PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY (fn. 48)
BAPTISTS.
There was a small Baptist group
in Colchester in the late 1630s; one of its members, Thomas Lamb, later a prominent General
Baptist preacher in London, was imprisoned by
the Court of High Commission in 1639 for
keeping conventicles. In 1640 a meeting of c. 20
people led by Richard Lee, a tailor, was broken
up by the borough authorities. (fn. 49) The congregation was apparently still meeting in 1642 when
Anabaptists were reported in Colchester, (fn. 50) but
there is no further record of Baptist activity in
the 1640s.
The Fifth Monarchist Henry Jessey seems to
have preached in Colchester in 1653, and he was
followed in 1655 by the Baptist Thomas Tillam
who had made c. 100 converts by May 1656. (fn. 51)
Tillam's teachings were at first approved by the
borough authorities, who gave him a church to
preach in, but by 1657 he was preaching the
seventh day (Saturday) sabbath, and opposition
to his teaching grew. (fn. 52) In 1659 the Independent
minister of St. Peter's, Edmund Warren, warned
of the 'spreading of this Jewish leaven' among
his flock. (fn. 53) Tillam was imprisoned in London in
1660, (fn. 54) and does not seem to have returned to
Colchester.
Abraham Chaplin was pastor of the Colchester
Seventh Day Baptists in 1690. (fn. 55) In 1706 he and
two of his congregation registered their newly
repaired meeting house in St. Leonard's parish.
Joseph Davis the younger of Highgate (Mdx.),
a member of the Seventh Day Baptist church in
London, by will dated 1731 and proved in 1733,
devised to Daniel Wright of Colchester, apparently a Seventh Day Baptist minister, the
meeting house and burial ground at the Hythe
for his life. (fn. 56) Four Colchester Particular Baptists
joined a Sabbatarian congregation under John
Ridley in 1739, but that may have been the one
at Woodbridge (Suff.). (fn. 57) The Colchester congregation, which received a bequest in 1760, seems
to have survived until c. 1770. The meeting
house at the Hythe was still known as the
Sabbatarian meeting in 1773, and a surviving
member of the extinct congregation was admitted to Eld Lane church in 1774. (fn. 58)
Stephen Crisp was apparently minister of a
Baptist, perhaps a General Baptist, congregation
in Colchester for a short time before his conversion to the Society of Friends in 1655. (fn. 59) In 1697
Thomas Agnes represented the Colchester congregation at the General Assembly of General
Baptists; he attended again in 1704 and was
apparently still elder or pastor in 1715. (fn. 60) In 1729
the Particular Baptists made provision for
General Baptists who wished to join their congregation, perhaps suggesting a crisis among the
Generals, but the church continued in the 1730s
when it was represented at the General Assembly by John Coolidge, and Charles Bulkeley
seems to have been minister for a short time in
the early 1740s. (fn. 61) It had been dissolved by
1755. (fn. 62)
Richard Tidmarsh, sent to Essex by the first
General Assembly of Particular Baptist churches
late in 1689, found some Baptists in Colchester
worshipping with other dissenting congregations. His preaching persuaded them to set up a
Particular Baptist church, and in 1690 their
minister, John Hammond, registered a meeting
house in St. Martin's Lane. (fn. 63) In 1703 Abednego
Lord registered a room in East Street for Baptist
services, (fn. 64) presumably for a separate congregation. In 1707 a total of 40 men and 53 women
united to form one Baptist church under Cornelius Rayner, who had succeeded Hammond in
1695; the union was probably between Rayner's
and Lord's congregations as Abednego Lord the
elder died a member of the united church in
1718. (fn. 65) By 1712 the congregation was meeting
in a house in Eld Lane in St. Botolph's parish,
which was conveyed to trustees that year; it may
earlier have met in a house on North Hill,
perhaps the Baptist meeting house rated for
church repairs in St. Peter's parish in 1702. (fn. 66)
Rayner died in 1708. He was succeeded by
John Vicars, 1709-11, and Vicars by John Rootsey, 1711-38, both founder members of the
Colchester church. (fn. 67) Rootsey, a wealthy man
who described himself as a gentleman and who
owned land in several parishes in Essex and
Suffolk, had c. 200 hearers in 1715, but in 1721
a total of 29 members refused to associate with
him and left the Eld Lane church. (fn. 68) Others
followed in 1724, 1729, and 1730, and c. 1724
they acquired their own pastor, John Dunthorne
from Hertfordshire. They had a meeting house
in St. James's parish, probably in East Bay. (fn. 69)
The schism, which seems to have been caused
by Rootsey's personality or religious views (he
may have had leanings towards Quakerism,
asking to be buried very simply in the Quaker
fashion), continued until after his death in 1738.
In 1739 the two congregations reunited at Eld
Lane under Dunthorne who remained pastor
until his death in 1756. (fn. 70) In 1758 there was
another schism when David Chapman, Dunthorne's assistant from 1753, led 5 men and 8
women away from Eld Lane to found a new
church, meeting in Moor Lane (later Priory
Street); another 4 men joined them in 1759. (fn. 71)
Chapman seems to have left Colchester soon
afterwards, (fn. 72) but his church continued, perhaps
because its members refused to accept Dunthorne's successor, Thomas Eisdell, whose
ministry was considered too 'doctrinal' by some
of his own congregation. Most returned to Eld
Lane early in the pastorate of Eisdell's successor
Thomas Stephens, 1774-1802. (fn. 73)
Although he complained in 1777 of the railing
spirit which had prevailed since the beginning
of the church's troubles, (fn. 74) Stephens, who
founded the Essex Baptist Association and was
an early supporter of overseas missions, was a
successful pastor at Eld Lane, starting a mission
at Mile End in 1796. (fn. 75) In 1795 the meeting house
was enlarged, and a baptistry was added. Earlier
baptisms had taken place publicly at Rootsey's
mill (Distillery Pond); they had provided opportunities for evangelization but had often
provoked jeering from the large crowds which
gathered to watch. (fn. 76)
Argument over Stephens's successor, perhaps
exacerbated by doctrinal differences within the
congregation which in 1796 was described as
'Arminians, Methodists, or Baptists', led to another schism in 1803 when 16 people followed
an unsuccessful candidate to a meeting room in
St. Runwald's parish. Most of the seceders
returned in 1804 at the start of the pastorate of
George Pritchard, 1804-12. (fn. 77) By 1811 there was
considerable dissatisfaction with Pritchard's
ministry, and a dispute that year over his refusal
to allow the 'antinomian' John Church to preach
at Eld Lane caused several members to secede
in 1812 and join a new church in Stanwell Street
on St. John's green. (fn. 78) Numbers of both members
and hearers increased under Pritchard's successor George Francies, 1815-36, although his
claim to have a membership of 800-900 in 1829
was much exaggerated; there were 165 members
in 1838. The mission at Mile End was reregistered in 1816 and one at Lexden in 1821. (fn. 79)
In 1834 a new chapel, to seat 1,000, was built
on a site adjoining the old one, largely at the
expense of Benjamin Nice, one of the deacons. (fn. 80)
For 30 years after Francies's resignation in 1836,
Eld Lane suffered from an ineffective ministry
due partly to the ill health of successive pastors
and partly perhaps to continuing doctrinal
differences. The presumably extreme views of
Thomas Rust, pastor 1838-41, caused the Congregational minister to withdraw from the joint
missionary prayer meetings which had previously
been held. (fn. 81) Rust was supported by most of his
congregation, but in 1848 dissatisfaction with his
successor led 28 members, apparently believers in
closed communion, to resign to form a new
church in Military Road. (fn. 82) In spite of those and
other resignations, Eld Lane reported congregations on Census Sunday 1851 of 350 in the
morning, 600 in the afternoon, and 200 in the
evening, in addition to 60 Sunday school children. (fn. 83) Moves towards strict communion in 1856
and 1857 led to further resignations, and in 1858
there were only 144 church members. (fn. 84)
The church was revived by E. Spurrier who
served, first as assistant and then as pastor, from
1866 to 1908. He reorganized the church, introducing the office of elder in 1876 to help with
pastoral work, and he was almost certainly responsible for the adoption of open communion in
1867. By 1883 meetings were being held at Parsons Heath and at a chapel in Ipswich Road, and
missions were opened at Parsons Heath in 1885 (fn. 85)
and at Blackheath in 1889. A mission room in
Magdalen Street was in use in 1892. At Eld Lane
itself a Sunday school building erected in 1868
was extended in 1889. Spurrier was twice president of the Essex Federation of Free Churches
and twice of the Essex Baptist Union. (fn. 86) Church
membership rose from 212 in 1888 to 281 in 1893
and reached a peak of 430 in 1959. The church's
success was at least partly due to the work of P.
