward E Crippen Thomas George 1908 The Story of Congregationalism in Surrey Internet Archive London J Clarke p 59 Retrieved 13 March 2018 a b Stephen Leslie ed 1886 Bradford John 1750 1805 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 6 London Smith Elder amp Co a b c Walter Wilson 1810 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting houseHouses in London Westminster and Southwark Including the Lives of Their Ministers from the Rise of Nonconformity to the Present Time author pp 542 4 Thompson John Handby Bradbury Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3169 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Gentleman s Magazine and Historical Chronicle E Cave 1816 p 280 G F Cruchley London 1834 Cruchley s Picture of London G F Cruchley p 82 a b F H W Sheppard General Editor 1957 Mile End New Town Survey of London volume 27 Spitalfields and Mile End New Town Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 9 December 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Ralph Griffiths 1786 The Monthly Review R Griffiths p 79 Lee Sidney ed 1896 Rippon John Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 London Smith Elder amp Co Ivimey Joseph 1830 A History of the English Baptists author and sold p 380 Retrieved 13 March 2018 The Anti Jacobin Review and Magazine J Whittle 1802 p 385 Bibliography of Unitarian Congregations Which Have Existed Since 1800 PDF Unitarian Historical Society Retrieved 17 June 2022 Congregational Historical Society 1956 Transactions pp 193 Sujit Sivasundaram 17 November 2005 Nature and the Godly Empire Science and Evangelical Mission in the Pacific 1795 1850 Cambridge University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 521 84836 7 Congregational Historical Society 1956 Transactions p 193 Stephen Leslie ed 1888 Cruden William Dictionary of National Biography Vol 13 London Smith Elder amp Co Walter Wilson 1814 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Including the Lives of Their Ministers from the Rise of Nonconformity to the Present Time with an Appendix on the Origin Progress and Present State of Christianity in Britain author p 4 a b John Styles Charles Buck 1817 Memoirs and Remains of the late Rev Charles Buck Anthony Finley at the White house n e corner of Chesnut and Fourth Streets pp 323 4 Joseph Ivimey 1830 A History of the English Baptists Ivimey p 412 The Latter Day Luminary Vol 1 Board 1818 p 211 Retrieved 13 August 2015 The Monthly Repository of Theology and General Literature Vol 7 Longman Hurst Rees and Orme 1813 p 526 Retrieved 13 August 2015 William Button 1754 1821 Publisher and Seller of Andrew Fuller s Publications Jeff Straub Academia edu academia edu Retrieved 13 August 2015 Ivimey J 1830 A History of the English Baptists Comprising the principal events of the history of the Protestant dissenterts during the reign of Geo III and of the Baptist Churches in London with notices of many of the principal churches in the country during the same period Vol 4 Ivimey p 335 Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b c Wilson W 2001 History amp Antiquities of the Dissenting Churches Vol 1 Baptist Standard Bearer p 402 ISBN 9781579786151 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Watkins H G 1798 Unanimity the Best Defence of Religious and Civil Liberty A Sermon Preached in the Parish Church of St Andrew Holborn on Sunday April 29th 1798 By Henry George Watkins F and C Rivington Anderson and Bateman p 3 Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b Stephen Leslie ed 1890 Gifford Andrew Dictionary of National Biography Vol 21 London Smith Elder amp Co Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds 1890 Ivimey Joseph Dictionary of National Biography Vol 24 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Thomas Faulkner 1839 The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Hammersmith Nichols amp Son p 265 a b The British Miscellany R Hastings 1841 p 130 a b c Aaron Crossley Hobart Seymour 1839 The Life and Times of Selina Countess of Huntingdon William Edward Painter p 213 a b c Joseph Ivimey 1830 A History of the English Baptists Ivimey p 387 a b Joseph Ivimey 1830 A History of the English Baptists author and sold p 403 a b c Stephen Leslie ed 1886 Burder George Dictionary of National Biography Vol 7 London Smith Elder amp Co a b William Hendry Stowell 1864 The Eclectic Review pp 3 4 a b The Congregational Magazine 1835 p 698 a b The Congregational Magazine formerly The London Christian instructor 1842 p 134 Memorials of the late Rev T S With an appendix of letters Second edition 1833 Samuel Roffey Maitland 1837 The Voluntary System Rivington pp 172 a b c The Spiritual magazine or Saint s treasury Continued as The Spiritual magazine and Zion s casket 1834 p 304 a b c d Lee Sidney ed 1892 Kentish John Dictionary of National Biography Vol 31 