PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
Asseblies of God. The Assemblies of God registered
premises in Stafford Street in 1943; the registration
was cancelled in 1945. (fn. 35) They registered Glad
Tidings Hall in Broadway North in 1944, and that
registration too was cancelled in 1945. (fn. 36) They registered the Bible Pattern Church in Lower Hall Lane
as Glad Tidings Hall in 1945 and replaced it with
the newly built Glad Tidings Hall Pentecostal
Church in Corporation Street West, which was
registered in 1958. (fn. 37) In 1967 the Assemblies also
reopened the former Bethel Gospel Church in
Stokes Street, Bloxwich, as Bethel Pentecostal
Church. (fn. 38) In 1970 the former Catholic Apostolic
Church in Brace Street was being used by West
Indian members of the Church of the Assemblies of
God. (fn. 39)
Baptists.
There was a Baptist congregation at
Walsall in 1651 when Robert Stotesbury and
Thomas Cumberlidge signed on its behalf the
letter addressed to Cromwell by Baptist groups in
the Midlands. (fn. 40) Cumberlidge was a tinker who
had served in Henry Stone's Parliamentarian troop
during the Civil War and was a ring-leader in the
anti-inclosure riots at Walsall in 1653. (fn. 41) There was
at least one Anabaptist in the parish in 1663, (fn. 42) and
the vicar reported one in 1773. (fn. 43)
The house in New Street registered by the occupier, Robert Benton, in 1826 (fn. 44) was presumably for
Baptists since a room in Benton's house in New
Street was used by a group of five for Particular
Baptist preaching for a few Sundays in 1831. It was
then replaced by the larger assembly room at the
Black Boy inn in New Street. The group consisted
at least in part of seceders from Bridge Street Congregational church who had long held Baptist
views. There was a resident pastor from 1832, and
a chapel with a school was built on the corner of
Goodall and Freer Streets in 1833. (fn. 45) A branch Sunday school was started at Short Acre to the north of
the town in 1836, and a schoolroom was built there
in 1840; another was opened in Newhall Street
about the same time. Both still existed in 1855. (fn. 46)
The chapel was enlarged in 1849 and two schoolrooms were built. (fn. 47) On Census Sunday 1851 there
was a congregation of 123 in the morning and 215
in the evening, numbers said to be unusually low. (fn. 48)
There was also an attendance of 20 at an afternoon
service that day at the Short Acre schoolroom. (fn. 49)
Goodall Street was closed in 1918; the building was
sold and has been demolished. The congregation
worshipped at the Temperance Hall until 1919 when
a new church was opened on the corner of the
Crescent and Lumley Road. It is of wood and asbestos; a brick Sunday-school building was added at
the rear in 1934. (fn. 50) In 1971 the church had 14 members. (fn. 51)
A small group of Particular Baptists, apparently
seceders from Goodall Street, worshipped from
1840 in a room in the town and in 1845 acquired the
former Primitive Methodist chapel on the corner of
Lower Hall Lane and Newport Street. Attendance
on Census Sunday 1851 was 45 in the morning, 22 in
the afternoon, and 65 in the evening; there was no
Sunday school. The chapel was replaced by the
Strict Baptist chapel in Midland Road begun in
1909 and opened in 1910; it is of brick with terracotta dressings on the façade. (fn. 52)
In 1845 the minister of Goodall Street and several
others separated from that church, worshipping
first in the assembly-room attached to the Dragon
and then in the club-room of the Black Boy and also
in a room attached to the Green Man in Dudley
Street. In 1846 they began work on Ebenezer, a brick
chapel on the corner of Stafford Street and Littleton
Street West; it was opened in 1847. (fn. 53) In 1851 it was
described as a General Baptist church, and on Census Sunday it had a congregation of 55 in the morning and 150 in the evening. There was then a Sunday
school. (fn. 54) A gallery was erected in 1859. In 1869 the
building was enlarged and a classical façade added;
the single-storey school at the rear was rebuilt with
two storeys. (fn. 55) In 1971 there were 113 members and
104 children and young people. (fn. 56) Ebenezer was
replaced by a new church in Green Lane in 1972;
designed in a modern style by Charles Brown, it is
built of dark brick and includes classrooms and
ancillary facilities. (fn. 57) By 1973 the old church was
occupied by the Church of God at Walsall.
Work was begun on a chapel in Vicarage Walk,
Caldmore, in 1878 under the auspices of Ebenezer.
It was opened in 1879, and the congregation became
an independent church in 1881. (fn. 58) Designed in an
Italian style by W. F. Markwick of Walsall, it is of
brick with dressings of stone and moulded plaster.
