NONCONFORMITY.
The Methodists, mainly
the Primitive Methodists, were the only nonconformists to enjoy any success in Ketley. A Quaker
evangelist spoke there in 1759, (fn. 37) and in 1854 a
Baptist at the Rock was reported to have joined
the Mormons. (fn. 38) A Salvation Army barracks, registered in 1888, had closed by 1896. (fn. 39) An undenominational iron chapel was rembered in
1982. (fn. 40)
Sporadic Wesleyan efforts were made over
some sixty years. There was regular Wesleyan
preaching at the Rock in 1813, (fn. 41) and still in 1823
when Old Park (in Dawley) and Mannerley Lane
were associated preaching places. (fn. 42) By 1840 the
Rock and Mannerley Lane were still associated
but in 1852 they separated and seem to have
expired. The latter was revived from 1856 to c.
1866. (fn. 43) Redlake had a Wesleyan society by 1840.
It seems to have lapsed in 1852, (fn. 44) but a house said
to have been lent for Wesleyan worship in 1853
was still being used when the society ceased in
1874. (fn. 45)
A Primitive Methodist society at Coalpit Bank
met in Wombridge parish in 1830. (fn. 46) By 1841 it
used Robert Pocock's schoolroom south of Main
Road, Ketley Bank, which it rebuilt as a brick
chapel in 1859. (fn. 47) Altered in 1907, (fn. 48) it had 191
seats and was called St. Paul's by 1940. (fn. 49) It had a
congregation of 31 in 1983. (fn. 50) The Rock too had
regular Primitive preaching by 1835. (fn. 51) A small
plain brick chapel was built in 1861 (fn. 52) off the west
side of Rock Road. In 1877 (fn. 53) a larger chapel, with
300 seats in 1940, (fn. 54) was built in polychrome brick
against the old chapel, which then became the
Sunday school. (fn. 55) In 1981 the new chapel was still
in use. There was regular Primitive preaching at
Ketleybrook by 1834. (fn. 56) A small plain brick chapel
called Ebenezer was built there in 1863 (fn. 57) on the
north side of the Holyhead road. Dr. S. Parkes
Cadman (1864-1936), a celebrated preacher in
the United States, (fn. 58) was baptized there. (fn. 59) The
chapel closed in 1963. (fn. 60) Other mid 19th-century
efforts by the Primitives were shorter lived. There
was regular preaching at Redlake in 1839 and
1849 (fn. 61) and at Mannerley Lane in 1842, 1851 (48
afternoon attendances on Census Sunday), and
1861. (fn. 62)
A small plain brick chapel of the United
Methodist Free Churches was built at Mosseygreen in 1873 and rebuilt or extended in 1904. (fn. 63)
Worship ceased in 1971. (fn. 64)
Footnotes
| 37 |
Trinder, Ind. Rev. Salop. 305. |
| 38 |
Dawley Bank Baptist Ch. min. bk. 1848-84, 26 Apr. 1854
(in possession of ch. sec.); cf. above, Wellington, Prot.
Nonconf. |
| 39 |
G.R.O., Worship Reg. no. 31125. |
| 40 |
Local inf. |
| 41 |
S.P.L., C 98.7 v.f., Shrews. circuit plan. |
| 42 |
S.P.L., L 98.7 v.f., Wellington circuit plan. |
| 43 |
S.R.O. 3767/XVII/A; /XVII/I, circuit plans of 1865-6. |
| 44 |
Ibid. /XVII/A. |
| 45 |
S.R.O. 3027/1/1, 4a. |
| 46 |
Below, Wombridge, Nonconf. |
| 47 |
S.R.O. 3038/6/1; date stone; below, Educ. |
| 48 |
Date stone. |
| 49 |
Meth. Church Bldgs.: Statistical Returns (1940), 268. |
| 50 |
Local inf. |
| 51 |
S.R.O. 3605/2, 28 Dec. 1835. |
| 52 |
S.R.O. 2533/130, 10 June 1861; date stone. |
| 53 |
Date stone. |
| 54 |
Meth. Church Bldgs.: Statistical Returns (1940), 270. |
| 55 |
Local inf. (recorded in S.M.R.). |
| 56 |
Inf. from Mr. J. H. Lenton. |
| 57 |
Date stone. |
| 58 |
Dict. American Biog. xxii. 85-6. |
| 59 |
S.R.O. 3767/XVIII/A, newscutting [of 1962]. |
| 60 |
Ibid. /IX/I, 19 Mar., 30 Apr. 1963; /IX/H, 3 Dec. 1963. |
| 61 |
S.R.O. 1861/5, p. 3; 3605/1, p. 22. The mtg. did not
survive to 1861: S.R.O. 1861/12. |
| 62 |
S.R.O. 1861/12; 3605/1, p. 81; P.R.O., HO 129/365, no.
30. |
| 63 |
Date stones. |
| 64 |
S.R.O. 4113/10/1, 23 Nov. 1971. |