H. Warwick Bailey, pastor 1944-72 and mayor of
Colchester in 1949. (fn. 87) It was still flourishing in
1988. The missions at Parsons Heath and Blackheath were then independent churches.
The church built in 1834 was restored in 1883
to plans by the Colchester architect F. E. Morris;
a vestry, a library, and a Sunday school room,
designed by J. F. Goodey, were added on the
west side of the church in 1889. (fn. 88) The plain
building, of white brick with a pedimented
front, (fn. 89) was thoroughly renovated in 1978.
A church in Stanwell Street, St. John's green,
was built in 1812 by a group of Independents and
Baptists, some of them seceders from Eld Lane.
The congregation, which had followed John
Church, had worshipped in a barn in St. Mary
Magdalen's parish earlier in 1812. It adopted a
Calvinist declaration of faith in 1813. (fn. 90) The
church suffered from financial problems as well
as from tensions between Baptists and Independents, but it was held together by its pastor,
Henry Dowling, who preached three times on
Sundays and held weekly services in the town and
surrounding villages. He claimed a congregation
of c. 400 in 1829, although in 1833 there seem to
have been only c. 50 members. Dowling resigned
in 1834 to become a missionary in Tasmania, and
in 1835 the church was dissolved. (fn. 91)
The chapel was bought by William Day, a
Baptist member of the original congregation, and
reopened as a Particular Baptist church. In 1851
congregations of 50 in the morning, 90 in the
afternoon, and 57 in the evening were reported. (fn. 92)
Numbers fell after the resignation in 1864 of the
pastor who had served since 1835, but by 1872
the church had revived sufficiently to erect a new
building. (fn. 93) About 1900 some members seem to
have seceded to form Providence church, Burling
ton Road, (fn. 94) but they returned to St. John's green
in 1910. The church was without a pastor from
1926 to 1936 and again from 1946. It closed in
1955. The building was sold in 1957 to the Elim
Pentecostal church. (fn. 95)
In 1961 Strict Baptists started meeting at the
former Town Mission hall in King Harold Road.
A school-hall and classrooms designed by H. P.
Stevens, a church member, were built in Prettygate Road in 1964, partly with money from the
sale of the St. John's green church. A permanent
church was built in 1976. (fn. 96)
The believers in closed communion who
seceded from Eld Lane in 1848 built the
Ebenezer chapel in Military Road, and in 1851
reported congregations of 100 in the morning
and 150 in the afternoon. Another Baptist
congregation of 30 in the morning, 50 in the
afternoon, and 35 in the evening, led by a
shoemaker, James Waterman, and meeting in
a warehouse in the same road, had been
licensed in 1850. It dissolved later in 1851, and
its members seem to have joined the Stanwell
Street church. (fn. 97) In 1857 and 1859 the congregation from the Ebenezer chapel met in the
Bible Room in Lion Walk. It seems to have
dissolved by 1866, when a new Calvinistic or
Particular Baptist church was formed in the
Bible Room with Waterman as minister. It
continued until 1874 when financial difficulties
and declining numbers forced the trustees to
sell the room. (fn. 98)
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS.
The Quaker
missionary James Parnell visited Colchester
early in 1655 and made several converts, including John Furley, a member of a prominent
Colchester family, and Stephen Crisp, a Baptist
who became a leading Quaker in the town and
a missionary in England, Holland, and Germany. (fn. 99) Parnell was arrested at Coggeshall later
in 1655 and imprisoned in Colchester Castle
where he died the following year. (fn. 1) Late in 1655
another missionary, Martha Simmonds from
London, walked through Colchester barefoot in
sackcloth and ashes. (fn. 2) By c. 1660 the Quakers in
Colchester seem to have been organized into a
two weeks meeting and, with Quakers from
neighbouring villages, into a monthly meeting.
They acquired their first property in 1659 when
Thomas Bayles gave them a burial ground in
Moor Lane (later Priory Street). (fn. 3)
Persecution of the Colchester Quakers, mainly
for their refusal to pay church rates or tithes,
was particularly fierce during the mayoralty of
William Moore who in 1663-4 had the meeting
house boarded up and then ordered troops to
break up Quaker meetings in the street, beating
and imprisoning many of those attending; he
again prevented Quakers from using their meeting house during his second mayoralty in
1670-1. They suffered further violent persecution in 1685, apparently at the instigation of the
town clerk, Samuel Shaw; meetings were broken
up and John Furley was fined for preaching. (fn. 4)
The Quakers met in a rented house or room
until 1663 when the lease expired; in spite of the
persecution they were then suffering, in 1663-4
they built a large meeting house (fn. 5) on a site
adjoining St. Martin's church and extending
from West to East Stockwell Street, including
the later Quaker Alley. It was acquired by the
Quaker Thomas Bayles in 1663 and was sold to
trustees for the Colchester two weeks meeting
in 1672. It was enlarged in 1672-3. (fn. 6) In 1683 the
Friends bought St. Helen's chapel in Maidenburgh Street which became known as the little
meeting house, but evening meetings in private
houses continued until 1695. (fn. 7) William Penn
attended an evening meeting in Jonathan Furley's house in 1677. (fn. 8) In 1701 the meeting house
in St. Martin's Lane was enlarged and St.