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Brown Dorothy Eugenia Sherman Eyre John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 9035 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Lee Sidney ed 1895 Palmer Samuel 1741 1813 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 43 London Smith Elder amp Co Skedd S J Palmer Samuel Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21213 Subscription or UK public library membership required John Spurgin 1848 The Sceptre of Righteousness a sermon Maidstone p 7 Walter Wilson 1810 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark author pp 123 a b Samuel Lewis 1842 The History and Topography of the Parish of Saint Mary Islington in the County of Middlesex author pp 412 3 Wilson W 1808 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Including the Lives of Their Ministers from the Rise of Nonconformity to the Present Time with an Appendix on the Origin Progress and Present State of Christianity in Britain Vol 1 author p 128 Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b Walter Wilson 1808 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Including the Lives of Their Ministers from the Rise of Nonconformity to the Present Time with an Appendix on the Origin Progress and Present State of Christianity in Britain author sold pp 129 The Evangelical Magazine 1811 p 222 Stephen Leslie ed 1887 Cecil Richard Dictionary of National Biography Vol 9 London Smith Elder amp Co Cyclopaedia Bibliographica A Library Manual of Theological and General Literature and Guide to Books for Authors Preachers Students and Literary Men Analytical Bibliographical and Biographical J Darling 1854 p 16 Dissenting Academies Online Clayton John c 1780 1865 dissacad english qmul ac uk Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b Stephen Leslie ed 1886 Campbell John 1766 1840 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 8 London Smith Elder amp Co First Home of Wesleyans Lambeth Marsh Waterloo Culture Grid culturegrid org uk Retrieved 13 August 2015 Andrew I Dale 2 September 2003 Most Honourable Remembrance The Life and Work of Thomas Bayes Springer p 46 ISBN 978 0 387 00499 0 a b c The baptist Magazine 1817 p 455 Ida Darlington ed 1955 Nonconformist Chapels in Walworth Survey of London volume 25 St George s Fields The parishes of St George the Martyr Southwark and St Mary Newington Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 10 December 2013 Richard S Kennedy Donald S Hair 2007 The Dramatic Imagination of Robert Browning A Literary Life University of Missouri Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 8262 6552 4 The Christian Guardian and Church of England magazine 1814 pp 293 4 McConnell Anita Hunter Henry Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14219 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c The Baptist Magazine 1870 p 487 a b G W Phillips of Bermondsey 1841 The history and antiquities of the parish of Bermondsey J Unwin p 79 Erasmus Middleton 1807 Evangelical Biography J Stratford p 318 Gunn William Alphonsus 1783 1808 CCEd Person ID 74648 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 11 March 2017 a b Walter Wilson 1808 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting houseHouses in London Westminster and Southwark author pp 519 John Neal Lake 1802 The Excellence of the Gospel a sermon p 3 Walter Wilson 1808 The history and antiquities of dissenting churches and meeting houses in London Westminster and Southwark printed for the author sold by W Button p 249 National review 1841 The Christian teacher p 126 Garnet Terry 1812 The pulpit or A biographical and literary account of eminent popular preachers interspersed with occasional clerical criticism by Onesimus p 191 The Evangelical Magazine editors 1797 p 515 George Pritchard 1837 Memoir of the Rev W Newman p i Congregational Church Orange Street London England Britain UK History orange street church org Retrieved 13 August 2015 a b Daniel Lysons 1795 St George in the East The Environs of London volume 2 County of Middlesex Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 10 December 2013 Woolrich A P Rees Abraham Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23280 Subscription or UK public library membership required Farrant John H Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 11661 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Subscription or UK public library membership required C R Elrington Editor T F T Baker Diane K Bolton Patricia E C Croot 1989 Paddington Protestant Nonconformity A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 9 Hampstead Paddington Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 10 December 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Evangelical Magazine and Missionary Chronicle 1820 p 56 Patricia E C Croot ed 2004 Religious