PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
Finchley
common may have been a resort of nonconformists
after the Conventicle Act of 1664 but no evidence supports the tradition that John Bunyan and
Richard Baxter held meetings there, although Baxter
lived in neighbouring Totteridge c. 1670. (fn. 13) In
1778 there were said to be a Methodist meetinghouse at Whetstone and two or three dissenters in
Finchley parish. In 1790 there were 'four or five
Presbyterians' and the Methodists were not
numerous, but by 1810 there were Methodist
meeting-houses at both Whetstone and Finchley
and dissent was increasing. (fn. 14) One of the Methodist
chapels was described in 1813 as very well attended. (fn. 15)
Whetstone was considered a nucleus of dissent
c. 1832. (fn. 16) By the mid 1830s there were well-filled
Wesleyan and Independent chapels in East End,
supported by the Mason family and, after the
building of Holy Trinity church in 1846, engaged
in rivalry with the Anglicans. By 1851 Finchley
had two Independent chapels, at East End and
North Finchley, and two Wesleyan, at East End and
Whetstone. Of the 857 nonconformist worshippers
on census Sunday in 1851, 667 were Independents
and 190 Methodists; 552 attended services in East
End, 242 in North Finchley, and 63 in Whetstone. (fn. 17)
Expansion was most rapid during the late 19th
century. Primitive Methodists became active in
Whetstone and on Finchley common in the 1850s
and opened a chapel in East End in 1872. Wesleyans
opened a chapel in North Finchley in 1879 and a
mission in 1886, Baptists appeared first in North
Finchley in 1868, building their own chapel in 1878
and establishing congregations at East Finchley in
1877, Church End in 1892, and Whetstone in 1898.
Meanwhile Quakers had appeared in North Finchley by 1882, the Salvation Army at North Finchley
in 1886 and East Finchley in 1896, Brethren at
North Finchley in 1893, and Presbyterians at
Church End in 1894 and East Finchley in 1900.
In 1903 there were sixteen recorded nonconformist congregations and a total of 4,479 worshippers. (fn. 18) The Congregationalists were still the
most numerous, with four groups (fn. 19) and 1,558
attendances. The Methodists had 1,267 attendances,
the Baptists 794, the Presbyterians 550, the Salvation
Army 254, and Brethren 56. (fn. 20) There were as many
as 2,246 nonconformists in East Finchley, 1,260 in
North Finchley, 924 in Church End, and 49 in
Whetstone.
London traders supported the first Wesleyan and
Independent chapels in East End (fn. 21) and wealthy
individuals helped the Congregationalists of North
Finchley and Church End. Established chapels
quickly became centres of social life, maintaining
not only missionary and temperance groups but
many sporting and cultural activities. (fn. 22)
Growth continued in the early 20th century. A
new Congregational church was founded at Church
End in 1905 and a Strict Baptist chapel moved in
1916 from London to North Finchley, where
Unitarians had appeared in 1911. Unspecified
missions opened at Whetstone in 1904 and East End
c. 1920, and Kensit Memorial Bible college at
Church End in 1908.
Newcomers in the 1930s included the Elim Foursquare Gospel Alliance in 1934 and Christian
Spiritualists in 1938. After the outbreak of the
Second World War many chapels closed, although
a Quaker group was founded in 1945 and a Swedenborgian church in 1952, besides some short-lived
undenominational groups in the 1950s and 1970s.
Closures were carried out between 1939 and 1949 by
the Primitive Methodists, the Presbyterians, the
Unitarians, and possibly the Salvation Army in
North Finchley. Whetstone Baptist chapel had
closed by 1954 and other denominations, like the
East End Congregationalists, built smaller chapels.
Contraction stimulated the ecumenical movement:
there was co-operation between the rector of
Finchley and Church End Congregationalists in
1924 and between the Congregational and Presbyterian churches at Church End in 1935. Finchley
Council of Churches was formed in 1943, the merger
of Church End Congregational (fn. 23) and Presbyterian
churches in 1969 preceded the formation of the
United Reformed Church in 1972, and the Elim
Foursquare Gospel Alliance began to share East
Finchley United Reformed church in 1974.
Congregationalists.