Helen's chapel repaired and licensed as a meeting house. (fn. 9)
In 1702 Colchester was still seen by opponents
as a centre of Quakerism, although membership
of the meetings was probably already declining
from its peak in the 1680s. (fn. 10) Joseph Besse,
schoolmaster and author of The Sufferings of the
People called Quakers, was among the five Colchester Quakers who affirmed instead of taking
the oaths of allegiance and abjuration in 1716,
and as many as 47 Quakers affirmed instead of
taking the oaths in 1723. (fn. 11) Distraints, sometimes
punitive, for unpaid church rates were taken
fairly regularly throughout the 18th century,
mainly from the leading and wealthier members
of the community like Richard Freshfield, Matthew Hawkins, and John Kendall (1726-1815),
a benefactor to the Colchester poor and a
missionary in England, Scotland, and Holland. (fn. 12)
Quakers also suffered, presumably from mobs,
for refusing to illuminate their houses on coronation days. (fn. 13)
The two weeks and the monthly meetings
maintained their separate existence until 1760,
although there was a considerable overlap in
membership and both used the same meeting
house. Friction between them on matters of
jurisdiction was first recorded in 1711, and grew
so bad that in 1723 the two weeks meeting ceased
to send representatives to the monthly meeting.
In 1727 the two weeks meeting similarly ceased
to send representatives to the Essex quarterly
meeting, recognizing only the yearly meeting in
London. The effect of the withdrawal of the two
weeks meeting was to reduce the monthly meeting, which was left with only the small rural
preparative meetings, to insignificance. Relations were presumably made worse in the period
1730-2 by the behaviour of Benjamin Lay who
was accepted by the monthly meeting after he
had been expelled from the two weeks meeting
for disorderly conduct. The rift was healed in
1760 when the two weeks meeting was reconstituted as a monthly meeting for the town only,
the two remaining rural meetings becoming the
Manningtree monthly meeting. The two monthly meetings merged in 1772. (fn. 14)
The number of Quakers in Colchester and its
neighbourhood continued to decline throughout
the 18th century and the figures of 80 members
and 20 other attenders reported in 1829 may
have been fairly accurate. (fn. 15) Nevertheless, between 1800 and 1802 the meeting house in
Quaker Alley was remodelled and extended at a
cost of c. £900, part of which was raised by
selling St. Helen's chapel with its associated five
almshouses and a further four almshouses adjoining it on the south, and the disused burial
grounds in Moor Lane and Almshouse Lane.
From 1826 to 1835 the Colchester monthly
meeting had to be subsidized by the other Essex
meetings. (fn. 16) In 1851 the meeting house could
hold 767, but the congregations on Census Sunday were only 58 in the morning and 48 in the
afternoon. (fn. 17)
Curiously the revival of Quakerism in Colchester seems to have coincided with the burning
down of the meeting house in 1871. A new
meeting house on a more convenient site in Sir
Isaac's Walk opened in 1872 and was remodelled
in 1892. In 1881 the Sudbury monthly meeting
was united to the Colchester meeting for religious matters. A mission was started at Lexden
before 1889 and another, apparently short-lived,
at Mile End in 1893. Membership of the Colchester monthly meeting increased to a peak of
193 in 1924. (fn. 18) The meeting house in Sir Isaac's
Walk, which had proved expensive to maintain,
was sold in 1938 and a new one built in Shewell
Road. (fn. 19) That site was compulsorily purchased
for redevelopment in 1974 and the Friends
moved to St. Mary's House, Church Street,
which they remodelled and extended. (fn. 20) In 1984
there were 150 members. (fn. 21)
Colchester Quakers benefited from several
charities. Five houses, part of the St. Helen's
chapel estate bought in 1683, were used as
almshouses in the 18th century. Four small
almshouses adjoining them on the south were
built by Stephen Crisp or his wife Gertrude
Losevelt for poor widows. All nine houses were
sold in 1802. (fn. 22) Thomas Braybrook by will dated
1669 left to Quaker trustees three houses in East
Street, but possession was not obtained until
after his widow's death in 1708. By 1784 the
houses were not worth repair; the site was sold
and the proceeds added to the monthly meeting's
funds for the poor. (fn. 23) In 1700 Robert Nicholas
was allowed land in St. Helen's chapel yard to
build four houses for poor Friends to live in, and
the houses were built, partly by subscription, in
1701. (fn. 24) By 1837 the houses seem to have been
let and the rent applied to the relief of the poor.
They were demolished and the site sold after the
earthquake of 1884, and the proceeds were invested for poor Quakers. (fn. 25) Giles Sayer, by will
proved 1708, left to his executor Richard Ashby
3 a. of pasture near Magdalen field for the benefit
of poor Quakers, and a £50 mortgage interest in
land in Peldon and West Mersea for poor Quaker
widows. In 1709 Ashby conveyed the land in
Peldon and West Mersea as well as that in
Colchester to Quaker trustees. (fn. 26) Mary Cockerill,
by will dated 1717, left the rents and profits of
a house, later two houses, in East Stockwell
Street to the women's meeting. The building
was sold to the town council in 1956 and the
proceeds invested for women Friends. (fn. 27) Benjamin Lay, by will dated 1731, left £100 to the
Coggeshall monthly meeting to assist emigrants
to America, or in default of suitable emigrants
to help poor members of the Colchester monthly
meeting. The interest was received by the Colchester monthly meeting in 1962. (fn. 28) Mary
Liversidge and Joan Bloys, by wills dated 1814,
and Elizabeth Davison, by will dated 1823, gave
£50, £19 19s., and £100 respectively to the
monthly meeting for poor Friends. All three
legacies were invested in 1835. (fn. 29) James Hurnard
in 1878 gave £1,000 in railway stock, the income
to meet the general expenses of the monthly
meeting. (fn. 30) Wilson Marriage, by will proved
1932, left £500 to build and endow a caretaker's
and meeting house by the burial ground in
Roman Road. In 1964 the charities produced a
total income of £79 0s. 10d. (fn. 31)
INDEPENDENTS and PRESBYTERIANS,later CONGREGATIONALISTS and UNITEDREFORMED CHURCH.
Owen Stockton, the
ejected town lecturer, preached in his house until
he was forced to leave Colchester in 1665. In 1672
he was licensed as an Independent teacher in a
meeting house in St. Martin's Lane in Colchester, and as a Presbyterian preacher in Ipswich
and Hadleigh (Suff.). (fn. 32) Edmund Warren, the
ejected minister of St. Peter's, was licensed in the
same year to preach to a Presbyterian congregation in John Rayner's house. (fn. 33) Independents and
Presbyterians seem to have worshipped together
in the 1670s and 1680s, Stockton and his successor William Folkes alternating as preachers with
Warren. The joint congregation was later said to
have met for a time in a room in the castle. (fn. 34) In
1691 Folkes's successor as Independent minister,
William Rawlinson, built a meeting house in
Moor Lane (later Priory Street), and in 1693
Warren's successor, Daniel Gilson, registered a
newly built Presbyterian meeting house in St.