Initially it contained two schoolrooms; the adjoining
schools were built in 1883-4. (fn. 59) In 1971 Vicarage
Walk had a membership of 107 with 70 children and
young people. (fn. 60) By the earlier 1880s Vicarage Walk
was running the mission established in Dudley
Street by Thomas Gameson c. 1872; his sons A.
and C. H. Gameson continued to support it after
his death in 1887, and it still existed c. 1916. (fn. 61)
The church in Bell Lane in the part of the Delves
added to Walsall in 1931 was registered in 1951. (fn. 62)
In 1971 there were 68 members and 98 children and
young people. (fn. 63)
A new Baptist congregation was worshipping
in the Temperance Hall in 1867, (fn. 64) and there was
a temporary Baptist church at the assembly-room
of the Royal Oak in Ablewell Street in the early
1870s. (fn. 65)
Bethel Gospel Church.
The Bethel Gospel
Church began to hold services in Bloxwich in 1930,
using the drill hall and then various warehouses. A
church was opened in Stokes Street in 1932 and continued in use until c. 1964. It was reopened by the
Assemblies of God in 1967. (fn. 66)
Bible Pattern Church.
The Bible Pattern
Church Fellowship registered the Tabernacle in
Lower Hall Lane in January 1944. By October
1945 it had been taken over by the Assemblies of
God. (fn. 67)
Brethren.
A building in Bridge Street was registered for Plymouth Brethren in 1863. (fn. 68) By 1871 they
had moved to a meeting-room in Burrowes Street,
still used in the later 1930s but closed by 1964. (fn. 69)
Caldmore Gospel Hall in West Bromwich Street was
registered for Brethren in 1921; (fn. 70) the building had
been extended by 1973. A meeting-room off Wolverhampton Road was registered for Brethren in 1936;
the registration was cancelled in 1939. (fn. 71) A meetingroom in Lower Hall Lane was registered for Brethren in 1955; it was replaced by a meeting-room in
Sandymount Road, registered in 1967. (fn. 72) Stephenson
Hall in Stephenson Square on the Beechdale estate
was registered for Plymouth Brethren in 1957. (fn. 73)
The Delves Gospel Hall, a wooden building in
Talke Road in the area added to Walsall in 1931, was
registered for Brethren in 1955. A new brick hall in
front of it was registered in 1958, but the old building continued to be used as a Sunday school. (fn. 74)
Catholic Apostolic Church.
A Catholic Apostolic Church on the corner of White and Brace
Streets was consecrated in 1876. It ceased to be used
as such c. 1928. (fn. 75) It was used by the congregation
of St. Michael's, Caldmore, during the restoration
of St. Michael's from 1964, (fn. 76) and in 1970 it was
occupied by the Assemblies of God. (fn. 77) In 1973 it
was used by Toc H.
Christadelphians.
The Christadelphians began
to hold meetings at Walsall about the early 1880s,
using the Temperance Hall and later the Athenaeum
Buildings and the Central Hall. In 1910 they took
over the chapel in Lower Hall Lane vacated by the
Strict Baptists. (fn. 78) A room in Tudor House, Bridge
Street, was registered as a Christadelphian meetingroom in 1936 and replaced by a hall in premises in
Upper Bridge Street, registered in 1940. (fn. 79)
Christian Scientists.
The Christian Scientists
registered premises in Denmark Road (now Broadway North) in 1933. The society no longer existed
in 1954. (fn. 80)
Congregationalists (Independents), later
United Reformed Church.