The Methodist meetinghouse at Whetstone in 1778 may have been Whetstone Congregational chapel for which registers
exist from 1788. (fn. 24) James Mathews, the pastor, was
described as a Methodist by his son, the actor
Charles Mathews (1803-78), and registered a
wooden building in Totteridge Lane for Independents in 1800. (fn. 25) It was probably the building once
used as a poorhouse, which passed to Joseph Baxendale. (fn. 26) In 1827 the congregation moved to Totteridge Independent chapel, founded by Catherine
Puget next to her school in Totteridge Lane. (fn. 27)
Congregationalists met in 1830 at the house of
Elizabeth Pride, described as in Colney Hatch,
Finchley, (fn. 28) and J. H. Puget ran a mission at Whetstone, possibly in Sherwood Street. (fn. 29) Whetstone
Congregationalists also attended Oakleigh Park
church, Friern Barnet, from 1888, (fn. 30) and after 1908
there was a short-lived hall behind Whetstone
Parade in High Road. (fn. 31)
East Finchley Congregational chapel originated
with meetings of Independents, (fn. 32) encouraged by the
Hoxton Itinerant Society, in various buildings in
the Hogmarket, East End, from 1804. (fn. 33) They built
a chapel on the edge of Finchley common, facing the
Great North Road, in 1830 and enlarged it in 1846.
On census Sunday 1851, when it was attended by
257 in the morning and 168 in the evening, it had
340 seats. (fn. 34) The building, further enlarged in 1861
and 1874, was restored as a lecture hall and Sunday
school after a fire in 1875. An imposing stone chapel,
designed in the Gothic style by J. Tarring & Son
and accommodating 600, was opened at the junction
of High Road and East End Road in 1878. (fn. 35) A new
hall and Sunday school were built behind in 1895,
whereupon the old chapel was sold. (fn. 36) There were
228 worshippers in the morning and 307 in the
evening on one Sunday in 1903. (fn. 37) The chapel was
extended in 1926 but demolished in 1965, when
part of the site was sold. A smaller chapel and hall,
each seating 150, were opened in 1970. (fn. 38)
North Finchley Congregational chapel (fn. 39) grew out
of meetings held by Thomas Campion Newman in
the 1830s at his schoolroom in Lodge Lane. In 1842
Newman, who lived at Orchard House near Tally
Ho Corner, licensed a disused stable there as an
Independent chapel. (fn. 40) Usually known as the 'cot
tagers' chapel', it seated 80 and was attended on
census Sunday 1851 by 78 in the morning, 87 in the
afternoon, and 77 in the evening. (fn. 41) In 1864 J. H.
Puget offered a site in Nether Street, (fn. 42) where an
imposing stone building was designed in the Gothic
style by Messrs. Searle and opened in 1865, (fn. 43) the
'cottagers' chapel' being sold by Newman's widow
to the Baptists in 1868. (fn. 44) Accommodation was
increased in 1875-6 and enlargements in 1894
included a hall. The church maintained a mission
room in High Road from 1869 until 1884, when it
built a hall at the corner of Avenue Road. On one
Sunday in 1903 the church was attended by 272 in
the morning and 356 in the afternoon. (fn. 45) An annexe
was built in 1924 for the Sunday school and the
mission hall was sold to pay for it in 1934. (fn. 46)
At Church End there was a brief attempt in 1799
to found an Independent church. (fn. 47) In 1882, when
Elm Park estate was being built, land in Dollis Road
was offered to the London Congregational Chapel
Building Society (fn. 48) and from 1884 to 1886 services
were held by the London Congregational Union in
assembly rooms adjoining the Railway hotel. In 1905
the Dollis Road site, which had never been suitable,
was sold and R. S. Griffin of Cyprus Hill Lodge
bought a site in Victoria Avenue, near Ballards
Lane. Until the church hall was opened there in
1907, (fn. 49) members worshipped at Hamilton hall in
Hendon Lane. A memorial hall was built in 1919
and there was a very active social life during the
first decade, although in 1923 some members
resigned over the socialist views of the minister. In
1924 it was decided not to build the intended large
church but to adapt the church hall, in 1929 the
memorial hall was sold, and in 1970 a new hall
was opened next to the church. From 1935 until
1955 and again in 1965 services were held jointly
with St. Margaret's Presbyterian church and in 1969
the two bodies united as Union church, Finchley
Central, from 1972 called St. Margaret's United
Reformed church. Thereafter most services were at
Victoria Avenue, although the halls of both former
churches were used for other activities.
Methodists.