Helen's Lane. (fn. 35)
Rawlinson's successor John Gledhill apparently found the Independent congregation very
divided when he arrived in 1693, (fn. 36) possibly
partly because of the recent split with the Presbyterians and partly because of internal disputes:
another Independent congregation in Colchester, presumably a breakaway group, registered
two meeting houses in St. Nicholas's parish in
1711. (fn. 37) Gledhill revived the Moor Lane congregation, claiming to have 600 hearers in 1715. (fn. 38)
Among the members of the 18th-century congregation were Arthur Winsley and Jeremiah
Daniell, both of whom, as occasional conformists, became mayors of Colchester. (fn. 39) Winsley
apparently paid for a rebuilding of the meeting
house in 1735. (fn. 40) In 1764, at the start of the
ministry of John Crisp, members and occasional
communicants totalled 105. (fn. 41) Land in Lion Walk
was bought in 1763, and in 1765-6 a new
meeting house was built there. (fn. 42)
By 1773 a substantial portion of the congregation, including four deacons, was dissatisfied
with Crisp's preaching, which they found insufficiently evangelical, experimental, and
spiritual. The minister resigned, but further
disagreements arose over the choice of his successor. (fn. 43) By 1809, possibly because of the
minister's illness, numbers had fallen to 66
members and 12 occasional communicants. (fn. 44)
The church revived under John Saville, 1809-
28, who registered a mission room in St.
Leonard's parish in 1822. (fn. 45) There were 110
members at Lion Walk by the end of his ministry
and his successor claimed a congregation of
1,000 in 1829. (fn. 46) By 1828 there were again dissensions in the church. Part of the fault may have
lain with Saville, whose next ministry, at Braintree, ended unhappily after only two years, but
the differences seem to have been exacerbated
by the behaviour of Joseph Herrick, the minister
of the St. Helen's Lane church. (fn. 47) The resignation of Saville's successor, Henry March, in 1839
was precipitated by an abusive letter from Herrick, but there had for some time been 'painful
hindrances' to his ministry, including disputes
which led to the departure of some of the
congregation to St. Helen's Lane c. 1836. (fn. 48) In
spite of the difficulties, membership of Lion
Walk increased to 168 during March's ministry. (fn. 49)
After a two-year vacancy Thomas W. Davids,
probably Lion Walk's most outstanding minister, was appointed, and served until 1874. The
early years of his ministry were not easy, and in
1843 and 1844 a total of 27 members resigned
to form a new church, later Headgate Congregational church. Nevertheless by 1845
membership at Lion Walk had risen to 215 and
preaching stations had been opened at Shrub
End (1842), Harwich Road, Greenstead (1844),
and Old Heath (c. 1845). There was a church
Benevolent Society; a teachers' Bible class had
been started in 1841 and a lay preachers' association in 1844. Another mission was opened at
the Hythe c. 1846. (fn. 50) On Census Sunday 1851
below-average congregations of 588 in the morning, 681 at a children's service in the afternoon,
and 325 in the evening were recorded at Lion
Walk, and congregations of 91 at Shrub End,
100 at the Hythe, and 115 at Greenstead. Membership of Lion Walk rose to 253 in 1855. (fn. 51) By
1858 the chapel was in need of improvement,
and in 1863 it was completely rebuilt to designs
by Frederick Barnes of Ipswich. The 'popery'
of the Early English architecture, notably its
spire, aroused opposition and provoked at least
one resignation, (fn. 52) but to those who had planned
it the new building symbolized Lion Walk's
growing importance in the life of the town. (fn. 53)
Davids himself was active in nonconformist
affairs both in the town and in the county, being
secretary of the Essex Congregational Union
1858-73, but he became known best as author
of Annals of Evangelical Nonconformity in Essex
published in 1863. (fn. 54)
The remainder of the 19th century and the
early 20th were marked by shorter ministries and
long vacancies during which the deacons led the
church. In 1880 a group of church members, led
by the deacons E. F. Blaxill and J. Barber,
bought a site extending from Culver Street to
the church for new Sunday school buildings
which were erected in 1887-8. (fn. 55) The congregation was enlarged by a secession from Headgate
church in 1881, (fn. 56) and Lion Walk continued to
flourish, particularly under Frank Leggatt,
1902-7. (fn. 57)
The 20th century has been marked by co-operation between Lion Walk and other Congregational churches in Colchester, although union
with Headgate church was rejected in 1947. (fn. 58)
The Hythe mission chapel closed in 1938, (fn. 59) but
the other missions, including one at Lexden
founded in 1931, flourished and became independent churches. By 1975 congregations were as
large as 300, and total membership was over 400.
The church building aroused controversy again
in 1975 when plans, carried out in 1985, were
revealed to redevelop the site with shops on the
ground floor and a church above. (fn. 60)
The meeting house in St. Helen's Lane, later
known as the old meeting, was described as
Presbyterian in 1715 when Daniel Gilson was
said to have 600 hearers. (fn. 61) Gilson, who served
from 1692 until his death in 1728, encountered
some opposition from a party within the congregation, perhaps the unlicensed group to whom
John Richardson, apparently a Presbyterian, was
preaching in 1700. (fn. 62) His successor John Tren (d.
1738) was much respected, and James Throgmorton, minister 1742-54, was known for his
moderation and goodness. (fn. 63) Throgmorton and
his predecessors were Presbyterians, but his
successors tended towards Unitarianism. (fn. 64)
Nevertheless in 1796 the congregation called
Isaac Taylor, an Independent, to the ministry,
and he made a Calvinistic confession of faith at
his ordination. (fn. 65) Although he had some success
with well attended evening lectures and with
village preaching, Taylor encountered opposition from the Unitarian element in his
congregation; numbers declined, and he resigned in 1810. (fn. 66) The support of some of the
congregation for the antinomian John Church,
who preached at St. Helen's Lane in 1810-11,
led to further dissension and the secession of
some members to the new Stanwell Street
church in 1812. (fn. 67) Matters came to a head early
in the ministry of Joseph Herrick who came to
the church in 1814. In 1816 the Unitarian
trustees removed the roof of the meeting house,
forcing Herrick and his supporters to meet in
the Lion Walk chapel or in Herrick's own house.
Herrick, supported by 28 or more members of
the congregation, opened his own chapel on the
other side of St. Helen's Lane at the end of 1816.
The trustees reopened the old chapel, probably
in 1817, as a Unitarian chapel, but the congregation was small and the chapel closed in 1823. (fn. 68)
The first 20 years of Herrick's ministry at the
new chapel although successful were stormy,
perhaps reflecting a crisis in Congregationalism
in Colchester as a whole as well as the personality
of the minister. (fn. 69) Besides disputes with 'impertinent' and 'obstructive' members of his own congregation there was friction with the Lion Walk
church, for the first time facing direct competition
from another flourishing Congregational body.
Nevertheless missions were opened in Lexden in
1821 and in Barrack Street in 1824. (fn. 70) The St.
Helen's Lane chapel was enlarged in 1824, but in
1828 and 1829 there was further trouble with
'antinomians', which seems to have culminated in
the removal of some members of the congregation
to the Stanwell Street church. A secession to St.