In 1763 twenty-eight
members of the Presbyterian meeting and the two
deacons seceded because of the minister's Unitarianism and built an Independent meeting-house in
Dudley Street, the first in Staffordshire. In time
two side galleries were erected in addition to the
existing one, and a vestry was built. Several of the
ministers after 1783 belonged to the Countess of
Huntingdon's Connexion. (fn. 81) A new and larger chapel
was opened on the south side of Bridge Street in
1791, with Captain Jonathan Scott as one of those
officiating at the opening service. The trust deed
insisted on its Independent affiliation. (fn. 82) Meanwhile
in 1787 a second and apparently rival meeting was
started in the club-room of the Castle inn in what is
now George Street by a former minister of Dudley
Street. It lasted until 1795 when Thomas Grove
became minister at Bridge Street and the seceders
returned. (fn. 83) A Sunday school, the first in Walsall,
was started in connexion with Dudley Street in
1789. It was at first held in a room in Freer's Yard,
High Street, belonging to one of the deacons, but it
soon moved to larger premises, a warehouse in the
Square. It remained there until schools were built
adjoining the Bridge Street chapel in 1818. (fn. 84) At the
beginning of Grove's pastorate there were 57 members enrolled; by the end (1817) there were 285, with
Bridge Street the leading Congregational church in
Staffordshire and Grove the leading minister. (fn. 85) In
1850-1 the average Sunday morning congregation
was 500. (fn. 86) New Sunday schools were built in 187980. (fn. 87) A new façade was added to the chapel in 1903
with statues of Richard Baxter and Isaac Watts. (fn. 88)
In 1857 there was a secession from Bridge Street
after the minister had tried to investigate charges
against one of the deacons, Jerome Clapp Jerome,
father of the writer Jerome K. Jerome. The seceders
worshipped first in the club-room at the New Inn,
Park Street, and then in the assembly-rooms in
Goodall Street. (fn. 89) In 1858 they began building a
chapel, Ephratah, in Wednesbury Road which was
opened in 1859. (fn. 90) It was enlarged in 1901 and partly
rebuilt after bomb damage in 1916. (fn. 91) It was of brick
with stone dressings and crocketed pinnacles; there
were towers on the north-west and south-west and
a projecting porch between them. Classrooms, a
schoolroom, and a lecture room were attached. (fn. 92) It
was designed by Jerome, who modelled it on the
Congregational church at Bideford (Devon), having
formerly been minister at the near-by Appledore. (fn. 93)
Both Bridge Street and Wednesbury Road congregations declined between the World Wars, and
in 1945 they united. Wednesbury Road became the
Walsall Congregational Church and Bridge Street
was sold, although the building was used for a time
as offices and survived until 1966. (fn. 94) By 1970 the
Wednesbury Road church was in disrepair and the
congregation—in 1971 52 members and 20 children
—was no longer concentrated near by; the meetingrooms, however, were much used as a result of the
church's local social work, notably among the many
immigrants. In 1973 the building was demolished
and work was started on the Glebe Centre on the
same site, incorporating a sanctuary, meeting-rooms,
a reading room, and a gymnasium. (fn. 95)
In 1819 Thomas Butteaux, the Independent
minister at Cannock, registered a house in Bloxwich.
He registered another house there in 1820. (fn. 96) The
cause apparently did not flourish, and it was not
until 1882 that another Congregational centre was
founded in the northern part of the borough. The
former Methodist Free church on the corner of
Blakenall Lane and Booth Street was then opened
as a Congregational church under the auspices of
Bridge Street. A new church and schools on the
corner of Chantry Avenue and Blakenall Lane were
begun in 1933 and opened in 1936. The building,
designed by F., A., and W. M. Smith, church members, is in a Gothic style. Of brick with stone dressings, it is faced with stucco and has a rusticated
base; there is a loggia on the south side. The site
includes a garden of rest and a manse. (fn. 97) In 1971 the
church had 72 members and 36 children. (fn. 98) The
former chapel became a feeding centre for schoolchildren in 1939. It was used by the Harden and
District Community Association by the early 1950s
and was taken over for commercial purposes in
1955. (fn. 99) It had been demolished by 1974.
By the later 1830s two members of Bridge Street
were conducting Sunday services in a house at Ryecroft. In 1838 the Independent Sabbath School of
Ryecroft and Birchills was formed under the auspices of Bridge Street, and its building, extended in
1857, was also used for Sunday services. In 1851,
however, these were stated to be only occasional;
the average congregation was 80. A church was
erected on the corner of North and Mill Streets in
1860; designed by J. C. Jerome, it is of brick with
stone dressings and has lancet windows. For some
years it was a branch of Wednesbury Road. (fn. 1) By 1971
it shared a minister with Blakenall. There were then
37 members and 25 children. (fn. 2) By 1972 the building
had become too decayed to be repaired and it was
closed; services were transferred to members'
homes. (fn. 3)
Broadway Congregational church on the corner
of Broadway North and Gillity Avenue was begun
in 1958 and opened in 1959. In 1971 it had 93 members and 90 children. (fn. 4)
Elim Foursquare Gospel Alliance.
Elim Hall
in Caxton Chambers, Darwall Street, was registered
in 1939. It was replaced by Elim Church of the Foursquare Gospel in Broadway North, registered in
1941; the registration was cancelled in 1944. (fn. 5)
Free Church of England.
St. Jude's Church in
Bott Lane was opened in 1886 to meet the needs of
Evangelical churchmen. It was replaced by a new
church in Eldon Street, registered in 1897. In 1909
the congregation joined the Free Church of England. (fn. 6) Sunday schools were opened in Bott Lane in
1913, and in 1931 new schools were opened on a site
in Eldon Street to the south of the church. (fn. 7)
Friends.
