Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Little England Chapel

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Built
  
1878

VLR #
  
114-0040

Opened
  
1878

Phone
  
+1 757-722-4249

NRHP Reference #
  
82004564

Designated VLR
  
June 16, 1981

Area
  
2,024 m²

Added to NRHP
  
8 July 1982

Little England Chapel

Location
  
4100 Kecoughtan Rd., Hampton, Virginia

Architect
  
Hampton Institute Students

Address
  
4100 Kecoughtan Rd, Hampton, VA 23669, USA

Similar
  
Air Power Park, War Memorial Stadium, Fort Wool, St John's Episcopal Church, Emancipation Oak

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Little England Chapel (originally called The Ocean Cottage Sunday School) was founded by George C. Rowe. Mr. Rowe, a printer at Hampton Institute, began the Sunday School with three Newtown children, in a small section of his home. The Sunday School became so popular that they needed more space to hold the Bible sessions.

Contents

History

In 1869, Daniel F. Cock set aside a triangular plot of thirty-five acres divided into thirty-three lots to be sold to blacks persons. This area was named "Cock's Newtown. In March 1870, the first six lots were sold at fifty dollars each. The last was sold in 1910. During this same period, blacks also purchased lots of comparable size at the same price from Charles Smith, Edward Whitehouse, and William N. Armstrong, brother of Samuel Armstron Principal of Hampton Institute. These lots were close to "Cock's Newtown" or close to the area where the Little England Chapel now stands. Subsequently, "Newtown" was applied to the entire black community.

In 1878, a large open arbor was built with ten rows of seating for academic and Sunday School classes on the property of Daniel Cock. The number of attendees grew to over 500 – too many to be accommodated in the open arbor. During that same summer Mr. Rowe, met with William N. Armstrong, who offered the use of a small piece of land along Ivy Home Road, if the residents in the neighborhood would contribute toward the support of a day school teacher. The money was raised and the chapel opened in 1879. Students from Hampton Institute not only designed but built the school house the work was overseen by William Armstrong.

By 1886, the chapel had become self-supporting and had grown from three to seventy children. The children of the chapel participated in missionary work for the community. As late as 1910, students from the institute rowed across the Hampton River to teach classes. In later years, they would travel by horse and buggy and the "School Chariot", a black shiny carriage drawn by two white horses. The students would serve as missionaries of the chapel for over fifty years.

References

Little England Chapel Wikipedia