East Finchley Methodist church
originated in a Wesleyan congregation established by
1817 and probably by 1810. (fn. 50) John Freeman held
prayer meetings in Lincoln Lodge, a cottage in High
Road at the corner of Strawberry Vale, in 1820. A
small chapel, attended mostly by labourers, opened
in 1829 in King's Corner or Street, (fn. 51) providing 110
sittings and attended on census Sunday 1851 by 45
in the morning, 52 in the afternoon, and 30 in the
evening. (fn. 52) It was replaced in 1868 by a building to
hold 300, (fn. 53) which in turn was replaced in 1897 by
a red-brick chapel built in the Gothic style on the
corner of High Road and Park Road with 650
sittings. (fn. 54) It was attended on one Sunday in 1903 by
462 in the morning and 372 in the afternoon. (fn. 55) The
building was again registered in 1915 (fn. 56) and remained
in use in 1977.
Primitive Methodists registered a building at
Finchley common fron 1854 until 1866. (fn. 57) A Primitive Methodist chapel opened in East End Road in
1872, (fn. 58) moved to no. 142 High Road in 1905, (fn. 59) and
closed between 1939 and 1949. (fn. 60)
Finchley Methodist church in Ballards Lane
opened as Wentworth Park Wesleyan chapel in
1879. (fn. 61) Built of yellow brick with stone dressings to
a design by Charles Bell, (fn. 62) it was attended by 169 in
the morning and 211 in the afternoon on one Sunday
in 1903. (fn. 63) A red-brick hall in a Gothic style was
built in 1904 next to the church, (fn. 64) which survived
in 1976.
A Wesleyan mission hall for 300 people (fn. 65) was
registered in Stanhope Road, North Finchley, in
1886 (fn. 66) and closed before 1913. (fn. 67)
Baptists.
North Finchley Baptist church (fn. 68) was
founded in 1868 under the aegis of a student of
J. A. Spurgeon. After a few weeks at a private
house in the Great North Road, members moved
into the former 'cottagers' chapel' near Ballards
Lane, where there was room for 150. (fn. 69) After initial
difficulties, numbers grew and in 1878 the foundation stone of the existing church was laid at the
junction of Ballards Lane and Dale Grove. The
church, opened in 1879 with seating for 400, was built
in stone to a Gothic design by Morton M. Glover
and registered by Calvinistic Baptists. (fn. 70) In 1903 it
had the largest Baptist congregation in Finchley,
with 147 on one Sunday morning and 187 in the
evening, (fn. 71) and in 1908 transepts were added to
accommodate another 260. The growth of the
Sunday school and of church societies led to the
acquisition of Dale Grove hall from the Congregationalists in 1894. Grenfall hall was built at the side
of the church in 1922 and Carey hall behind Dale
Grove hall in 1933.
East Finchley Baptist church was founded in 1877
in Long Lane as a New Connexion church by J.
Batey. (fn. 72) A church was built at the corner of High
Road and Hertford Road in 1889 and registered in
1894. (fn. 73) A new church, of flint with stone dressings
in an elaborate Gothic style, was built in Creighton
Avenue in 1902 (fn. 74) and attended on one Sunday in
1903 by 143 in the morning and 187 in the evening. (fn. 75)
It became a hall when the existing church, of red
brick with stone dressings in a Gothic style, was
built in 1950. (fn. 76)
Church End or West Finchley Baptist church
derives from services held in Queen's Terrace in
1892. An iron tabernacle was opened in Station
Road in 1895, (fn. 77) although not registered until 1910, (fn. 78)
and may have been the iron room attended on one
Sunday in 1903 by 7 in the morning and 69 in the
evening. (fn. 79) The existing church, a plain brick building with a hall and seating for 200, was opened in
1936 on the corner of East End Road and Stanhope
Avenue. (fn. 80)
Whetstone Baptist church opened in Lyric House,
High Road, in 1898 (fn. 81) and was attended on one
Sunday in 1903 by 18 in the morning and 31 in the
afternoon. (fn. 82) It moved to Oakleigh Road in 1906 (fn. 83)
and back to High Road in 1945, where it closed
before 1954. (fn. 84)
Strict Baptists.
Soho Memorial chapel at the
junction of High Road and Fallowcourt Avenue,
North Finchley, originated in a group which met in
Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1790. It moved several
times and was reorganized at the Soho chapel in
Oxford Street in 1818, later moving to Shaftesbury
Avenue. In 1916 the church moved to North
Finchley, opening a school chapel in 1918 and an
adjacent chapel in 1925. (fn. 85) Both buildings, in yellow
brick with red-brick dressings in a simple Gothic
style, were still in use in 1976. The chapel benefited
from the charities of Florence Alice Simpson (d.
1947) and Hannah Albertina Simpson (d. 1949). (fn. 86)
Society of Friends.