In 1773 the vicar of Walsall reported one
Quaker in the parish. (fn. 8) A meeting consisting of
eighteen people from Walsall and district was started
at a house in Leigh Road in 1932. It was recognized
as a regular part of the Warwickshire Monthly
Meeting in 1942. The Friends met in various places
and by 1973 worshipped each Sunday at the Social
Service Centre in Whittimere Street. There were
then twenty members. (fn. 9)
Independents,see Congregationalists.
Jehovah's witnesses.
The Witnesses had a
meeting-room at no. 126 Lichfield Street by 1936
when it was registered for the International Bible
Students' Association; it had ceased to be used by
1954. (fn. 10) The Kingdom Hall housed in the former
Primitive Methodist church in Victor Street was
registered in 1958. (fn. 11)
A Kingdom Hall at no. 79 High Street, Bloxwich,
was registered in 1944 but had ceased to be used by
1954. (fn. 12) A hall was registered at no. 152 Lichfield
Road, Bloxwich, in 1963 and was replaced by a hall
at Sandbank, registered in 1973. (fn. 13)
Latter-day Saints.
In 1855 the Mormons registered a lecture room in Wisemore; it had ceased to
be used by 1876. (fn. 14) A Walsall church was established
in 1961. By 1968 it had 250 members and met at the
Blind Institute in Hatherton Road, where it still met
in 1974. (fn. 15)
Methodists. Wesleyan.
In May 1743 Charles
Wesley preached from the steps of Walsall market
house to a crowd of 'fierce Ephesian beasts . . . who
roared and shouted and threw stones incessantly'.
The Walsall mob continued to play a part in the
anti-Methodist outbreaks of the district which persisted into 1744. John Wesley himself was a victim
in September 1743 when a mob, having taken him
from Wednesbury to Bentley in an unsuccessful
attempt to bring him before a magistrate, took him
to Reynold's Hall in an equally unsuccessful attempt
to bring him before William Persehouse. He was
then seized by the Walsall mob and dragged into the
town. There he managed to preach and was eventually escorted back to Wednesbury. (fn. 16)
Wesley came from Wednesbury to Walsall in 1764,
and although trouble was expected he secured an
attentive hearing. He preached in the open since the
house where the Methodists met, apparently in New
Street, was too small for the numbers on that occasion. (fn. 17) A room in Dudley Street was hired for meetings in 1770; in 1790 the loft over the stables at the
Castle inn in what is now George Street became the
meeting-place. (fn. 18) In 1773 the vicar reported a Methodist meeting-house, duly licensed; as with the Presbyterians the congregation, although including some
'substantial people', consisted mainly 'of those of the
inferior class', and he thought that there had been
no recent increase in numbers. (fn. 19)
In 1801 the Wesleyans built a chapel in Bedlam
Court on the south side of High Street. (fn. 20) A Sunday
school was started in 1807. (fn. 21) The chapel was
replaced by one in Ablewell Street begun in 1828
and opened in 1829; it was designed in a Grecian
style by John Fallows of Birmingham. There was
a minister's house adjoining and a Sunday school
under the chapel. A vestry was added in 1834 and a
girls' schoolroom was later built behind the chapel. (fn. 22)
The first chapel was converted into cottages which
still stood in 1929. (fn. 23) In 1835 Ablewell Street became
the head of the new Walsall circuit, formed out of
Wednesbury circuit. (fn. 24) Attendances at the chapel on
Census Sunday 1851 were 260 in the morning, 112
in the afternoon, and 358 in the evening. (fn. 25) A new
chapel was built on an adjoining site in 1859; of red
brick with Bath stone dressings, it was designed by
William and Samuel Horton of Wednesbury. In
1887 it was described as the largest place of worship
in the town. (fn. 26) The former chapel was converted
into a day and Sunday school; new Sunday schools
were built in 1910. (fn. 27) The cause declined in the early
20th century, and the Conference of 1928 created a
Walsall mission. The chapel was reconstructed in
1929 and reopened in 1930 as the Central Hall.
Membership rose from 176 in 1928 to 371 in 1932. (fn. 28)
In 1972 further reconstruction began. The gallery
level was filled in and in 1973 opened as the church;
the well of the hall was then still being converted
into a conference centre with other parts of the
building as ancillary rooms. (fn. 29)
At Bloxwich in the late 18th century, possibly
from 1781, Methodists were meeting in a flax oven
on Bullock's Fold in Chapel field in the north-eastern
part of the village. The building was leased as a
chapel from 1795. (fn. 30) A new Wesleyan chapel was
built to the south in what is now Park Road in 1832. (fn. 31)
Its predecessor remained in use as a Sunday school
but had been replaced before 1856 when a school at
the back of the 1832 chapel was enlarged. (fn. 32) Attendances at the chapel on Census Sunday 1851 were
160 in the morning and 390 in the evening. (fn. 33) It was
replaced in 1865 by a new chapel on the corner of
High Street and what is now Victoria Avenue;
designed by S. and J. Loxton of Wednesbury, it was
in a Gothic style with a south-west tower and turret.
