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Meadrow Unitarian Chapel

Meadrow Unitarian Chapel (also known as Meadrow Chapel and Godalming Unitarian Church) is a Unitarian chapel in the Farncombe area of Godalming, Surrey, England. It is part of the London District and South Eastern Provincial Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches, one of 16 districts[1] within the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches, the umbrella organisation for British Unitarians.[2]

Meadrow Unitarian Chapel
Godalming Unitarian Church
The chapel from the northwest
Location map and quick summary
Meadrow Unitarian Chapel
51°11′37″N 0°35′52″W / 51.193522°N 0.597792°W / 51.193522; -0.597792
LocationMeadrow, Farncombe, Surrey GU7 3JB
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationUnitarianism
Previous denominationGeneral Baptist
History
Former name(s)Meadrow General Baptist Chapel
StatusChapel
Founded1789
Architecture
Functional statusOpen
Heritage designationGrade II
Designated16 May 1975
Specifications
Length35.5 feet (10.8 m)
Width22 feet (6.7 m)
Number of floors1
MaterialsBrick, stucco

Founded in 1789 as a General Baptist chapel in a town where Protestant Nonconformism was historically strong, it can trace its roots back to informal 17th-century Baptist meetings in houses and other venues. The congregation's doctrines changed during the 19th century to encompass Unitarian ideas, and the church "has long been regarded as Unitarian".[3] Worship took place in another building within the grounds for more than a century until the mid-1970s, when the old chapel—which has been listed at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance—was returned to religious use.

History edit

Context and beliefs edit

The ancient settlement of Godalming is "a rarity among towns of Southern England": it developed as a small-scale industrial centre rather than as a market town.[4] In terms of religion, industrial workers in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries often tended towards Nonconformism rather than Anglican or Roman Catholic worship,[5] and this was the case in Godalming: during the reign of King Charles II in the late 17th century, well over 1,000 of the 3,000 residents were Nonconformists, although there were no dedicated places of worship at that time (people gathered in conventicles).[6] One of the largest Nonconformist groups, and the longest established and most prominent in the west of Surrey,[7] were Baptists.[8] By the 18th century Calvinistic (Strict and Particular) Baptists had split to form a separate denomination, and most Baptists identified with the General Baptist tradition which differed little in its theology from Anglicanism, the Established Church.[7] However, some of these congregations later experienced a further development in their doctrinal position, towards anti-Trinitarianism (the rejection of the doctrine of the Trinity), and developed into Unitarian churches.[9]

This doctrinal shift happened at Godalming, where General Baptist meetings have a long history. Small groups identifying as Baptist but with no organised structure met in various places in the Godalming area from the 17th century, helped by regular visits from prominent preacher Matthew Caffyn of Horsham in Sussex. By the second half of the 18th century, meetings regularly took place at the house of William Evershed, who lived between Godalming and Eashing. Evershed merely leased this cottage:[10] he owned land and a house in Billingshurst near Horsham, and in 1754 he founded a General Baptist chapel there which soon became Unitarian. (It continues in use as Billingshurst Unitarian Chapel,[11] and descendants of the Evershed family maintained a 260 year connection with it. The last of that line, Susie Evershed, died in August 2022, aged 90, and her memorial stone sits in the chapel grounds surrounded by over 120 Evershed family members who lived and worshipped in the village).[12]

Building the chapel edit

In the late 18th century, the congregation who met at Evershed's house decided to build a permanent chapel in Godalming.[10] Records show that on "Wed June 4th 1783, at a church meeting held at Bro. Wm. Evershed's at Eashing, Godalming, it was agreed that a more convenient Place of Public Worship may conduce much to the ease and prosperity of this chapel. Agreed that a meeting house be Erected at Meadrow, Godalming for that purpose."[13] A site was found at Meadrow, north of the River Wey, and the chapel was built and opened in 1789. The "simple, attractive building" had a baptistery to allow total-immersion baptism in accordance with General Baptist principles: the first such baptism was recorded in 1809.[10] The church gradually moved towards Unitarianism and became fully associated with that denomination in the second half of the 19th century.[10] Another small group which met at a house in Crownpits elsewhere in Godalming later joined the congregation. The group called itself the "Particular Unitarian Baptist Church" and traced its roots back many years.[14]

 
The British School on Bridge Street was founded by Meadrow Chapel.

