Wesley's Chapel
Wesley's Chapel (originally the City Road Chapel) is a Methodist church situated in the St Luke's area in the south of the London Borough of Islington. Opened in 1778, it was built under the direction of John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist movement. The site is a place of worship and visitor attraction, incorporating the Museum of Methodism in its crypt and John Wesley's House next to the chapel. The chapel has been called "The Mother Church of World Methodism".[1]
Wesley's Chapel | |
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Wesley's Chapel and Leysian Mission | |
Chapel and courtyard | |
Location | 49 City Road, St Luke's, London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Denomination | Methodist Church of Great Britain |
Website | www |
History | |
Founded | 1778 |
Founder(s) | John Wesley |
Dedicated | 1778 |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | George Dance the Younger |
Style | Georgian architecture |
Administration | |
Circuit | City Road |
Clergy | |
Minister(s) | The Revd Dr Jennifer Smith; Revd Steven Cooper |
Along with the associated Leysian Mission, Wesley's Chapel is a circuit of the London District of the Methodist Church. The chapel has an average Sunday service attendance of about 440.[2]
History and architecture
In 1776 Methodist leader John Wesley applied to the City of London for a site to build his new chapel and was granted an area of land on City Road. After raising funds from across the Connexion[3] the foundation stone for the chapel was laid on 21 April 1777. The architect was George Dance the Younger, surveyor to the City of London, and the builder was Samuel Tooth, a member of the Foundery society. The chapel was formally opened with a service on 1 November 1778.[3] The City Road Chapel was established to replace Wesley's earlier London chapel, the Foundery,[4] where he first preached on 11 November 1739.[5]
The building has Grade I listed status and is a fine example of Georgian architecture,[1] although it has been altered and improved since it was built. For example, the original plain windows were replaced with stained glass. In 1864, the gallery was modernised, its front lowered and raked seating installed.[3] Around the gallery is motif in relief supposedly designed by Wesley: a dove with an olive branch in its beak encircled by a serpent following its own tail.[6] The Adam style ceiling was replaced by a replica following a fire in 1879.[3]
Another major refurbishment of 1891 was carried out by Holloway Brothers, collaborating with the Methodist architect William Willmer Pocock. (There is a memorial stained glass window dedicated to Pocock.) The foundations were reinforced, the apse windows were enlarged to accommodate the stained glass, and new pews were installed.[3] The pillars supporting the gallery were originally ships' masts donated by King George III, but these were replaced by French jasper pillars donated from Methodist churches overseas.[4] Only the top section of the original three-decker pulpit survives.[3] An organ was installed in 1882 and the present organ in 1891; it was electrified in 1905 and in 1938 its pipes were moved to their present position at the rear of the gallery.[7]
- Sanctuary behind the pulpit
- Pulpit and gallery
- Pews, table and rail, and the organ in the gallery
The location of the sanctuary (including the original Communion table against the wall) in an apse behind the pulpit was common in the 'auditory' churches of the 18th century, but few other examples survive today.[3] The present sanctuary in front of the pulpit dates from restoration work in the 1970s. Among other alterations, the foundations were again strengthened due to subsistence and the roof was replaced. The chapel was reopened on 1 November 1978, by Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.[3] The present communion rail was a gift in 1993 from former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher,[8][9] who was married in the chapel in 1951.[10]
A memorial to Susanna Wesley stands just inside the gate, and her grave is situated in Bunhill Fields Burial Ground, opposite the Chapel.[11]
The first woman to preach in Wesley's Chapel was Agnes Elizabeth Slack, in 1926.[12]
The site
The chapel is set within a cobbled courtyard off City Road, with the chapel at the furthest end and Wesley's house on the right.
John Wesley's House
John Wesley's House, a mid-Georgian townhouse, was built in 1779 at the same time as the chapel.[13] It was Wesley's residence for the last eleven years of his life. He is commemorated by a blue plaque on the City Road frontage. This Grade I listed building is open to visitors as a historic house museum. It was built by Wesley and designed by George Dance the younger, at that time the surveyor of the City of London.
Wesley lived in the house for the last twelve years of his life and died in his bedroom. The house was also used to accommodate travelling preachers and their families. The household servants also lived on the premises. The house continued to be used for travelling preachers after Wesley's death until it was turned into a museum in the 1900s.
- John Wesley blue plaque
- John Wesley's House- Study
- John Wesley's House- Kitchen
In the dining room his Chamber Horse is set up which he used for exercise; on display in the study is his electric machine which was used for the treatment of illness.[14]
- John Wesley's Electric Machine
- John Wesley's Chamber Horse
Courtyard, gardens and cemetery
At the front of Wesley's House is a small physic garden which contains herbs mentioned in Wesley's book, The Primitive Physic. It details ways in which common people could cure themselves using natural medicines as they couldn't afford a doctor. Wesley set up the first free dispensary in London giving out medical advice and remedies at his Foundery chapel.
The house is dressed with period furniture which shows what it would have been like when Wesley lived and died there, although the house would have mostly been painted in French grey rather than fancy wallpaper.