Helen's Lane from Lion Walk church led to the
further enlargement of the chapel in 1836; the
work included the building of a new front on
Stockwell Street, and the chapel was thereafter
known as Stockwell Street chapel. The enlargement of the chapel resulted in a debt which was
used by some of the trustees and deacons, who
were opposed to Herrick's ministry, to gain control of the chapel. (fn. 71) After protracted wrangling the
mortgagees, who supported Herrick's opponents,
seized the chapel for debt in 1843, and Herrick
and his supporters were forced to agree to buy the
chapel back by paying off the mortgage, which
they did in 1844. During the dispute some members of the congregation seem to have moved to
Lion Walk chapel. A vestry was added to the
chapel in 1845, without incurring further debt. In
1851 Herrick claimed a connexion of c. 1,500. (fn. 72)
Herrick remained at Stockwell Street, where
he was long remembered as a gifted preacher, (fn. 73)
until his death in 1865. The remainder of his
pastorate was peaceful. His successor T. Batty,
1866-1906, built new schoolrooms in 1868, remodelled the chapel in 1875, and established a
mission in Mile End, where a chapel was built
in 1880. (fn. 74) For most of the earlier 20th century
the church suffered from short pastorates and
frequent vacancies. From 1946 to 1950 the
church was served jointly with Shrub End Congregational church, but plans for uniting the two
churches were not carried out. After 1950 Stockwell Street had no minister, and by 1960 its
membership had fallen to 20. (fn. 75) It closed in 1966.
Despite public protests the building remained
empty until it was sold in 1979 for conversion
to offices. (fn. 76)
In the late 1830s there was considerable dissatisfaction with both the existing Congregational
churches in Colchester. (fn. 77) Between 1837 and 1841
five meeting places were registered by groups
mainly composed of members or former members
of Lion Walk, Stockwell Street, and the dissolved
Baptist and Independent congregation at Stanwell
Street. Samuel Hubbard, a deacon at Stockwell
Street in 1839-40, was minister of congregations
in St. Peter's parish in 1839 and St. Martin's
parish in 1841. (fn. 78) Some of the registrations may
have been of the meetings in private houses to
which Joseph Herrick of Stockwell Street objected in 1840, but in 1843 several of those
involved in the earlier meetings joined in the
foundation of a new Congregational church. The
leading members of the group were the surgeon
David Morris who had resigned from Lion Walk
in 1842, the newspaper proprietor and local politician J. B. Harvey, the solicitor H. S. Goody
who had also been a member of Lion Walk, and
the solicitor and Liberal activist F. B. Philbrick.
They met for a short time in a room in the
Mechanics' Institution before building their new
chapel at Headgate, designed by W. F. Poulton,
early in 1844. (fn. 79) Alexander Fraser, the first minister, was called in 1844 by 30 members of the new
church. Membership increased rapidly in the first
few years, 13 people being admitted in 1844 (only
5 of them from Lion Walk church), 22 in 1845,
and 17 in 1846. (fn. 80) Relations with Lion Walk were
cordial throughout the 19th century, but those
with Stockwell Street were less close. (fn. 81)
By 1865 open-air services were being held in
neighbouring villages, and in 1868 it was necessary to increase the accommodation at Headgate
itself by building side galleries. (fn. 82) In 1881, however, a dispute between the hitherto popular
minister Edmund Miller and his deacons led to
the departure of over 40 members, including J.
B. Harvey and H. S. Goody. (fn. 83) The church
recovered in the remainder of Miller's ministry
and those of his successors, membership reaching a peak of 225 in 1902 after a successful
mission by 'Gypsy' Smith in 1901. New schoolrooms were built in 1903. (fn. 84)
In the earlier 20th century the church was
strongly pacifist, 12 members being conscientious objectors during the First World War. In
1933 as many as 50 members were pacifists and
in 1939 the church published A Christian Protest
against Conscription written by the minister Wallis Hayward. (fn. 85) Membership of Headgate, as of
other churches, declined in the earlier 20th
century, but a proposed union with Lion Walk
was rejected in 1947. The church was gutted by
fire in 1968 but was restored and reopened in
1970. (fn. 86) In 1974 it was closed and the congregation joined with that of the parish church of St.
Mary's-at-the-Walls to build Christ Church,
Ireton Road, which in 1988 was shared by the
two congregations. (fn. 87) The old church was sold to
the Labour party.
The church in King Harold Road, Shrub End,
remained a mission of Lion Walk until 1946
when it was joined with Stockwell Street in a
joint pastorate. By 1948 Shrub End was almost
self-supporting and became an independent
church. In 1955 a new church, built by the Essex
Congregational Union, was opened in Plume
Avenue. (fn. 88)
The chapel in Harwich Road, Greenstead, was
enlarged in 1877. In 1936 the assistant minister
at Lion Walk was given sole charge of the chapel,
which was rebuilt in 1938. The church became
self-supporting in 1946 and fully independent in
1948. (fn. 89) By 1985 the congregation had united with
that of Headgate at Christ Church, Ireton Road.
The mission at Old Heath seems to have been
closed before 1851, but it was later reopened and
was enlarged in 1888 and again in 1899; in 1960
it was still a mission of Lion Walk, (fn. 90) but by 1985
it was independent and unlike Lion Walk had
remained Congregational. The mission hall at
Lexden, founded in 1931, was replaced by a
permanent church in 1936. (fn. 91) In 1985 it was an
independent Congregational church.
WESLEYAN METHODISTS.
The Wesleyan
preacher Laurence Coughton came to Colchester
in the summer of 1758, and by the time John
Wesley visited the town in October that year the
society had a membership of 120, despite fierce
opposition from other ministers and clergy. Early
Wesleyan meetings were often disrupted by the
mob who let birds into the meeting room to put
out the candles, and on one occasion drove a
donkey into the room. Wesley visited Colchester
several times in 1759, often preaching on St.
John's green because the hired meeting room at
the bottom of North Hill was too small. On his
advice the Colchester Methodists built their own
meeting house in Maidenburgh Street, which
was licensed in 1761. Wesley, preaching in the
shell of the twelve-sided building in 1759,
described it as 'the best building of the size for
the voice that I know in England'. (fn. 92) The church
suffered from internal disputes between 1763
and 1766 but had recovered by 1769 and was
still growing in 1772 despite the 'uncommon
stumbling blocks' being placed in its way; it
became the head of a circuit in 1765. (fn. 93) Among
the early ministers was Francis Asbury (1768)
who became the first bishop of the Methodist
Episcopal Church in the U.S.A. (fn. 94) Because of the
'ill conduct' of the preachers the Colchester
society declined in the early 1780s, and Wesley
made several visits to strengthen it. Numbers had
risen to 60 by the time Wesley visited the church
for the last time in 1790, but he still found the
congregation 'lessened and cold enough' and the
spirit of Methodism lost. The society's problems
were compounded by the Evangelical vicar of St.