In 1821 a brick cottage was built on to the north side of the chapel. In 1870 a Gothic Revival-style Sunday school building was constructed much closer to the road; it was later converted into a chapel, and the 1789 building became the Sunday school.[13][15] This situation was reversed in 1975[13] or 1976[15] when the 1870 building reverted to its original role as a schoolroom and meeting room and worship again took place in the old chapel.[13]

As well as the Sunday school, the church—like many others during the Victorian era, when "a keen sense of social justice" characterised Nonconformist churches in particular—helped to found a free non-denominational day school in accordance with Joseph Lancaster's educational model. A site was found on Bridge Road near the town centre and "a fine new British school" was built.[10] Now Grade II-listed, it was constructed in 1872 and extended in about 1900.[16]

After the church moved back from the 1870 building into the original chapel, it was registered for the solemnisation of marriages in June 1976.[17] It is also licensed for worship in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 and has the registration number 74351.[18]

Architecture edit

The chapel was designated a Grade II listed building on 16 May 1975.[19] Such buildings are defined as "nationally important and of special interest".[20] As of February 2001, it was one of 1,548 Grade II listed buildings and 1,661 listed buildings of all grades in the Borough of Waverley,[21] the local government district in which Godalming is situated.[22] It is one of several current and former places of worship in Godalming with listed status: St Edmund's Roman Catholic Church,[23] the Quaker meeting house on Mill Street,[24] the former Salvation Army Hall on Mint Street (originally Congregational, and later Methodist)[25] and the later Congregational church on Bridge Street (also no longer in religious use)[26] are all Grade II-listed, and St Peter and St Paul's parish church has Grade I status.[27]

The chapel is a single-storey building of red-brown brick laid in the English bond pattern. The brickwork is still visible on the attached cottage, but the chapel has been rendered with stucco. The cottage has two storeys but is the same height as the chapel; they share a roof, which is laid with tiles. The façade consists of four bays of which the leftmost is formed by the cottage. A gabled porch is placed centrally, and there is a chimneystack halfway along the roof and another on the end of the cottage. The divide between the cottage and the chapel is marked by quoins, and a cornice runs across the façade below the roofline. The chapel has three arched windows: the two to the right of the entrance porch are full-height, but the other (between the cottage and the porch) lights only the upper section of the chapel. There is a door below it which may have replaced the lower section. Another door gives entry to the cottage; it is set below a straight-headed porch with a wooden architrave. The chapel's porch has a round-arched entrance and a cross on the gable. There are three round-arched windows to the rear of the chapel, which is faced with slates and which backs on to the River Wey.[13][15][19]

Inside, the original pews and benches have been moved to the walls to give an open worship space which takes up the rightmost two bays of the chapel. Separated from this above the third bay is a panelled gallery supported by columns and a cross beam. A "good row of hat-pegs" was noted in a survey of 1986. The chapel, inclusive of all three bays, measures 35.5 by 22 feet (10.8 m × 6.7 m). The baptistery, set into the floor, survives: there are brick steps down into it, and it is lined with bricks.[13][15][19]

Burial ground edit

 
The north side of the burial ground

The last burial at the chapel took place in 1869. Ten years later the first transcript was taken of the inscriptions on the monuments and gravestones.[28]

There are four burial vaults in front of the chapel. From north to south they are:

  • Henry Portsmouth Elphs (died 1833) and Betty Elphs (died 1834)
  • Thomas Pilsley (died 1810: the first burial in the burial ground) and Ann Pilsley (died 1816)
  • John Ellis (died 1824), Mary Ellis (died 1825) and Sarah Ellis (died 1815): John Ellis was a major contributor to the chapel's construction
  • George Knight (died 1843) and Emily Knight (died 1848)