The 1832 building then became the Sunday school
and by 1877 was being used as a temperance hall;
it later became a cinema, and by 1973 it was used by
Midland Aeroquipment Ltd. A manse was built
in Victoria Avenue behind the new chapel in 1874.
New Sunday schools were built beside the manse in
1910. (fn. 34) The High Street chapel had been closed by
1963, (fn. 35) and the former Methodist Free church in
New Street replaced it until 1966 when St. John's
Methodist church was opened in Victoria Avenue
to the east of the schools. It is a building of brick
and concrete designed in a modern style by Hulme,
Upright & Partners of Tunstall, Stoke-on-Trent. (fn. 36)
A Wesleyan meeting-place was established at
Pleck in a cottage in Narrow Lane apparently
c. 1827. (fn. 37) The society moved to a cottage in Wellington Street in 1830, and in 1840 a chapel was opened
in Chapel Street (later St. Quentin Street and now
obliterated) off Old Pleck Road. On Census Sunday
1851 there was a congregation of 13 in the afternoon
and 37 in the evening, although average attendances
were claimed of 30 and 45 respectively. (fn. 38) A new
chapel was opened on the corner of Regent (later
Caledon) and Oxford Streets in 1861; a Sunday
school was opened opposite in 1865. A church was
built on the corner of Bescot and Wednesbury Roads
in 1899-1901. Designed in a Perpendicular style by
C. W. D. Joynson of Joynson Bros., Darlaston, (fn. 39)
it is of brick with terracotta dressings and consists of
nave, transepts, and apsidal east end; there is a
north-west tower with a spire, and at the south-west
corner is a turret. The Caledon Street chapel was
taken over by the Primitive Methodists. A Sunday
school and church rooms were built in Bescot Road
in 1914-15.
By 1837 a site for a Wesleyan chapel had been
bought under the auspices of Ablewell Street. (fn. 40) It
was presumably in Stafford Street where a Sunday
school had been started by 1839 and where Centenary
chapel was opened in 1840. A new Sunday school
was built in 1841. Attendances at the chapel on Census Sunday 1851 were 121 in the morning, 151 in the
afternoon, and 170 in the evening. (fn. 41) The school was
enlarged in 1854 and 1858. The chapel was extended
in 1860 and again in 1889 when a new façade with
a balustraded portico was built. It became the head
of a new circuit in 1863 when Walsall circuit was
divided into Wesley and Centenary circuits. (fn. 42) The
chapel had ceased to be used by the Methodists by
1940 when it was registered as Walsall Town
Mission. (fn. 43)
A Wesleyan chapel was opened at the Coal Pool
end of Coal Pool Lane in 1852. (fn. 44) A new chapel was
erected on the same site in 1896. (fn. 45) It is of brick in
a plain style.
The Wesleyans were holding afternoon services
at Palfrey by 1857, apparently in the Millerchip
family's house in Dale Street. (fn. 46) A chapel was opened
in Dale Street, apparently in 1863, under the auspices of Ablewell Street, but with the opening of a
chapel in Corporation Street in 1876 services at Dale
Street were reduced. There was, however, a Sunday
school by 1868, and a new school was built in 1887.
Dale Street then had a membership of 24, which had
risen to 55 by 1888. The chapel was rebuilt in 190910; of brick with stone dressings, it was designed
in a Gothic style by Hickton & Farmer of Walsall.
It was closed in 1974.
A Wesleyan chapel was built at Leamore on the
west side of Broadstone (now Bloxwich Road) in
1862-3 to the design of Mr. Loxton of Wednesbury;
an extension designed by S. and J. Loxton of Wednesbury was begun in 1864. There was then a
flourishing Sunday school. The site was taken over
by the corporation in 1963 and the building demolished. (fn. 47) A new church was opened on the corner of
Bloxwich Road and Carl Street in 1965. (fn. 48) Designed
by J. M. Warnock, (fn. 49) it is of brick with a central spire
and includes a hall.
A school-chapel was opened in Queen Street
under the auspices of Centenary chapel in 1864. A
chapel was built on the corner of Bridgeman and
Queen Streets in 1867 and was used until c. 1931.