Peter's, who opposed the creation of a separate
Methodist church; he apparently ceased trying to
attract Methodists to St. Peter's after Wesley had
publicly accused him of sheep stealing. (fn. 95) Methodist numbers revived, and in 1800 the meeting
house was rebuilt to accommodate 700-800. (fn. 96)
Missions from Maidenburgh Street were opened at Lexden and at the Hythe in 1822. (fn. 97) The
Lexden house, or another in the same parish,
was licensed again in 1823, as was a house in St.
Botolph's, both by John Wood, a Wesleyan. (fn. 98) In
the same year two Chelmsford Wesleyans, Thomas Page a schoolmaster and Ambrose Freeman
the circuit minister, licensed houses in St. Runwald's and in St. Giles's, and Page licensed a
chapel in St. Giles's in 1824. (fn. 99) All the meetings
were probably short lived, and their relationship
to Maidenburgh Street is not clear. In 1827 a
former Sunday school room in St. Nicholas's
parish was licensed, presumably as a mission
from Maidenburgh Street, by R. C. Coleman,
probably Richard Coleman a lay preacher in the
Colchester circuit, and William Dennis who was
a member of Maidenburgh Street by 1832. (fn. 1) In
1829 the minister claimed a congregation of 700
at Maidenburgh Street and of 100 at a meeting
in a former Primitive Methodist chapel in Magdalen Street, although membership was only 229
at Maidenburgh Street and 11 at Magdalen
Street. The Magdalen Street meeting seems to
have closed later that year. (fn. 2)
In 1835 the church bought a site in Culver
Street, and a new chapel was opened in 1836. It
stood behind the street frontage, approached
through an archway; the two cottages on the
street were used by the church. (fn. 3) The later 1830s
and 1840s were a time of expansion, the meeting
house or preaching station in Magdalen Street
being reopened 1836-43 and 1848-9, one at the
Hythe 1840-8, and one at Old Heath 1848-59. (fn. 4)
The Wesleyan Reform schism reduced membership in the late 1840s, but average congregations
of 700 in the morning and 650 in the afternoon
were reported in 1851 although actual congregations on Census Sunday that year were 500 in
the morning and 330 in the afternoon. (fn. 5)
The preaching station at Old Heath was reopened 1861-2, and that at the Hythe was revived
in 1864 and replaced by a chapel in 1869. (fn. 6)
Mission work was begun at Mile End in 1884. (fn. 7)
At Culver Street the schoolroom was enlarged
for both school and church purposes in 1869,
and in 1878 the chapel was repaired and reseated, increasing the accommodation. (fn. 8) In 1900
the church was remodelled to plans by W.
Cressall and J. F. Goodey, providing a suite of
rooms and a caretakers' house in place of the old
cottages, and an imposing new facade with twin
flanking towers. The interior was remodelled
with a new choir gallery and rostrum. The
church was gutted by fire in 1926, but was
rebuilt on its former plan and reopened in 1928. (fn. 9)
In 1970 the Culver Street church was closed
and sold for redevelopment as part of the shopping precinct. A new church was built at the
entrance to Castle park on a site between
Ryegate Road and Maidenburgh Street, near
that of the 18th-century meeting house. The
buildings, designed by Kenneth C. Cheeseman
to fit the irregular plan of the site, are low with
a flat, copper roof. The interior arrangements
are flexible, with a movable partition between
the church and a hall. In the vestibule is the
pulpit from the original meeting house. (fn. 10)
The preaching station at the Hythe was replaced in 1869 by a chapel in the back lane, later
Spurgeon Street; it closed in 1956. (fn. 11)
In 1899 the New Town Wesleyan Chapel
Trust was formed and land for a church bought;
the church, in the later Wimpole Road, opened
in 1904. (fn. 12) In its early years the church was well
filled, with membership reaching 148 by 1914.
Progress was revived after the First World War,
and the ministry of G. H. Simpson, 1929-33,
was outstanding. When the Hythe and Artillery
Street churches closed in the 1950s some of their
members transferred to Wimpole Road, which
in 1963 reached a membership peak of 262. (fn. 13) By
1972 the minister also served Elmstead Market,
Rowhedge, and Fingringhoe. (fn. 14)
PRIMITIVE METHODISTS.
The Primitive
Methodist Samuel Chapman registered a chapel
in a converted house in Magdalen Street in 1824,
and Colchester, with 19 members and a resident
preacher, was part of the Norwich circuit in
1825. (fn. 15) The chapel was being used by the Wesleyans in 1829, and there is no further record of
Primitive Methodism in Colchester until 1839
when the society, which then had 55 members,
built a chapel near the Barracks, in the later
Artillery Street. (fn. 16) C. H. Spurgeon (1834-92), the
Baptist preacher, was converted in the Artillery
Street church in 1850 by a sermon from a lay
preacher, probably Samuel Nightingale; he
preached there himself in 1864. (fn. 17) On Census
Sunday 1851 congregations of 183 (including 60
children) in the morning, 239 (including 80
children) in the afternoon, and 117 in the evening were reported. A preaching room at
Greenstead, closed by 1860, reported congregations of 22 in the afternoon and 50 in the
evening. (fn. 18) The Artillery Street church became
the head of a circuit in 1859. (fn. 19) In 1873 it reported
a membership of 70 and congregations of 300. (fn. 20)
Numbers declined in the later 1870s, but by
1887 they had recovered to 66 members and a
congregation of 250. The church was remodelled
in 1892. It closed in 1957. (fn. 21)
In 1869 a group of Primitive Methodists
started worshipping in the former Old Meeting
or St. Helen's chapel. (fn. 22) They moved to the new
Ebenezer chapel in Nunns Cut (later Nunns
Road) in 1873. (fn. 23) The membership was 33 and
the average congregations 100 in 1873. (fn. 24) By 1887
both membership and congregation had fallen to
10 and strenuous efforts were being made to
revive the church. Numbers rose steadily in the
1890s until in 1905 there were 30 members and
congregations of 130. (fn. 25) The church closed in
1946. (fn. 26)
UNITED METHODIST FREE CHURCH.
A number of members seceded from the Culver
Street Wesleyan church in the late 1840s. Some
of them were worshipping at the New Jerusalem
church, formerly the Presbyterian Old Meeting,
in St. Helen's Lane in 1851 when they reported
congregations of 200 in the afternoon and 300 in
the evening. (fn. 27) In 1853, the New Church congregation having apparently died out, they formed
a new trust for the chapel. The following year
J. C. Houchin, formerly a Primitive Methodist
lay preacher, became minister and the church
adopted Congregational principles of order and
church government while remaining associated
with the United Methodist Free Church. In
1860 Houchin registered the chapel as Methodist Free Church, (fn. 28) but the following year the
congregation declined to join the London district meeting of the United Methodist Free
Church and in 1863 it formally declared itself a
Congregational church. Houchin resigned for
financial reasons in 1864 and in 1865 the congregation called Mr. Reynolds, a Baptist, to be
their minister. The church founded in 1853
seems to have dissolved soon afterwards, but the
chapel continued in use under T. Delight, one
of the original trustees. He gave the Primitive
Methodists permission to use it in 1869 and they
retained possession until their move to Nunns
Cut in 1873 despite an attempt c. 1870 by the
United Methodist Free Church to recover the
building. (fn. 29)
A United Methodist Free Church in Magdalen
Street, apparently in the former Primitive Methodist and Wesleyan chapel, was recorded in
1863. (fn. 30) By 1876 it was an undenominational
mission hall under the direction of John Bawtree. (fn. 31) In 1881 it was again recorded, possibly in
error, as a Methodist Free Church, but it had
closed by 1897. (fn. 32)
THE NEW JERUSALEM CHURCH.