Including these vaults, 46 people are interred in the burial ground. There are three rows of eight, two and nine graves on the north side of the path to the chapel entrance; four under the path (commemorated by stones set into it); and two rows of five and four to the south of the path. There are four burials behind the 1870 building (by the northern boundary of the burial ground) and six alongside the southern boundary. The surname Ellis appears 12 times, and in the first row of eight graves seven are named Cooke.[28]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Districts". The General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches. 2014. from the original on 3 October 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  2. ^ . The London District and South Eastern Provincial Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches. 2015. Archived from the original on 16 September 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  3. ^ Stell 2002, p. 323.
  4. ^ Janaway 1987, p. 34.
  5. ^ Janaway 1987, p. 64.
  6. ^ Malden, H. E., ed. (1911). "A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3. Parishes: Godalming". Victoria County History of Surrey. British History Online. pp. 24–42. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  7. ^ a b Stock 1999, p. 17.
  8. ^ Stock 1999, p. 1.
  9. ^ Stock 1999, p. 2.
  10. ^ a b c d e Stock 1999, p. 18.
  11. ^ Stell 2002, p. 331.
  12. ^ ‘The Last of the Eversheds'. ‘Impulse – Promoting Unitarianism in London and the South East’. Winter edition 2023. Page 11.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Hague & Hague 1986, p. 60.
  14. ^ Stock 1999, p. 20.
  15. ^ a b c d Stell 2002, pp. 323–324.
  16. ^ Historic England. "Former British School, Bridge Road, Godalming (Grade II) (1381331)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  17. ^ "No. 46938". The London Gazette. 21 June 1976. p. 8667.
  18. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 74351; Name: Meadrow Unitarian Chapel; Address: Meadrow, Godalming; Denomination: Unitarians. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates)
  19. ^ a b c Historic England. "Unitarian Chapel and Cottage, Meadrow (east side), Godalming (Grade II) (1044505)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  20. ^ . English Heritage. 2012. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  21. ^ . Images of England. English Heritage. 2007. Archived from the original on 28 October 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
  22. ^ "Godalming Directory – Waverley Borough Council". Godalming Town Council. 2015. from the original on 1 October 2015. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
  23. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Edmund King and Martyr, Croft Road (south side), Godalming (Grade II) (1189582)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  24. ^ Historic England. "Friends Meeting House, Mill Lane (south side), Godalming (Grade II) (1352714)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  25. ^ Historic England. "Salvation Army Meeting Hall, 18 Mint Street (north side), Godalming (Grade II) (1044475)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  26. ^ Historic England. "Former Congregational Church and attached Sunday School, now Messenger, May & Baverstock Premises, Bridge Street (north-west side), Godalming (Grade II) (1294577)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  27. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Peter and St Paul, Church Street (east side), Godalming (Grade I) (1044546)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  28. ^ a b Monumental Inscriptions at Meadrow Chapel, Farncombe (Godalming), founded 1783: transcript (c. 1983) at Surrey History Centre, Woking (ID number SHC07035596)

Bibliography edit

  • Hague, Graham; Hague, Judy (1986). The Unitarian Heritage: An Architectural Survey (PDF) (1st ed.). Sheffield: Unitarian Heritage. ISBN 0-9511081-0-7.
  • Janaway, John (1987). Yesterday's Town: Godalming. Buckingham: Barracuda Books Ltd. ISBN 0-86023-291-3.
  • Stell, Christopher (2002). Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting-houses in Eastern England. Swindon: English Heritage. ISBN 1-873592-50-7.
  • Stock, Peter (1999). Hidden Nonconformity: a study of Nonconformity in the Godalming area from the 17th century. Farnham: Arrow Press.