It then seems to have been taken over by the Bethel
Evangelistic Society. (fn. 50)
There was a Wesleyan meeting-place in Corporation Street, Caldmore, by the beginning of 1876. (fn. 51)
Trinity chapel in Corporation Street was begun
later that year and opened in 1877. Designed in a
Gothic style by Samuel Loxton of Walsall, it was of
brick with Hollington stone dressings and consisted
of nave and transepts with a north-west tower and
spire. A Sunday school was built at the rear. (fn. 52) The
spire was blown down in 1894. (fn. 53) New Sunday schools
were begun in 1906. (fn. 54) The church (now Caldmore
Methodist church) was rebuilt on the same site in
1957-8 to serve both the Trinity and Victor Street
societies. (fn. 55) Designed in a modern style by C. C. Gray
of Walsall, (fn. 56) it is of brick with stone and concrete
dressings.
A Wesleyan chapel was opened on the corner of
Butts and Lichfield Roads in 1883; Sunday schools
were built on an adjoining site in 1887. (fn. 57) Mellish
Road church on the same site was built in 1909-10;
W. M. Lester was the principal subscriber. (fn. 58) Designed in a Perpendicular style by Hickton & Farmer
of Walsall, (fn. 59) it is of brick and stone and consists of
an aisled and clerestoried nave, transepts, and a
south-east tower and spire; there is an extensive
basement approached from Butts Road. The Sunday
schools in Butts Road adjoining the church were
built in 1935. (fn. 60)
A Wesleyan school-chapel, now Reedswood
Methodist church, was opened in Edward Street in
1903. (fn. 61)
In 1973 there were nine Methodist churches in
the area of the pre-1966 borough. (fn. 62) The Central
Hall in Ablewell Street and Coal Pool made up Walsall Mission circuit, formed in 1928. Mellish Road,
Bloxwich Road, Caldmore, and Dale Street were in
Walsall Methodist circuit. St. John's and Reedswood
were in Bloxwich circuit, formed out of Walsall
Centenary circuit in 1932. Pleck was in Darlaston
circuit, formed out of Wednesbury circuit in 1931.
New Connexion.
New Connexion Methodists had
taken a lease of land in Teddesley Street by 1858 as
the site for a chapel. By 1860 they had built a schoolroom which was also used for services. It still existed
in the early 1870s. (fn. 63)
Primitive
The Primitive Methodists registered a
room in George Street in 1830. (fn. 64) A chapel was built
on the corner of Lower Hall Lane and Newport
Street in 1832-3. (fn. 65) It was taken over by Particular
Baptists in 1845, (fn. 66) and in 1850 the Primitive Methodists moved into the former Ragged School at
Townend Bank. The average Sunday morning congregation was 50 by 1851, and there was also a Sunday school. (fn. 67) By 1876 the Primitive Methodists had
built Mount Zion chapel on a site at the corner of
Blue Lane West and Margaret Street, the building
lease of which had been granted in 1871. (fn. 68) A Sun
day school was opened behind in Margaret Street in
1877. (fn. 69) The registration of the chapel was cancelled in 1960, (fn. 70) and it had been demolished by 1973.
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in High
Street, Bloxwich, near the junction with Pinfold in
1842. The Sunday congregation in 1850-1 averaged
100 in the morning and 160 in the evening, and there
was also a Sunday school. (fn. 71) The chapel was rebuilt
in 1895-6, (fn. 72) and a new school was begun in 1902. (fn. 73)
As Pinfold Methodist church it was sold with the
school and the site in 1964, being one of the three
Bloxwich Methodist churches which were replaced
in 1966 by St. John's in Victoria Avenue. (fn. 74) By 1973
the buildings had been demolished and the site
formed part of a garage.
A chapel was built in North Street, Ryecroft, in
1845. By 1850-1 there was an average Sunday congregation of 120 in the afternoon and 160 in the
evening, and there was also a Sunday school. (fn. 75) It
was replaced by a chapel and Sunday school built in
Stafford Street in 1904-5. (fn. 76) The chapel, in a Gothic
style, is of red brick with terracotta dressings and
has a north-west tower and spire. It was closed
c. 1965 (fn. 77) and was used as a warehouse by the early
1970s.
A Primitive Methodist chapel used also as a
schoolroom was opened in 1850 in the street now
called Old Birchills by a group that had met in a
cottage at Bentley in St. Peter's, Wolverhampton.
By 1851 the Sunday congregation averaged 30 afternoon and evening. Further work on the building was
carried out c. 1880 and in 1897. In 1904 a new chapel
was opened on the corner of Dalkeith Street and
Old Birchills nearly opposite the old building, which
remained in use as a Sunday school. (fn. 78) The 1904
chapel was burnt down in 1946 and the congregation
joined Reedswood Methodist church. (fn. 79)
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in Darlaston Road, Pleck, c. 1860. (fn. 80) In 1901 the congregation
took over the vacated Wesleyan chapel in Caledon
Street instead, retaining it until c. 1963. (fn. 81) It was
subsequently demolished, but the Darlaston Road
chapel, a Gothic building of red brick with whitebrick dressings, became a Sikh temple in 1965. (fn. 82) A
chapel was built in Chapel Street, Blakenall Heath,
c. 1866. It was converted into shops c. 1920 after
standing empty for two years. (fn. 83) A chapel was built
in Victor Street, Caldmore, in 1884. (fn. 84) By 1957 the
congregation had united with that of Trinity, Corporation Street, and the Victor Street chapel was
taken over by Jehovah's Witnesses. (fn. 85)
Methodist Free Church.