A Quaker meeting-house in
Ballards Lane from c. 1882 until c. 1909 (fn. 87) was not
registered. A constituent of the Hampstead monthly
meeting met in Finchley from 1945 until 1950.
Finchley particular meeting opened in 1952, (fn. 88)
registering a room at no. 131 Nether Street in 1955, (fn. 89)
and built a striking new meeting-house in 1967 at
no. 58 Alexandra Grove. (fn. 90)
The Salvation Army.
A barracks was opened at
no. 4 Lodge Lane, North Finchley, in 1886 and was
attended by 20 in the morning and 31 in the evening
on one Sunday in 1903. It had probably closed long
before 1954. (fn. 91)
A hall was opened in High Road, East Finchley,
in 1896 and superseded in 1903 (fn. 92) by a barracks,
later designated a hall, in Hertford Road near High
Road. (fn. 93) The small yellow- and red-brick hall,
attended by 65 in the morning and 138 in the evening
on one Sunday in 1903, (fn. 94) was still used in 1976.
A hall in Summers Lane near Friern Barnet was
registered in 1934 (fn. 95) and closed between 1939 and
1949. (fn. 96)
Presbyterians. (fn. 97)
In 1891 the Presbyterian Church
of England acquired land at the corner of Ballards
Lane and Redbourne Avenue, where a hall was
opened in 1893 and registered in 1894. (fn. 98) The church,
of red brick with stone dressings in the Gothic style,
was registered in 1895 (fn. 99) and attended by 224 in both
the morning and the evening on one Sunday in
1903. (fn. 1) Called St. Margaret's from 1932, the church
joined Church End Congregational church in 1969
to form Union church, Finchley Central; after the
formation of the United Reformed church in 1972,
it was known as St. Margaret's United Reformed
church. The old Presbyterian church hall was still
used by the united congregation in 1976 but was
demolished in 1977.
A Presbyterian mission started in Hamilton Road
in 1898, moved to an iron hall in Brackenbury Road,
East Finchley, in 1899, (fn. 2) and closed between 1939
and 1949. (fn. 3) The former Wesleyan chapel in King
Street was used as a Presbyterian hall from c. 1930
until c. 1939. (fn. 4)
Christian Spiritualists.
A hut in Christchurch
Avenue, North Finchley, was registered in 1934 by
Christian Spiritualists, (fn. 5) who in 1943 moved to a tin
hut in Woodbury Grove, (fn. 6) which they still occupied
in 1978.
Elim Foursquare Gospel Alliance.
Elim hall
in Christchurch Avenue, perhaps formerly used by
the Christian Spiritualists, was registered by Elim
Foursquare Gospel Alliance from 1938 until 1954. (fn. 7)
The alliance then used the former Wesleyan chapel
in King Street (fn. 8) until 1974, when it began sharing
East Finchley United Reformed church in East End
Road. (fn. 9)
Other Denominations and unspecified missions.
Brethren had a meeting-house in Ballards
Lane from 1893 until 1911, (fn. 10) where there were 10
worshippers in the morning and 46 in the evening on
one Sunday in 1903. (fn. 11)
Unitarians registered Granville hall, Granville
Road, in 1911 (fn. 12) and remained there until between
1939 and 1949. (fn. 13)
The North Finchley Brotherhood met in Ballards
Lane in the 1950s (fn. 14) and the Swedenborgian North
Finchley New Christian church, founded at no. 71
Gainsborough Road in 1952, (fn. 15) survived in 1976. It
was a beneficiary of several small charities regulated
by a Scheme of 1957. (fn. 16)
The London City Mission ran an interdenominational mission at no. 8 St. John's Parade, Whetstone,
from 1904 until 1925. (fn. 17)
Kensit Memorial college, originally for 'Evangelical Protestants' and later interdenominational,
opened in Hendon Lane in 1908. Services took place
in the college's conservatory until 1910, when an
iron church was opened. New church and college
buildings were opened in 1968. (fn. 18)
There was a gospel hall in East End Road, possibly
the former Primitive Methodist chapel, from c. 1920
to c. 1939. (fn. 19) A group of 'Christians' met at no. 144
Ballards Lane in 1940, moving to no. 134 in 1941
and to no. 4 Granville Road in 1949. (fn. 20) It may have
been the same group which registered no. 23a the
Grove in 1954. (fn. 21) An undesignated congregation
registered no. 197 East End Road in 1970 (fn. 22) and a
similar group, which first used no. 214 East End
Road in 1971, still existed in 1976. (fn. 23)