A pulic meeting was arranged in Colchester in 1816
by members of the New Church already established at Brightlingsea. Opposition from local
clergy and ministers caused the borough council
to withdraw permission for the use of the town
hall, but 400-500 people attended a meeting in
the Angel inn. (fn. 33) In 1823 the bookseller U. W.
Mattacks, registered a meeting house, almost
certainly the Old Meeting, for the New Church;
Mattacks was still leader in 1851 when the
congregation of 20 shared the building with a
breakaway Methodist group. (fn. 34) The church had
died out by 1853 when a new, Methodist, trust
was formed for the meeting house. (fn. 35)
The church was revived in 1881 by Joseph
Deans, then minister at Brightlingsea, and a
society was formed in 1882. It met in the
Shaftesbury hotel in Culver Street, and by 1887
had 51 members. (fn. 36) By 1890 most of the 37
members of the Colchester society, unlike other
British members of the church, had adopted the
Academy view that Emanuel Swedenborg's
writings were a direct revelation of divine truth.
The following year they withdrew from all
connexion with the British General Conference
of the church and affiliated themselves to the
American General Church of the Advent of Our
Lord. (fn. 37) A few members, who continued to subscribe to the views of the British Conference,
formed a separate society which continued to
meet in the Shaftesbury hotel; it moved c. 1910
to the Masonic hall, Abbeygate Street, and c.
1912 to the Oddfellows hall, George Street,
where it remained until it was dissolved c.
1927. (fn. 38) The main Colchester society also met in
the Shaftesbury hotel, although it also used a
room, formerly the St. Botolph's Infant school,
in Osborne Street from 1898 to 1901. In 1902 it
moved to a room in Priory Street and reorganized itself as the Colchester Society of the
General Church of the New Jerusalem. A new
church was built in Maldon Road in 1924 and
extended in 1967. (fn. 39)
SALVATION ARMY.
Early in 1882 William
Booth, the founder of the Salvation Army,
bought through an agent the former skating rink
in St. John's Street. (fn. 40) The Army licensed rooms
in the theatre in Queen Street shortly afterwards
and in June, after an outdoor meeting in the
cattle market, opened their barracks in the converted skating rink. (fn. 41) Early meetings there
provoked violent and unruly behaviour from
some bystanders, but the Army's right to hold
services there and out of doors was upheld by
the mayor and other justices. (fn. 42) A building on
Hythe Hill licensed in 1888 had closed by 1895. (fn. 43)
William Booth visited Colchester several times,
preaching to large congregations. (fn. 44) The barracks
in St. John's Street were demolished in 1973 to
make way for the inner relief road, and a new
citadel was opened in Butt Road. It was extended in 1975. (fn. 45)
UNDENOMINATIONAL MISSIONS.
Thomas Flory, a builder, registered the Gospel
Band Hall in Queen Street in 1886. In 1902 a
new Gospel Band Mission Hall, seating 300, was
erected in Abbeygate Street; it became well
known for the hearty singing of Moody and
Sankey hymns, accompanied by organ and 12piece band, and in its early days was well filled.
In 1966 the mission became affiliated to the
Fellowship of Independent Churches and was
renamed Colchester Evangelical church. (fn. 46)
The Colchester Town Mission was founded in
1839 by the businessman J. B. Harvey, who
served as its secretary for over 40 years, to visit
the 'multitude who never attend public worship'. (fn. 47) A missionary was employed, but the
mission had no permanent headquarters until
1956 when it bought the former Congregational
church at Shrub End. (fn. 48) The building was taken
over by the Baptists in 1961, and the mission
moved to Maldon Road. It had closed by 1988. (fn. 49)
Cottage meetings for railwaymen were held in
1892 by Harry Thorogood, a signalman from St.
Botolph's station, and Mrs. Nottidge. An old
carpenter's shop at Mrs. Nottidge's house, no.
1 Colne Bank Road, was converted into a
mission hall. Meetings were held there and in
rented rooms until 1896 when a Railway Mission
hall, seating 250, was built in North Station
Road. The first salaried superintendent was
appointed in 1924. (fn. 50) The mission became the
Emmanuel Evangelical church c. 1979. (fn. 51)
The British Christian Mission rooms in Lion
Walk were registered in 1891 by John Adams, a
wholesale and retail clothier; they were disused
by 1895. (fn. 52) The Friends Evangelistic Band registered the Vineyard Street Mission hall in 1930,
and the Christian Alliance of Women and Girls
registered two rooms at no. 4A Bank Passage in
1937; both seem to have been short-lived. In
1967 a meeting room in Wimpole Road was
registered for 'Christians not otherwise designated'. (fn. 53)
OTHER CHURCHES.
The Brethren were active in Colchester by 1844 when C. T. Rust of
Eld Lane Baptist church accused them of taking
members from other churches. (fn. 54) No congregation was recorded in 1851, but members of Eld
Lane resigned to join the Brethren in 1867 and
1868, and in 1871 there were two Brethren
meetings in the town with a total of 350 sittings. (fn. 55) Brethren registered rooms at no. 70A
High Street in 1884 where they remained until
1917. They met at the Burlington hall, Burlington Road, from 1917 to 1921 and then
successively at the Literary hall, St. John's
Street and the Gospel Hall, North Station Road.
In 1933 they built the Assembly hall in Maldon
Road, whose name was changed to the Maldon
Road chapel in 1979. (fn. 56) Another group which was
meeting in Cedars Road in 1906 seems to have
continued until 1960 or later. Other meetings,
mainly short-lived, were recorded in Culver
Street from c. 1874 to 1894 and in 1947, Sir
Isaac's Walk from c. 1878 to 1882, in 1894, and
from c. 1902 to 1926 or later, Lion Walk from
c. 1898 to 1926 or later, Gilberd Road from c.
1898 to 1902, and Osborne Street in 1906. (fn. 57)
Missionaries from London established a
branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of the
Latter Day Saints at Colchester in 1850. (fn. 58) In
1851 they claimed congregations of 30 in the
morning and 120 in the evening in a converted
shop in St. Peter's parish, probably on North
Hill where the presiding elder lived, (fn. 59) but actual
membership was probably never much more
than 30 and had fallen to 5 by 1854 when the
church was disbanded. It was revived in 1857
but was disbanded again c. 1860. (fn. 60) There was no
further Mormon activity in Colchester until
1949 when a new church was founded. Meetings
were held in a hired hall until a church was built
in Straight Road between 1963 and 1966. (fn. 61)
A Christadelphian fellowship was formed in
1907 by C. J. Cole, a tailor. Meetings of about
20 were held in a hut in Winnock Road, later
successively in the Co-operative reading room,
New Town Road, St. George's hall, High Street,
the Foresters hall, Winnock Road, and the
Friends meeting house, Shewell Road. During
the First World War dissension arose on the
question of non-combatant service, and some
members seceded to form a separate fellowship.