The Methodist Free
Church opened a chapel in Whittimere Street in
1862. It was still in use in 1880 but closed soon afterwards. (fn. 86)
The Free Church built a chapel in Bloxwich in
1864-5 in what came to be called Revival Street. (fn. 87)
It was replaced by a chapel in New Street begun in
1894. Schools and a club were opened in 1930. New
Street was closed with the opening of St. John's
Methodist church in Victoria Avenue in 1966. (fn. 88) A
building of brick with stone dressings in a Gothic
style, it was apparently used as a warehouse in the
early 1970s.
The Free Church registered a preaching-room in
Birchills Street in 1866. It had ceased to be used by
1896. (fn. 89)
The Free Church registered a school-chapel at
Blakenall in 1868. (fn. 90) A chapel was built on the corner
of Blakenall Lane and Booth Street in 1871. It was
closed a few years later and in 1882 was taken over
by the Congregationalists. (fn. 91)
Presbyterians, later United Reformed Church.
Presbyterianism was strong in Walsall in the later
17th century. Besides supporters among the clergy
and members of the corporation, (fn. 92) Sir Thomas
Wilbraham of Weston-under-Lizard, lord of Walsall
manor and patron of the living, was thought in
1662-3 to be a Presbyterian, (fn. 93) while Edward Leigh
of the near-by Rushall Hall was considered 'a dangerous Presbyterian'. (fn. 94) John Reynolds, minister at
Wolverhampton 1658-60, was presented at the
county quarter sessions with seven inhabitants of
Walsall for holding a conventicle there in May
1663, (fn. 95) and in July four ejected ministers were
reported to be living in Walsall. (fn. 96) In 1669 there were
at least seven ejected ministers there, all Presbyterians; they preached at the houses of Mrs. Pearson,
Mr. Fowler, and Mr. Eaves, and their followers were
estimated at over 300. (fn. 97) In 1672 the houses of
Edward Eaves, George Fowler, and Elizabeth
Deakin were licensed for Presbyterian worship and
Richard Bell, an ejected minister, was licensed as a
Presbyterian teacher. (fn. 98) The number of nonconformists was given as 200 in 1676, (fn. 99) all or most of
them presumably Presbyterians.
It was stated in 1681 that a meeting-house had
been built where conventicles were kept, undisturbed by the mayors and frequented by most of the
magistrates. (fn. 1) Richard Hilton, one of the Presbyterian ministers at Walsall in 1669, was maintaining
a lecture there in 1690, but he received 'little assistance though many able men in the town'. (fn. 2) His house
there was licensed for worship in 1693. (fn. 3) A 'great
room' known as 'the chapel' and adjoining George
Fowler's house was leased to Fowler by his father
Simon, of Cheadle, in 1707, (fn. 4) and that was presumably the meeting-house in Bank (later Fox's and
Cox's) Court on the north side of High Street that
was burnt by a mob in 1715. (fn. 5)
The meeting-house was restored with financial
help from the government, (fn. 6) and in 1717 there were
400 hearers. (fn. 7) In 1737 a house in Upper Rushall
Street occupied by the minister was settled in trust
by Thomas Walker and licensed as a meeting-house
a few days later. (fn. 8) In 1773 the vicar reported a Presbyterian meeting-house supported, like that of the
Methodists, by some 'substantial people' but mainly
by 'those of the inferior class'; he thought that numbers had changed little in recent years. (fn. 9) In fact the
meeting-house had by then passed under Unitarian
influence. Hostility to such influence was probably
the cause of a secession in 1751. A new meetinghouse was begun in that year at Hill Top, but the
uncompleted structure was soon destroyed by a
mob. (fn. 10) There was another secession in 1763 which
resulted in the building of an Independent meetinghouse. (fn. 11)
Presbyterianism was revived in Walsall in 1876
when services were begun in the Exchange Rooms in
High Street by a group of 23 seceders from Bridge
Street Congregational chapel; a Sunday school was
also started. The cause was recognized as a preaching
station the same year and as a fully constituted congregation in 1877. In that year the services were
transferred to the Temperance Hall in Freer Street.
