Ravenscourt Baptist Church
Ravenscourt Baptist Church | |
---|---|
Denomination | Baptist |
Website | ravenscourtbaptist |
History | |
Former name(s) | West End Baptist Church |
Founded | 1793 |
Architecture | |
Groundbreaking | 1971 |
Completed | 1972 |
Construction cost | £78,000 |
Ravenscourt Baptist Church is a church in Ravenscourt Road, Hammersmith, London. It was established in 1793 as the West End Baptist Church.[1] The current building opposite the Ravenscourt Park tube station opened in 1971.[2][3]
History
[edit]A society of Baptists first started meeting on Hampshire Hog Lane in Hammersmith as early as 1768.[1][4] The exact location of the meeting house is unknown.[4] In 1788, a new meeting house built by Samuel Naylor was opened on King Street.[4] For two years, it was occupied by Baptists, after which it was let to another religious society, possibly Methodists, who called the building Trinity Chapel.[4]
By November 1793, the building was again taken over by Baptists, forming what became known for over 200 years as the West End Baptist Church.[4] In 1808, the church started a Sunday school for boys, which was opened to girls in 1839.[1]
A larger church building was built in 1851.[1] The West End Baptist Church on King Street was famously depicted in a painting by A. J. Messenger at the Royal Academy of Arts, described as "indicative of the heaviness of the Victorian style of buildings".[2]
Further modifications were made to the building in 1902.[1] By 1909, it had 630 members.[1]
By the 1960s, the church found it difficult to maintain the premises.[1] On 12 June 1971, four foundation stones, including three taken from the old premises, were laid for a new church building on Ravenscourt Road.[5] Church documents dating back to the 19th century, sealed in glass jars, became part of the new structure.[5] The minister at the time was the Reverend Frederick Hemmens.[6][5]
Later that year, excavators were tasked with digging up graves dating back to 1793 in the old church cemetery, after a special bill was passed in Parliament authorising development of the land, and Royal assent was granted in December 1970.[7][2] The cemetery had been used to bury dissenters who were not allowed to be buried on the "consecrated ground" of the Anglican Church.[7] As of 18 November 1971, eight skeletons had been unearthed; they were thought to be approximately 150 years old.[7]
The current church and hall block opened in 1972, with a new entrance on Ravenscourt Road.[1] The new church, which cost £78,000 to build, had a chapel seating 240 people, a large hall, two small halls, and a caretaker's two-bedroomed flat.[2][6] The front hall block on King Street became part of the Polish Social and Cultural Centre.[1]
In subsequent decades, church membership declined.[1] By 1993, it had only 40 members.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Persaud, Joy (22 October 1993). "Grass Roots". The Gazette. Hammersmith, Fulham & Shepherds Bush. p. 4. Retrieved 29 September 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d "'Church situation is more hopeful than it was'". Shepherds Bush Gazette and Hammersmith Post. 4 March 1971. Retrieved 29 September 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Ravenscourt Baptist Church". Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- ^ a b c d e Cundy, H. William (1978). Hammersmith Quaker's Tercentenary, 1677–1977. London: The Religious Society of Friends. pp. 57–58.
- ^ a b c "Church records are now part of the structure". Shepherds Bush Gazette and Hammersmith Post. 17 June 1971. Retrieved 29 September 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "Baptists go to market". Shepherds Bush Gazette and Hammersmith Post. 23 November 1972. Retrieved 29 September 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c "Old graveyard makes macabre work for the excavators". Shepherds Bush Gazette and Hammersmith Post. 18 November 1971. Retrieved 29 September 2024 – via Newspapers.com.