history Protestant nonconformity A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 12 Chelsea Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 10 December 2013 a b Robert Aspland 1848 The Christian reformer or Unitarian magazine and review ed by R Aspland p 163 Stephen Leslie ed 1889 Fox William Johnson Dictionary of National Biography Vol 20 London Smith Elder amp Co Ralph Griffiths George Edward Griffiths 1808 The Monthly Review R Griffiths p 447 William Taylor antiquary 1833 Annals of St Mary Overy an historical and descriptive account of St Saviour s church and parish Published by the author p 115 Stephen Leslie ed 1887 Collyer William Bengo Dictionary of National Biography Vol 11 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Lee Sidney ed 1892 Jervis Thomas Dictionary of National Biography Vol 29 London Smith Elder amp Co Litvack Leon Woodd Basil Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 29909 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stephen Leslie ed 1889 Francklin Thomas Dictionary of National Biography Vol 20 London Smith Elder amp Co John Britton 1826 The original Picture of London Longman p 121 a b c Walter Wilson 1810 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting houseHouses in London Westminster and Southwark author p 304 a b Joseph Foulkes Winks 1843 The Baptist Reporter J Heaton pp 288 Clipsham E F Booth Abraham Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 2871 Subscription or UK public library membership required Joseph Ivimey 1823 A History of the English Baptists author and sold p 307 Wilson W 1808 The history and antiquities of dissenting churches and meeting houses in London Westminster and Southwark including the lives of their ministers from the rise of nonconformity to the present time with an appendix on the origin progress and present state of Christianity in Britain Vol 2 printed for the author sold by W Button p 61 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Walter Wilson The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting houseHouses 1810 p 116 archive org a b Walter Wilson 1 October 2001 History amp Antiquities of the Dissenting Churches The Baptist Standard Bearer Inc p 123 ISBN 978 1 57978 617 5 a b Walter Wilson 1808 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark Printed for the author p 296 a b Daniel Lysons 1796 The Environs of London Counties of Herts Essex amp Kent T Cadell p 640 Stephen Leslie ed 1889 Fletcher Joseph 1784 1843 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 19 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Walter Wilson 1 October 2001 History amp Antiquities of the Dissenting Churches The Baptist Standard Bearer Inc pp 48 ISBN 978 1 57978 618 2 Henry Benjamin Wheatley 8 December 2011 Round about Piccadilly and Pall Mall Or a Ramble from the Haymarket to Hyde Park Cambridge University Press p 179 ISBN 978 1 108 03650 4 Skedd S J Anderson James Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 474 Subscription or UK public library membership required Eugene Comte Goblet d Alviella translator J Moden The Contemporary Evolution of Religious Thought in England American and India 1886 p 109 archive org Joseph Ivimey 1827 A brief history of the dissenters memoirs of Miss Ann Price also of Daniel Cuxon Caleb Vernon and Charles Whitfield and an introductory address on the constitution of the Baptist churches Wightman and Cramp p 200 Walter Wilson 1810 The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches and Meeting Houses in London Westminster and Southwark author p 544 a b Mason John C S La Trobe Christian Ignatius Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 16107 Subscription or UK public library membership required John Campbell 1851 The Christian Witness p 495 a b Joseph Ivimey 1829 Dr Williams s library and the debate on the Roman Catholic claims January 20th 1829 Wightman and Cramp p 52 Stephen Leslie ed 1887 Clayton John 1754 1843 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 11 London Smith Elder amp Co a b c AIM25 collection description White s Row Chapel Spitalfields aim25 ac uk Retrieved 13 August 2015 Stephen Leslie ed 1887 Dillon Robert Crawford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 12 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Reynolds J S Piercy William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 48166 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Stephen Leslie ed 1889 Evans John 1767 1827 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 18 London Smith Elder amp Co External links editA Hand book to all places of Public Worship in London 1848 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of places of worship in London 1804 amp oldid 1179559015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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