Wesley died on 2 March 1791. His tomb is in the garden at the rear of the chapel alongside the graves of six of his preachers, and those of his sister Martha Hall and his doctor and biographer, Dr John Whitehead.[3][15]
A bronze statue of Wesley with the inscription "the world is my parish" stands at the entrance to the courtyard; created in 1891 by John Adams-Acton, the sculpture is Grade II listed.[16]
Victorian lavatory
The site also houses one of the few surviving examples of a gentleman's convenience built by the sanitary engineer Thomas Crapper in 1891.[17]
The Leysian Mission
The Leys School was opened in Cambridge in 1875, two years after non-Anglicans were admitted to the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. It was intended to be "the Methodist Eton". Dr William Fiddian Moulton, a biblical scholar and church leader, was its first headmaster.
The mission was started, in nearby Whitecross Street, in 1886, by former pupils of the school who were concerned about the social and housing conditions in the East End of London.[18] In 1904 the mission moved into purpose-built premises in Old Street, very near Wesley’s Chapel.[18] It provided a medical mission, a "poor man’s lawyer", a relief committee, feeding programmes, meetings for men and women, and a range of services and musical activities.
After World War II and the arrival of the welfare state the mission disposed of the buildings. Strong links with the school remain and a scholarship allows a number of children from the city of London to attend the school as boarders. Wesley’s Chapel and the mission merged on Easter Day 1989.[19]
The chapel today
The chapel is home to a multicultural congregation with a membership of 439.[2] It is a working church with daily prayer, Sunday Holy Communion services and several weekday services. It is known for its relatively "high church" sacramental liturgy. The superintendent minister is Canon Jennifer Smith.[20] Wesley's Chapel is in a Local Ecumenical Partnership (LEP) with St Giles' Cripplegate, its Anglican neighbour and shares close relationships with St Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, St Anne's Lutheran Church and the Friends meeting house at Bunhill Fields. It has meeting rooms for other activities.[21]
Museum of Methodism
The Museum of Methodism, housed in the chapel's crypt, contains artefacts and relics relating to Methodism, including several of Wesley's speeches and essays on theology, the "warmed heart" contemplative space", Thomas Coke's writing slope or desk and Donald Soper's portable preaching stand.[22][23] The museum was created in 1978 and was refurbished in 2014, with the last case being installed in early 2016 thanks to a generous donation.
- John Wesley's Death Mask
- John Wesley Ship
- John Wesley Ceramics
- African Gourd
- Fijian War Club
- Chinese Ornament
References
- Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1195538)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 January 2009.
- "Circuit Membership Statistics Summary October 2012" (PDF). Statistics for Mission. Methodist Church in Britain. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
- Vickers, John A. "Wesley's Chapel, City Road, London". dmbi.online. A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
- "History: Wesley's Chapel". Wesley's Chapel & Leysian Mission. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
- "Wesley's Chapel - timeline". Museum of Methodism. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- This Great Light Life & Legacy of John Wesley (video). Spiral productions. 2013. 9 minutes in – via YouTube.
- "Organ". Wesley's Chapel & Leysian Mission. 2008. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- "Death of a Member: Baroness Thatcher". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 744. House of Lords. 10 April 2013. p. 1154.
- "Communion table and rail". RE:Quest. Archived from the original on 15 June 2011. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
- Filby, Eliza (14 April 2013). "Margaret Thatcher: her unswerving faith shaped by her father". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
- "Wesley's Chapel and Leysian Mission, John Wesley's House and the Museum of Methodism | Methodist Heritage". www.methodistheritage.org.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
- Maria Zina Gonçalves de Abreu (2 June 2014). Women Past and Present: Biographic and Multidisciplinary Studies. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 128–130. ISBN 978-1-4438-6114-4.
- Stephen Inwood (28 June 2012). Historic London: An Explorer's Companion. Pan Macmillan. pp. 97–. ISBN 978-0-230-75252-8.
It was also resolved to provide a separate residence for John Wesley, who had lived many years in an apartment above the Foundry. ... After living nearly forty years above the Foundry, John Wesley occupied his new home in 1779. Today, it is ...
- Johnstone, Lucy (2000). Users and Abusers of Psychiatry: A Critical Look at Psychiatric Practice. Routledge. p. 152. ISBN 0-415-21155-7.
- John Wesley at Find a Grave
- England, Historic. "Statue of John Wesley in the forecourt of Wesley's Chapel, Islington - 1195540". www.historicengland.org.uk. Historic England. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
- "Visit One Of London's Most Opulent Toilets". Londonist. 30 December 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
- "Leysian Mission, London". dmbi.online. A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
- "What is the Leysian Mission?" at wesleyschapel.org.uk
- "Revd Dr Jen Smith". London District of the Methodist Church | London, UK | Methodism. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
- "What is Wesley's Chapel?" at wesleyschapel.org.uk/
- "Museum of Methodism". Wesley's Chapel & Leysian Mission. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
- "Museum of Methodism" leaflet, available at the Museum
Further reading
- George John Stevenson, City Road Chapel, London, and its Associations, Historical, Biographical, and Memorial (1872)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wesley's Chapel. |