CHURCH.
The church of ST. JOHN, Walsall
Wood, originated in a mission established by the
earlier 1820s. Services were at first held in cottages,
but in 1825 the vicar of St. Matthew's was licensed
to hold them in a schoolroom. (fn. 28) In 1836 1½ a. on the
north side of the present High Street was acquired
from Lord Bradford as the site for the church, which
was consecrated in 1837. (fn. 29) The living was endowed
with £500 raised by subscription and augmented by
£20 yearly out of Walsall vicarage. (fn. 30) In 1845 a new
parish of St. John was formed out of St. Matthew's
parish. (fn. 31) The living, at first a perpetual curacy and
from 1868 a vicarage, has remained in the gift of the
vicar of St. Matthew's. (fn. 32) The minister's house originally lay west of the church on the site of the
present St. John's Close. (fn. 33) It was replaced by a new
house north of the church in 1967 and demolished
in 1968. (fn. 34)
Several missions have been opened from St.
John's. A mission centre was established at Clayhanger c. 1872. (fn. 35) The mission church of Holy
Trinity there was opened in 1879; designed by D.
Shenton Hill of Birmingham, it is a brick building
with rendered walls and has a bell in a bellcot. (fn. 36)
Christ Church, High Heath, was opened c. 1886
and is built of rendered brick in a mixed Gothic and
Renaissance style; it was closed in 1973. (fn. 37) St. Mark's,
School Street, Shelfield, was opened in 1895 and
closed in 1964. It was replaced in 1965 by a new
mission church of St. Mark in Green Lane, with a
house near by for an assistant curate. (fn. 38)
The church of St. John was designed by a Mr.
Highway of Walsall (probably Isaac Highway) in
a plain Gothic style. (fn. 39) It originally consisted of a
nave and west tower in blue brick; of that building
only the tower and west wall of the nave remain. A
south aisle of red brick and a sanctuary were added
in 1886, and a north aisle designed by H. E. Lavender of Walsall was built to match in 1895; there is a
vestry at the end of each aisle. (fn. 40) The rebuilt nave
has an arcade of five bays with cast-iron piers and
foliage capitals. The original graveyard was c. ½ a.
in extent; under the inclosure award of 1876 4 a. in
what is now Brookland Road was assigned to the
parish as a burial ground for all denominations in
Walsall Wood. (fn. 41)
ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
A mass-centre was
opened from St. Patrick's, Walsall, in 1891 in the
clubroom of the Four Crosses inn at Shelfield. (fn. 42) A
school-chapel dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul
was opened in 1893 on the corner of Mill Road and
Broad Lane on a site given by Peter Aspinall of the
Four Crosses; designed by S. Loxton of Walsall and
Cannock, it is of brick. A parish, which at first
included Aldridge, was formed in 1909; a resident
priest was appointed and occupied a house adjoining
the church. The Franciscans took over the parish in
1924. They left in 1966, and Shelfield passed back
into the care of the archdiocese of Birmingham. In
1932 the church of St. Francis was opened on the
opposite side of Mill Road to the earlier buildings,
part of the cost being met by a gift of £3,000 from
R. Holden. In 1974 the former chapel and house were
being used respectively as a parish hall and a social
club. The Roman Catholic population of St.
Francis's parish in 1974 was 1,025.
PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
A barn at
Shelfield Lodge and the clubroom at the Horse and
Jockey inn at Walsall Wood were registered in 1813
for unspecified dissenting worship. (fn. 43) About the early
1820s Benjamin Wheeley and other Wesleyan
Methodists from Walsall began to hold a school on
Sunday mornings in a barn at Walsall Wood, with
a service in the afternoon. (fn. 44) By 1851 the congregation at the afternoon services averaged 25, but there
was still no proper chapel. (fn. 45) There was a chapel in
Walsall Road to the south-west of the canal bridge
by 1882, and probably by 1878; it is a Gothic building of brick. It was replaced c. 1902 by a chapel
further north on the opposite side of the road; it
had been closed by 1959 and was subsequently
demolished. The earlier chapel became a Sunday
school and since 1946 has been occupied by W.
Hawkins & Son, organ-builders. (fn. 46)
By 1851 Wesleyans were meeting in temporary
premises at Shelfield, and on Census Sunday that
year there was an evening congregation of 25. (fn. 47) In
1864 a chapel was built on the corner of Lichfield and
Spring Roads; (fn. 48) it is a Gothic building of brick with
a cement façade. It was replaced in 1906-7 by a
chapel built to the south. (fn. 49) Designed by T. W.
Sanders of Walsall, (fn. 50) it is of brick and has an ornamental façade with stone dressings. The earlier
chapel became a hall.
Ebenezer Primitive Methodist chapel in Lichfield
Road towards the northern end of Walsall Wood
was built in 1863. (fn. 51) In 1891 a new chapel, of red
brick in a baroque style, was built on the same site. (fn. 52)
The adjacent school is dated 1908. A Primitive
Methodist chapel was built at High Heath on the
corner of Mob Lane (now Coronation Road) and
Broad Lane (now Broad Way) in 1893. (fn. 53) It is of red
brick with blue-brick dressings. A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in Four Crosses Road, Shelfield, in 1906. (fn. 54) Now Shelfield Centenary Methodist
church, it is a brick building with applied halftimbering.
The Church of the Latter-day Saints registered
a building near the Horse and Jockey in 1855; they
had ceased to use it by 1876. (fn. 55) There was a chapel of
unknown denomination at the west end of Beech
Tree Road between at least 1878 and 1883. (fn. 56)
The Christian Brethren registered the Gospel
Hall in Clayhanger Road in 1927 and the House of
Prayer in Coppice Road in 1934. (fn. 57)