meadrow, unitarian, chapel, also, known, meadrow, chapel, godalming, unitarian, church, unitarian, chapel, farncombe, area, godalming, surrey, england, part, london, district, south, eastern, provincial, assembly, unitarian, free, christian, churches, district. Meadrow Unitarian Chapel also known as Meadrow Chapel and Godalming Unitarian Church is a Unitarian chapel in the Farncombe area of Godalming Surrey England It is part of the London District and South Eastern Provincial Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches one of 16 districts 1 within the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches the umbrella organisation for British Unitarians 2 Meadrow Unitarian ChapelGodalming Unitarian ChurchThe chapel from the northwestLocation map and quick summaryMeadrow Unitarian Chapel51 11 37 N 0 35 52 W 51 193522 N 0 597792 W 51 193522 0 597792LocationMeadrow Farncombe Surrey GU7 3JBCountryUnited KingdomDenominationUnitarianismPrevious denominationGeneral BaptistHistoryFormer name s Meadrow General Baptist ChapelStatusChapelFounded1789ArchitectureFunctional statusOpenHeritage designationGrade IIDesignated16 May 1975SpecificationsLength35 5 feet 10 8 m Width22 feet 6 7 m Number of floors1MaterialsBrick stuccoFounded in 1789 as a General Baptist chapel in a town where Protestant Nonconformism was historically strong it can trace its roots back to informal 17th century Baptist meetings in houses and other venues The congregation s doctrines changed during the 19th century to encompass Unitarian ideas and the church has long been regarded as Unitarian 3 Worship took place in another building within the grounds for more than a century until the mid 1970s when the old chapel which has been listed at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance was returned to religious use Contents 1 History 1 1 Context and beliefs 1 2 Building the chapel 2 Architecture 3 Burial ground 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 BibliographyHistory editSee also History of Unitarianism Context and beliefs edit The ancient settlement of Godalming is a rarity among towns of Southern England it developed as a small scale industrial centre rather than as a market town 4 In terms of religion industrial workers in the 17th 18th and 19th centuries often tended towards Nonconformism rather than Anglican or Roman Catholic worship 5 and this was the case in Godalming during the reign of King Charles II in the late 17th century well over 1 000 of the 3 000 residents were Nonconformists although there were no dedicated places of worship at that time people gathered in conventicles 6 One of the largest Nonconformist groups and the longest established and most prominent in the west of Surrey 7 were Baptists 8 By the 18th century Calvinistic Strict and Particular Baptists had split to form a separate denomination and most Baptists identified with the General Baptist tradition which differed little in its theology from Anglicanism the Established Church 7 However some of these congregations later experienced a further development in their doctrinal position towards anti Trinitarianism the rejection of the doctrine of the Trinity and developed into Unitarian churches 9 This doctrinal shift happened at Godalming where General Baptist meetings have a long history Small groups identifying as Baptist but with no organised structure met in various places in the Godalming area from the 17th century helped by regular visits from prominent preacher Matthew Caffyn of Horsham in Sussex By the second half of the 18th century meetings regularly took place at the house of William Evershed who lived between Godalming and Eashing Evershed merely leased this cottage 10 he owned land and a house in Billingshurst near Horsham and in 1754 he founded a General Baptist chapel there which soon became Unitarian It continues in use as Billingshurst Unitarian Chapel 11 and descendants of the Evershed family maintained a 260 year connection with it The last of that line Susie Evershed died in August 2022 aged 90 and her memorial stone sits in the chapel grounds surrounded by over 120 Evershed family members who lived and worshipped in the village 12 Building the chapel edit In the late 18th century the congregation who met at Evershed s house decided to build a permanent chapel in Godalming 10 Records show that on Wed June 4th 1783 at a church meeting held at Bro Wm Evershed s at Eashing Godalming it was agreed that a more convenient Place of Public Worship may conduce much to the ease and prosperity of this chapel Agreed that a meeting house be Erected at Meadrow Godalming for that purpose 13 A site was found at Meadrow north of the River Wey and the chapel was built and opened in 1789 The simple attractive building had a baptistery to allow total immersion baptism in accordance with General Baptist principles the first such baptism was recorded in 1809 10 The church gradually moved towards Unitarianism and became fully associated with that denomination in the second half of the 19th century 10 Another small group which met at a house in Crownpits elsewhere in Godalming later joined the congregation The group called itself the Particular Unitarian Baptist Church and traced its roots back many years 14 nbsp The British School on Bridge Street was founded by Meadrow Chapel In 1821 a brick cottage was built on to the north side of the chapel In 1870 a Gothic Revival style Sunday school building was constructed much closer to the road it was later converted into a chapel and the 1789 building became the Sunday school 13 15 This situation was reversed in 1975 13 or 1976 15 when the 1870 building reverted to its original role as a schoolroom and meeting room and worship again took place in the old chapel 13 As well as the Sunday school the church like many others during the Victorian era when a keen sense of social justice characterised Nonconformist churches in particular helped to found a free non denominational day school in accordance with Joseph Lancaster s educational model A site was found on Bridge Road near the town centre and a fine new British school was built 10 Now Grade II listed it was constructed in 1872 and extended in about 1900 16 After the church moved back from the 1870 building into the original chapel it was registered for the solemnisation of marriages in June 1976 17 It is also licensed for worship in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 and has the registration number 74351 18 Architecture editThe chapel was designated a Grade II listed building on 16 May 1975 19 Such buildings are defined as nationally important and of special interest 20 As of February 2001 it was one of 1 548 Grade II listed buildings and 1 661 listed buildings of all grades in the Borough of Waverley 21 the local government district in which Godalming is situated 22 It is one of several current and former places of worship in Godalming with listed