A church was built on the corner of Hatherton Road
and Darwall Street in 1881-2. (fn. 12) Designed by Cotton &
McConnal (fn. 13) in a Gothic style, it is of brick with
stone dressings; there is a north-east tower, which
originally had a spire but had lost it by the early
1970s. The schools at the rear were enlarged in
1904. (fn. 14) Since 1972 it has been Hatherton United
Reformed Church.
Quakers, see Friends.
Salvation Army.
The Walsall corps of the Salvation Army was formed in 1882 and opened a barracks
at the skating rink in Hatherton Street in 1883. It
had ceased to be used by 1896. (fn. 15) A barracks and
schools in Green Lane were opened in 1902. (fn. 16) A
Salvation Army hall in premises in West Bromwich
Street was registered in 1934; the registration was
cancelled in 1951. (fn. 17)
In 1863 William (later General) Booth was living
with his wife and son at no. 5 Hatherton Street and
ran a mission in the town, forming the Hallelujah
Band of reformed reprobates. (fn. 18) The activities of
the band in Bloxwich in 1865 led to the building
of a hall in what came to be called Revival Street. (fn. 19)
By 1898 the hall was known as the Revival Chapel
and was used by the Salvation Army. (fn. 20) A barracks
in Clarendon Street, Bloxwich, was registered in
1901, (fn. 21) and about that time the chapel was taken
over by J. & J. Wiggin, who turned it into a factory. (fn. 22)
The barracks was replaced by the Gospel Mission
Hall in Pinfold, registered for the Salvation Army
in 1907; it had ceased to be used by 1964. (fn. 23)
Seventh-day Adventists.
Advent Church in
Stafford Street was registered in 1945. It had ceased
to be used by 1954. (fn. 24)
Spiritualists.
Walsall Spiritualist Church was
founded in 1877, (fn. 25) and a room in Exchange Buildings
in High Street was registered for it in 1879. (fn. 26) The
room was replaced by Central Hall in Bradford
Street, begun in 1889 and opened in 1890. (fn. 27) This
was in turn replaced by a church on the corner of
Vicarage Place and Caldmore Road built in 1957. (fn. 28)
Bloxwich National Spiritualist Church was formed
in 1921 (fn. 29) and had a church in Wolverhampton
Road. (fn. 30) A new church was built in Revival Street
in 1938. (fn. 31)
Unitarians.
The meeting-house in Bank Court
off High Street turned from Presbyterianism to
Unitarianism in the later 18th century. (fn. 32) It was
replaced in 1827 by Christ's Chapel in Stafford
Street, (fn. 33) a small classical building of brick with a
stuccoed façade. A Sunday school was established
in the late 18th century. (fn. 34) In 1883 the Religious
Reformer, the monthly paper of the Walsall Unitarian Free Church, noted that Unitarianism was
making slow progress locally: 'Unitarianism in
Walsall is like Protestantism in Spain, or Christianity
in Turkey; . . . tradition, prejudice, popularity,
interest, and fashion are all against it.' (fn. 35)
United Reformed Church, see Congregationalists; Presbyterians.
Other Groups.
The Free Church registered a
church in James Street (now Leckie Road), Ryecroft,
in 1866. It had been closed by 1896. (fn. 36)
A Primitive Christian meeting-room in Freer
Street was registered in 1866. It had been closed by
1896. (fn. 37)
The Town Mission Hall in North Street, Ryecroft, was registered in 1909. The mission moved to
the former Wesleyan chapel on the corner of Stafford
and John Streets, registered as Walsall Town Mission in 1940. (fn. 38) The building was no longer in use in
1973.
Services were being held in a meeting-room in
Lower Hall Lane c. 1911 and continued until at
least 1916. (fn. 39)
Bethel Temple in Queen Street was opened by
the Bethel Evangelistic Society in 1932 but had
become undenominational by 1933. (fn. 40) It evidently
occupied the former Wesleyan chapel on the corner
of Bridgeman Street. The building no longer stood
in 1973.
Beulah Pentecostal Mission in premises in
Wednesbury Road was registered in 1935 but was
no longer in existence in 1954. (fn. 41)
Birchills Labour Church in premises in Hollyhedge Lane was registered in 1936 but was no
longer in existence in 1954. (fn. 42)
The New Testament Church of God registered
a building behind no. 88 Wednesbury Road in
1967. (fn. 43)
Bethany Church of God registered two rooms at
no. 57 Wednesbury Road in 1972. (fn. 44) A board over
the door in 1973 read: 'Bethany Church of God,
"Zionist", kept by the Power of God.'
The Church of God at Walsall was in occupation
of the former Ebenezer Baptist church in Stafford
Street in 1973.