Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Union Chapel, Islington

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Country
  
England

Website
  
www.unionchapel.org.uk

Minister(s)
  
Karen Stallard

Phone
  
+44 20 7226 1686

Denomination
  
Congregationalist

Architect(s)
  
James Cubitt

Height
  
52 m

Union Chapel, Islington

Address
  
Union Chapel, Compton Terrace, London N1 2UN, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Bush Hall, Roundhouse, Barbican Centre, The Royal Albert Hall, Kings Place

Profiles

Union Chapel is a working church, live entertainment venue and charity drop-in centre for the homeless in Islington, London, England. Built in the late 19th century in the Gothic revival style, the church is Grade I-listed. It is at the top end of Upper Street, near Highbury Fields.

Contents

The Venue

The church hosts live music and comedy events, and was voted London's Best Live Music Venue by readers of Time Out magazine in 2012.

Margins Homelessness Project

The Margins Project, based in the Union Chapel, provides a range of support services to people facing homelessness, crisis and isolation. It operates a Sunday drop-in that provides meals, showers and laundry facilities. It also offers help with accessing housing, employment and health services and weekly art classes.

Church in the Chapel

Union Chapel is a Congregational church, which describes itself as "liberal, inclusive, non-hierarchical, and non-conformist" and meets every Sunday for worship. The church is also open on Wednesday mornings for private prayer, and a Bible study group meets Wednesday lunchtime.

History

The congregation first met in 1799 in a house in Highbury Grove as a union of evangelical Anglicans and non-conformists, and moved to a previous building on the present site in Compton Terrace, just off Upper Street, in 1806. The current building is in the Victorian gothic style of architecture. It was designed by James Cubitt of Loughton, and built between 1874 and 1877, with further additions from 1877 to 1890, while Henry Allon was pastor. The chapel was used for a major scene in the 1982 film, Who Dares Wins. Since 1982, the charity Friends of Union Chapel has helped restore and preserve the church and organise activities. Behind the church is the large Sunday School, built on the Akron Plan.

Ministers

  • Thomas Lewis 1804–1852
  • Henry Allon 1844–1892
  • Hardy Harwood 1891–1914
  • Ronald Taylor 1940–1980
  • Gareth Trevor Jones 1981–1986
  • Janet Wootton 1987–?
  • Karen Stallard 2010–current
  • Organ

    The organ dates from 1877 and is by Henry Willis & Sons. It was restored in 1946 by Monk & Gunther and by Harrison & Harrison in 2013.

    Organists

  • John Henry Gauntlett 1852–1861
  • Ebenezer Prout 1861–1873
  • Fountain Meen 1880–1909
  • John Hooker 1973–2002
  • References

    Union Chapel, Islington Wikipedia