In 1959 one fellowship met in Shewell Road and
the other in the Oddfellows hall, George
Street. (fn. 62) Only one fellowship, meeting in the
Oddfellows hall, Williams Walk, survived in
1984, and it had closed by 1988.
Christian Science meetings, begun in a cottage
in Bergholt Road in 1909, quickly moved to a
room in the Masonic hall, Abbeygate Street.
From 1912 services were held at no. 150A High
Street, and in 1919 a Christian Science Society
was formed. In 1923 premises in Lion Walk
were bought and remodelled to provide a hall
seating 100, a reading room, and a schoolroom,
on two storeys. The society became the First
Church of Christ Scientist, Colchester, in 1931,
and in 1938 the church was dedicated. The
church was demolished as part of the redevelopment of Lion Walk, and a new church was built
in 1975 in Trinity Street and dedicated in 1977.
The building, designed by Bryan Thomas to fit
its constricted site, has reading rooms on two
storeys on the street frontage with behind them
an octagonal room for worship, surmounted by
a glass spire. (fn. 63)
Jehovah's Witnesses began meeting in Colchester in 1936. They registered rooms at no.
41C Head Street as a Kingdom hall in 1939 and
moved to no. 41A Head Street in 1948. Between
1954 and 1957 services were held in the Colchester and County Liberal club, and in 1953 the
swimming pool at Bath Place was used for
baptisms. (fn. 64) A Kingdom hall in George Street,
formerly the Oddfellows hall, was dedicated in
1962. A new hall in Elmstead Road was built in
a single day in 1984 by c. 1,200 members of the
church from all over the country. (fn. 65) In 1988 there
were also meetings at the Hythe and Lexden.
Following a mission in 1930, a resident Elim
Pentecostal minister was appointed for Colchester, and meetings were held in a hall, possibly
the Oddfellows hall, in Osborne Street. In 1931
a tabernacle, intended to be temporary, was
erected in Fairfax Road; it was occupied until
1957 when the church moved to the former
Strict Baptist chapel in Stanwell Street. The
chapel was demolished to make way for the new
inner relief road and a new Elim Pentecostal
church was built in Walsingham Road and opened in 1971. (fn. 66)
After preliminary meetings in a private house
and in the Shrub End social hut, members of
the pentecostal Assemblies of God in 1936 set
up a Full Gospel mission which moved in 1939
to rooms in a house in Straight Road. A permanent church was opened in a hall there in 1946. (fn. 67)
A Seventh Day Adventist church was founded
in 1939 by Pastor J. M. Howard, and the former
Gospel hall in North Station Road was acquired
in 1940. The hall was rebuilt and registered for
worship in 1966. (fn. 68)
The Gospel Acres Evangelistic team reopened
the former Artillery Street Primitive Methodist
church as the Spurgeon Memorial church c.
1960. In 1966 it was taken over by the Datchet
Evangelical fellowship and its name altered to
Spurgeon Evangelical church. (fn. 69)
House meetings were started on the Greenstead estate in 1964, and the Greenstead
Evangelical fellowship was founded in 1966. It
acquired a site in Magnolia Drive in 1970 and
built the Greenstead Free church. (fn. 70) The Jesus
Centre, the coffee-bar church, was established
in the former town mission hall in King Harold
Road, Shrub End, in 1969. (fn. 71) Mount Zion Free
church at no. 328 Ipswich Road was registered
for Evangelical Christians in 1972. (fn. 72) The Colne
Valley community church, a member of the
Evangelical Alliance, was founded in 1977; in
1987 its members were instrumental in forming
Net Work which in 1988 bought the disused
water tower, Jumbo, for use as a prayer centre.
In 1988 the church opened a school in its
premises at Braiswick. (fn. 73)
Christian Spiritualists began meeting in a private house in Wellesley Road in 1930, and in
1934 they built All Kin hall in Maldon Road.
The hall was demolished in 1967, and the congregation met in a succession of temporary
premises. (fn. 74) Christian Spiritualists registered a
room at no. 117 Shrub Road as the Temple of
Light in 1973. (fn. 75) They were still meeting there
in 1988; another group met in Port Lane South.
A Spiritualist society was apparently founded in
Colchester in 1928 and a branch of the National
Spiritualist association in 1934; in 1962 its members built a church in Priory Street which in
1988 was affiliated to the Spiritualist National
Union. (fn. 76)
FOREIGN CHURCHES.
A Dutch church
was established by 1562. (fn. 77) Its first known minister, Jan or John Migrode a refugee from
Zeeland, was living in Colchester in 1563. His
successor Theodorus van den Berghe, a distinguished scholar, served the church from 1572
until his death in 1598, refusing two calls to
return to Holland. (fn. 78) Two later ministers, Jonas
Proost, 1600-44 and Jan Ruytinck, whose name
was anglicised John Ruting, 1645-63, served as
masters of the Colchester grammar school. (fn. 79)
The Dutch congregation were later said to have
worshipped at first in St. Giles's church; by the
1680s they were using St. Nicholas's, and in
the early 18th century All Saints', contributing
to its repair in 1704, 1705, and 1712. In 1716
they acquired their own church in a house in
St. Mary's parish near the corner of Head
Street and St. Mary's Lane. (fn. 80)
In 1612 James I confirmed the privileges of
the Dutch congregation, including the use of
their own order in their church. (fn. 81) In the 1630s
Archbishop Laud attempted to assimilate the
Dutch to the Church of England, ruling that
only aliens and the first English-born generation might use the Dutch service; others were
to attend their parish churches. Laud's vicar
general reported that the Dutch ministers and
elders at Colchester were very ready to obey,
and were indeed as conformable as any clergy
in the diocese, having agreed to translate the
Book of Common Prayer into Dutch, (fn. 82) but
privately they opposed the measures and were
the last of the foreign churches to accept Laud's
injunction. (fn. 83) Although by the later 17th century the Dutch community was being assimilated, ministers continued to be appointed,
among them Jan Smit or John Smith, who was
also rector of the parish church of St. Maryat-the-Walls. The Dutch church closed in 1728
or 1729. (fn. 84)
Forty-three members of the French church
in Colchester were reported in 1573. The
church was still in existence in 1593, but
presumably came to an end when the Huguenots returned to France after the Edict of
Nantes in 1598. (fn. 85) The year after the revocation
of the Edict in 1685 a group of refugees,
including seven ministers and their families,
moved from Maldon to Colchester, and the son
of a French minister was buried in St. Nicholas's in 1688. (fn. 86) The French poor in Colchester
were relieved regularly from 1698 to 1718 or
later, and French ministers were recorded in
1691, 1696, 1698, 1716, and 1717. (fn. 87) The church
was last recorded in 1722. (fn. 88)