Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

George Street Particular Baptist Church

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Location
  
Nottingham

Denomination
  
Particular Baptist

Completed
  
16 August 1815

Country
  
England

Architect(s)
  
Edward Staveley

Opened
  
16 August 1815

George Street Particular Baptist Church

Construction cost
  
6,000 GBP (equivalent to £400,797 in 2015)

Similar
  
Hurst Spit, Coronation Chair, Kinniside Stone Circle

George Street Particular Baptist Church was a former Baptist Church in Nottingham from 1815 to 1948. The building is now used as an Arts Theatre.

Contents

History

The congregation had its roots in Friar Lane Baptist Church, which it outgrew by the early nineteenth century. It commissioned a new building on George Street which opened in 1815. It was built to designs by the architect Edward Staveley. It had seating for 1,000 people. The congregation also formed Cross Street Baptist Church in Arnold, Nottingham.

In 1847 the church underwent a schism and part of the congregation left to form Derby Road Particular Baptist Church.

It was remodelled as a Co-operative Theatre in 1948 by A.H. Betts.

Ministers

  • John Jarman 1803 - 1830
  • James Edwards 1830 - ????
  • Organ

    The church was the first Baptist church in Nottingham to purchase an organ, which it did in 1847. It was erected by Messrs. Bevington and Sons of London, at a cost of £220 (equivalent to £18,132 in 2015) (It is possible that the church authorities had seen the organ by the same builders erected the previous year in St. Paul's Church on the opposite side of George Street.)

    References

    George Street Particular Baptist Church Wikipedia