status St Edmund s Roman Catholic Church 23 the Quaker meeting house on Mill Street 24 the former Salvation Army Hall on Mint Street originally Congregational and later Methodist 25 and the later Congregational church on Bridge Street also no longer in religious use 26 are all Grade II listed and St Peter and St Paul s parish church has Grade I status 27 The chapel is a single storey building of red brown brick laid in the English bond pattern The brickwork is still visible on the attached cottage but the chapel has been rendered with stucco The cottage has two storeys but is the same height as the chapel they share a roof which is laid with tiles The facade consists of four bays of which the leftmost is formed by the cottage A gabled porch is placed centrally and there is a chimneystack halfway along the roof and another on the end of the cottage The divide between the cottage and the chapel is marked by quoins and a cornice runs across the facade below the roofline The chapel has three arched windows the two to the right of the entrance porch are full height but the other between the cottage and the porch lights only the upper section of the chapel There is a door below it which may have replaced the lower section Another door gives entry to the cottage it is set below a straight headed porch with a wooden architrave The chapel s porch has a round arched entrance and a cross on the gable There are three round arched windows to the rear of the chapel which is faced with slates and which backs on to the River Wey 13 15 19 Inside the original pews and benches have been moved to the walls to give an open worship space which takes up the rightmost two bays of the chapel Separated from this above the third bay is a panelled gallery supported by columns and a cross beam A good row of hat pegs was noted in a survey of 1986 The chapel inclusive of all three bays measures 35 5 by 22 feet 10 8 m 6 7 m The baptistery set into the floor survives there are brick steps down into it and it is lined with bricks 13 15 19 Burial ground edit nbsp The north side of the burial groundThe last burial at the chapel took place in 1869 Ten years later the first transcript was taken of the inscriptions on the monuments and gravestones 28 There are four burial vaults in front of the chapel From north to south they are Henry Portsmouth Elphs died 1833 and Betty Elphs died 1834 Thomas Pilsley died 1810 the first burial in the burial ground and Ann Pilsley died 1816 John Ellis died 1824 Mary Ellis died 1825 and Sarah Ellis died 1815 John Ellis was a major contributor to the chapel s construction George Knight died 1843 and Emily Knight died 1848 Including these vaults 46 people are interred in the burial ground There are three rows of eight two and nine graves on the north side of the path to the chapel entrance four under the path commemorated by stones set into it and two rows of five and four to the south of the path There are four burials behind the 1870 building by the northern boundary of the burial ground and six alongside the southern boundary The surname Ellis appears 12 times and in the first row of eight graves seven are named Cooke 28 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meadrow Unitarian Chapel List of places of worship in Waverley borough References editNotes edit Districts The General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches 2014 Archived from the original on 3 October 2015 Retrieved 2 October 2015 National Scene The London District and South Eastern Provincial Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches 2015 Archived from the original on 16 September 2015 Retrieved 2 October 2015 Stell 2002 p 323 Janaway 1987 p 34 Janaway 1987 p 64 Malden H E ed 1911 A History of the County of Surrey Volume 3 Parishes Godalming Victoria County History of Surrey British History Online pp 24 42 Retrieved 28 September 2015 a b Stock 1999 p 17 Stock 1999 p 1 Stock 1999 p 2 a b c d e Stock 1999 p 18 Stell 2002 p 331 The Last of the Eversheds Impulse Promoting Unitarianism in London and the South East Winter edition 2023 Page 11 a b c d e f Hague amp Hague 1986 p 60 Stock 1999 p 20 a b c d Stell 2002 pp 323 324 Historic England Former British School Bridge Road Godalming Grade II 1381331 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 2 October 2015 No 46938 The London Gazette 21 June 1976 p 8667 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 74351 Name Meadrow Unitarian Chapel Address Meadrow Godalming Denomination Unitarians Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates a b c Historic England Unitarian Chapel and Cottage Meadrow east side Godalming Grade II 1044505 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 2 October 2015 Listed Buildings English Heritage 2012 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Images of England Statistics by County Surrey Images of England English Heritage 2007 Archived from the original on 28 October 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Godalming Directory Waverley Borough Council Godalming Town Council 2015 Archived from the original on 1 October 2015 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Historic England Church of St Edmund King and Martyr Croft Road south side Godalming Grade II 1189582 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 October 2015 Historic England Friends Meeting House Mill Lane south side Godalming Grade II 1352714 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 October 2015 Historic England Salvation Army Meeting Hall 18 Mint Street north side Godalming Grade II 1044475 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 October 2015 Historic England Former Congregational Church and attached Sunday School now Messenger May amp Baverstock Premises Bridge Street north west side Godalming Grade II 1294577 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 October 2015 Historic England Church of St Peter and St Paul Church Street east side Godalming Grade I 1044546 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 October 2015 a b Monumental Inscriptions at Meadrow Chapel Farncombe Godalming founded 1783 transcript c 1983 at Surrey History Centre Woking ID number SHC07035596 Bibliography edit Hague Graham Hague Judy 1986 The Unitarian Heritage An Architectural Survey PDF 1st ed Sheffield Unitarian Heritage ISBN 0 9511081 0 7 Janaway John 1987 Yesterday s Town Godalming Buckingham Barracuda Books Ltd ISBN 0 86023 291 3 Stell Christopher 2002 Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting houses in Eastern England Swindon English Heritage ISBN 1 873592 50 7 Stock Peter 1999 Hidden Nonconformity a study of Nonconformity in the Godalming area from the 17th century Farnham Arrow Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meadrow Unitarian Chapel amp oldid 1141355556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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