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Sorry but I still need a picture and data for this church. If you can help or have a picture then do please get in touch
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. The congregation then built the chapel in Berkley
Street. It has had varied fortunes.
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A schoolroom was first used as a place of meeting. Three years
later the old chapel was built
by congregationalists and a removal was made to Hanover Chapel,
at the corner of Mill Street and Warwick Street.
The first stone was laid for this
on April 23 1829 and on 17th January 1830 the chapel opened for divine service.
(with thanks to Caryl). The
work, did not progress however and in 1839 the chapel was closed
for a time. Next year it was re-opened and continued in use until
1855/ 1856, when it was burnt down.
It
was not subsequently rebuilt. The congregation moved instead
to a new* chapel in Berkley
Street, leaving virtually no trace of the old one. James
Picton, in 1872, reported ' a few forlorn tombstones in a joiner's
yard, forming part of the old site' .
* There is
room for confusion with addresses here as the new building although
known as the Berkley Street Congregational Church is shown in Gore
for 1858 as the Hanover Independant Chapel. It was sited close to number
9 Berkley St.
at the corner of Berkley Street and Upper Hill Street. It was built in 1857 and in
1858 Rev. John Dewsnap was minister.
Both
old and new church sites are now destroyed and under housing. The
new building is shown on the 1905 map.
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