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In June 1843, 65 members of Paul’s
Meeting
Church
,
Taunton
broke away to form a new church.
A site, formerly Whitmarsh’s wagon yard was
purchased, hidden behind
North Street
, large enough to include a church, schoolrooms and possibly a
cemetery, for £1,000. Architect
and builder, Mr Samuel Pollard built the church at cost price
of labour and materials for £1,500.
The exterior was in the C12 Gothic style and the
interior a four bay aisled nave with openwork wooden roofing,
a fine
Bath
stone pulpit and oak pews.
Mrs Thompson of
Poundisford
Park
laid the foundation stone on 10th August 1843 and Rev Henry
Quick was the first minister.
The deacons and minister were anxious to
open the buildings free of debt.
After the first services held in the now completed
church on 11th June 1844, all the money had been pledged by
9.30pm. Such was the size of the congregation, that, despite
extra seats, an outdoor service was conducted for the crowd
outside.
Schools,
Bible classrooms and a vestry were built next, again at cost
price, and the foundation stone for these was laid on 8th May
1845, the buildings to be completed by November. They were
used for:
-
Bible classes for 60 young members,
-
Children’s classes for 160
children,
-
Infant school for 100,
-
Adult classes for 120.
By 1859, such was the success of the teaching and the need for
it, that the school outgrew its accommodation so was enlarged,
again free from debt, and a library, evening school and sick
visiting society were established.
In the 1870s, the school buildings were further
enlarged and a Chapel Keeper’s House was built.
The
church itself was overcrowded, so in August 1850 galleries
were added enabling the church to accommodate 800 people.
By this time, £4,900 had been raised for buildings, £3,000
for missionary work, annual salary for the minister, and funds
for relieving the poor – a huge sum indeed.
By 1884, the buildings in North Street on
the church site, and obscuring the church view, were
demolished, being too dilapidated to repair, so money was
raised to build a house and a shop further south
[No 33 North Street] to be let for regular income, and
to widen the approach to the church, opening up its present
view. These
buildings were sold in the 1950s to purchase a Manse at
18 Eastwick Road
, which was later sold [the current Manse in
Ashley Road
was purchased in 1974]. The
present church gates replaced those removed for the war effort
and were designed by a deacon and cost £200.
At the Jubilee in 1893, only 3 of the original 65
members remained, and yet more money was raised to pay off
accumulated debts. At
that time, over 10,000 children and adults had passed through
the various classes held on the premises.
An
organ was installed in 1870 in the gallery opposite
the pulpit. Previously
the only music had been led by the choir.
Seventeen years later the organ was moved from there,
cleaned and repaired and put in the present position.
In December 1939 a new one was installed, built by
Osmonds of Taunton.
In the first hundred years North Street
Congregational Church had made a huge impact in society, with
its schools, Sunday schools, adult schools, lay preaching in
surrounding villages, evangelism, work in the hospital, Town
Mission, Soldiers’ Home, the Y.M.C.A., generous giving to
missions, especially the London Missionary Society and the
support of the John Williams missionary ships.
Many members went on to serve in the Congregational
Union, some had distinguished careers in the ministry and one
founded and worked in a hospital in
India
.
In 1847 Congregationalists had founded
the
Independent
School
for Congregational Boys [also called The West of England
Dissenters’
Proprietary
School
and Taunton Free Church School] and now known as
Taunton
School
.
North
Street
Church
, along with Paul’s Meeting and
Silver
Street
Baptist
Church
, raised funds to build Rowbarton Congregational Church in
1910. This stood
where the present gyratory road system is near St. Andrew’s
Church, and was demolished in 1971 – a plaque on the
flowerbed marks the site.
North
Street
Church
was the ‘
Mother
Church
’ for Bathpool, Blagdon Hill, Rowbarton and Bishop’s Hull
Chapels.
Since
state education became available and compulsory for all, the
school buildings at
North Street
were no longer needed for that purpose.
Also the more recent decline in Sunday school numbers
resulted in the buildings becoming less used and falling into
disrepair. In the early 1990s, vigorous fund-raising events
took place and an ambitious project undertaken to bring the
buildings into line with modern regulations.
A fire escape was installed, the whole building
re-wired, repaired and decorated, and the church was carpeted
[replacing very shabby linoleum].
A model ship to commemorate John Williams IV missionary
ship, which had sailed in 1843, was made and situated in front
of the pulpit. In
this, monies raised were placed for the restoration work,
which was completed for the 150th anniversary in 1993.
The former school buildings were rented to various
charities with mutual benefits.
The small building next to Whirligig Lane, now
‘Chamberlains’ [used as a former saddle store, for watch
repairs and by a Model Railway Club] was refurbished as a
church charity shop, later changed to a ‘drop-in’ café
and an evening cyber café for the youth.
It is named after the Reverend Elsie Chamberlain,
minister from
1980 to 1986, a woman ‘first’ for many things: Chaplain to
the Forces, workings at the B.B.C. for 27 years presenting
‘Lift Up Your Hearts’ and ‘The Daily Service’.
She was also the first woman minister in
Taunton
and first woman Chairman of the Congregational Union.
North Street Congregational Church is a
listed building, but instead of dwelling on its past alone,
the church continues to play a leading role with other
churches for the future of
Taunton
.
Compiled by Hazel Earl [Sept. 2003] |