PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
There were apparently no dissenters in the 17th century
and only short-lived congregations before the establishment in 1883-4 of the first surviving nonconformist church. (fn. 3) Methodists had a small chapel
in Colney Hatch Lane from 1836, (fn. 4) with attendances
of 25 in the morning and 38 in the evening on
census Sunday 1851. (fn. 5) They later worshipped at a
boarding school at no. 1 Torrington Park from
1852 to 1866, (fn. 6) and in Friern Barnet Lane until
c. 1889. (fn. 7)
By 1903 an average of 813 nonconformists worshipped each Sunday, compared with 1,475 Anglicans. There were 567 Congregationalists, 37
Brethren, and 209 who attended the Railway
Mission, (fn. 8) which was the most successful of the
missions, many of which were ignored in the survey.
Methodist churches were established in 1904 and
c. 1930. There were seven nonconformist places of
worship in 1911 (fn. 9) and two Congregationalist, two
Methodist, a Baptist, and two Brethren's places
of worship in 1975. The more successful establishments were made north of Friern Barnet Road.
Small mission halls of more radical denominations
proliferated in the poorer Avenue and Freehold
districts but most were not purpose-built and had
closed by 1975.
Christ Church United Reformed church stands
at the corner of Friern Barnet and Bellevue roads.
The original Congregationalist lecture hall of
1883-4 (fn. 10) is a red-brick building with stone dressings
in an Early English style. It contained committee
rooms, a common room, and a hall for 300, (fn. 11)
which was used for services and had an average
Sunday congregation of 225 in 1903. (fn. 12) A permanent
church was built in front in 1910 to the design of
George Baines & Co. (fn. 13) on a north-south axis.
Also of red brick with stone dressings, it is square
with an east transept and a low south-west tower
and spire. It has a capacity of 600. (fn. 14) The first
minister, Benjamin Waugh, 1883-7, was founder
of the N.S.P.C.C. (fn. 15)
Oakleigh Park United Reformed church originated in 1887, when the Congregational school and
chapel at Totteridge were too small and a site was
chosen midway between Totteridge and Oakleigh
Park stations, in the angle of Oakleigh Road North
and Oakleigh Park North. The building was to be
of two storeys, with a chapel or school hall on the
first floor and a vestry and smaller rooms below.
Built in 1888 of yellow brick with stone dressings (fn. 16)
in the simplest early Gothic style, it was used as a
hall in 1975. The permanent church was erected in
1900 in an idiosyncratic Gothic style by E. F.
Knight. (fn. 17) It is of red brick and consists of a rectangular nave, polygonal east end, and two low
western turrets. It seats 350. (fn. 18) In 1903 an average
of 190 attended the morning and 152 the evening
services on Sundays. (fn. 19)
Pembroke Road Methodist church, in the Freehold, was founded in 1904 by the main Muswell
Hill Methodist church as a Wesleyan mission hall. (fn. 20)
In 1922 it moved to the Freehold mission hall in
Sydney Road, (fn. 21) which was replaced in 1954 by a
new church in Pembroke Road. (fn. 22) In 1975 a small
red-brick church seated 150 and shared a minister
with Manor Drive Methodist church. (fn. 23)
Manor Drive Methodist church, planned in 1930
for Torrington Park (fn. 24) and temporarily established
on the corner with Friern Barnet Lane by 1935, (fn. 25)
opened on the corner of Manor Drive and York
Way in 1938. (fn. 26) An imposing red-brick building in a
modern style, it consists of a nave with shallow
aisles, transepts, a low lantern tower, a polygonal
chancel with adjoining vestries, and a narthex
connecting the nave to the single-storeyed hall added
in 1956. (fn. 27) It has seating for c. 300. (fn. 28)
Baptists from 1865 probably attended New Southgate Baptist church, sometimes described as in
Colney Hatch. (fn. 29) Before 1887 it founded a mission
hall at Pembroke Road, (fn. 30) known as the Pembroke
Baptist mission room in 1902 (fn. 31) and renamed the
United mission hall c. 1922 when joined by seceders
from the Freehold mission in Sydney Road.
Although still governed by a trust deed held by the
mother church, the congregation managed its own
affairs in 1975. The original timber-framed and
corrugated iron hut was then used for Sunday
school and other activities but wooden huts of
c. 1918 at the rear had been replaced c. 1968 by a
brick building, containing a church for 75-100. (fn. 32)
In 1905 the Ebenezer Baptist chapel was registered
in a house at no. 15 Beaconsfield Road, New Southgate, by Old Baptists. (fn. 33) It was described as the Old
Baptist Union training house in 1906 (fn. 34) and was
disused by 1954. (fn. 35)
Christian Brethren from Highgate began to
worship in Athenaeum Road, Whetstone, c. 1884.
They met in a converted house with a capacity of
c. 25, (fn. 36) probably the Christians' meeting-room
recorded between 1889 and 1925, (fn. 37) until in 1926
they moved to a new brick hall in Oakleigh Road
North, which seated 100. Oakleigh hall was enlarged in 1954, renamed Oakleigh chapel shortly
afterwards, (fn. 38) and still used in 1975.
Christian Brethren from St. James's Lane, Muswell Hill, (fn. 39) acquired a small site on the corner of
Wilton and Coppetts roads c. 1949. Wilton chapel,
a low red-brick hall, was opened in 1952 and completed a few years later. (fn. 40)
The New Southgate branch of the Railway
Mission was established c. 1883. (fn. 41) Between 1891 (fn. 42)
and 1899 it acquired a site north of Friern Barnet
Road beside the railway, (fn. 43) where a tin chapel was
erected. In 1903 there was an average attendance of
90 at morning service and 209 at evening service
every Sunday. (fn. 44) The mission hall was still open
in 1939 (fn. 45) but later was used by the G.P.O. (fn. 46) and
in 1975 as a builder's store.
The Bethel Full Gospel church in Cromwell
Road, Muswell Hill, which was registered by the
Assemblies of God in 1939, was disused by 1954. (fn. 47)
It may have replaced the Bethel mission hall which
was at Carlisle Place, New Southgate, between
1889 and 1939. (fn. 48)
The Freehold mission hall in Sydney Road,
Muswell Hill, was built by 1901 (fn. 49) for a congregation
that had met in a shop. Described as interdenominational, it had close links with the Pembroke Baptist
mission hall, to which some members seceded in
1922. (fn. 50) The brick chapel survives as the depot of
the Hobart Manufacturing Co.
A meeting-room in Athenaeum road between
1889 and 1897 had disappeared by 1900 (fn. 51) and a
Gospel hall there in 1925 was disused by 1930. (fn. 52)