ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
Between 1574 and
1597 the Hale family of Moons were repeatedly
prosecuted for recusancy. A private chapel had
been licensed at Moons in 1536 and this may well
have been used for secret Roman Catholic worship in
the later 16th century. (fn. 1) In 1598 William Humphrey
was cited for harbouring a 'papistical woman'
thought to be a common messenger between recusants, (fn. 2) but he was never indicted as a recusant
himself. Indictments of a few Walthamstow recusants continued to 1629, (fn. 3) but in 1676 no papists
were enumerated in the parish. (fn. 4) In 1766 one Roman
Catholic family was reported. (fn. 5) This was the Bradshaw family, who may have given hospitality to the
Jesuit mission conducted in Walthamstow from
1769 to 1772 by John Talbot, a priest who remained
there until 1779. By 1780 there were 32 papists
in the parish. (fn. 6) In the 1840s mass was being said in
private houses, with the support of Captain George
Collard (d. 1853) and his wife. In 1847 Captain
Collard conveyed some land to his wife for her
disposal for charitable purposes and in the same
year she gave by deed a 2-acre site in Shernhall Street
to build the mission chapel of ST. GEORGE.
This small building of Kentish ragstone was opened
in 1849 by Dr. (later Cardinal) Nicholas Wiseman,
who was then living at Shern Hall and was one of
the trustees. (fn. 7) Differences had arisen by 1851 (fn. 8)
and in 1853 Mrs. Collard abandoned the faith,
quarrelled with the priest, revoked all gifts she had
made, and locked up the chapel. Wiseman built a
small temporary chapel until the other was reopened in 1854, and in 1855 the trustees' title to
the land conveyed to them by Mrs. Collard in
1847 was confirmed by a Chancery decree. (fn. 9)
The Walthamstow mission also served Woodford,
Leyton, Wanstead, and Chingford, until their own
missions opened. The present church, dedicated
to OUR LADY AND ST. GEORGE, was opened
in 1901, a massive brick building in the Early
English style with circular apse and domed roof
and a Lady chapel on the north side. (fn. 10) Six other
chapels were added later. In 1903 Sunday attendances totalled 746. (fn. 11) The church of OUR LADY
OF THE ROSARY AND ST. PATRICK,
Blackhorse Road, was opened in 1908 (fn. 12) and the
church of CHRIST THE KING, Chingford Road,
in 1932. (fn. 13)
PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
A Presbyterian meeting was licensed in Walthamstow in
1672, and not long afterwards a permanent congregation of Presbyterians existed in Marsh Street. (fn. 14)
Their numbers and prestige grew in the 18th
century; by 1778 there were said to be many dissenters in the parish, all Presbyterians except one
family of Quakers and one of Baptists. (fn. 15) In 1786
some members of the Marsh Street congregation
broke away to form a new meeting, which later
became a Congregational church. Independent meetings were registered in private houses in 1798 and
1799, (fn. 16) and a permanent Independent congregation
was formed in Wood Street in 1807. (fn. 17) Other meetings of unknown denomination were registered in
private houses in 1818, 1822, and 1833. (fn. 18) Baptists
were worshipping in Marsh Street in 1849, and
from the 1850s the Wood Street Independent church
became a Union church. Congregationalists, who
formed another church in 1861, (fn. 19) remained the
leading nonconformist group until the 1870s, when
permanent congregations were formed by Wesleyan
and Primitive Methodists, Baptists, and Strict
Baptists. Intensive missionary activity followed
among Walthamstow's new population, including
much social work in the poorer districts and among
young people. The denominations already established spread, and were joined by the Free Methodists, Brethren, and Salvation Army in the 1880s,
Unitarians and Presbyterian Church of England in
the late 1890s, and Presbyterian Church of Wales
and Friends by 1903.
In 1903 there were some 46 nonconformist
churches and missions in Walthamstow, with Sunday congregations totalling over 13,827 (fn. 20) or about
56.5 per cent of worshippers of all denominations
in the district. In terms of Sunday attendances the
Congregationalists still had the largest nonconformist following, but the Free Methodists were
close behind, the Lighthouse in Markhouse Road
attracting congregations only exceeded in Walthamstow by those of the parish church of St. Mary.
The three main denominations founded no new
churches after 1913, but between the two World
Wars Spiritualists and small fundamentalist and
pentecostal groups became established. In the 1930s
membership generally fell and many churches were
burdened by debt. During the Second World War
dispersal of members and bomb damage increased
the difficulties of many churches and compelled
reorganization and retrenchment when it ended.
The only newcomers after 1945 were small sects
such as the Church of the Nazarene. In 1963 37
places of nonconformist worship were listed. (fn. 21) Two
of these had closed by 1970.
The accounts of individual churches were completed in 1970. Dates in brackets after ministers'
names show the years of their pastorate. Attendance
statistics for 1903 are from the Daily News census. (fn. 22)
Baptists.
A room in Marsh Street was registered
for Baptist worship by John Glaskin of Hackney,
minister, in 1849. (fn. 23) A permanent congregation was
established in the 1850s, when Wood Street Independent chapel, under a Baptist pastor, became a
Union church. (fn. 24) Between 1874 and 1906 6 Baptist
churches were formed; 5 of them were still active
in 1970, with another founded in 1913. Membership
figures quoted below are from the Baptist Handbooks.
Central church, Orford Road, originated in 1874 in
services held for the Markhouse common district. (fn. 25)
An iron hall was erected on the corner of Boundary
and Boston Roads in 1875 and a permanent church
was built in 1880. (fn. 26) A mission was opened at Higham
Hill in 1886, and during the pastorate of W. Murray
(1892–1914) a mission was begun in High Street.
By 1907 there were 358 members. In 1914 the
present church was built in Orford Road. It is a
large red-brick building in the Gothic style with a
south-west tower. Membership fell from 318 in
1915 to 296 in 1916 when some of the original
Boundary Road members, finding their new church
too distant, seceded and opened a small iron hut in
Boundary Road. (fn. 27) In 1939 Central church had 349
members, and in 1967 269. The Boundary Road
church, closed in 1914, was later taken over by the
Walthamstow and Leyton Synagogue. (fn. 28)
Higham Hill church, Higham Hill Road, originated in 1885 when services began in a shop in that
road. (fn. 29) The following year Boundary Road Baptist
church opened a Higham Hill mission in St.
Andrew's Road. From 1888, if not before, this was
conducted in the old British schools building, previously occupied by the Friends. (fn. 30) A church was
formed in 1896. The present church was opened in
1904. In 1921 there were 300 members, in 1939
205, and in 1967 66.
Erskine Road Spurgeon Memorial church, which
originated in High Street in 1898, may have begun
as a mission of Boundary Road. (fn. 31) About 1901 an iron
hall was erected in Erskine Road, registered in 1902
as the Spurgeon Memorial church. (fn. 32) The church
appears to have ceased about 1911–12, when there
were 32 members. (fn. 33) The earlier date is the more
likely if a tradition that the church furnishings went
to Spruce Hill Baptist church is correct. (fn. 34) The
Erskine Road site, on the corner of Melville Road,
was occupied in 1970 as a school meals centre.
Blackhorse Road church was founded in 1898,
with the help of the Pioneer Mission. (fn. 35) There were
120 members in 1903. The present church was
opened in 1932. (fn. 36) There were 129 members in
1939 and 24 in 1967.
The Tabernacle, Greenleaf Road, originated in
1902 in a tent mission sponsored by the Pioneer
Mission on Church Hill, on the site later occupied
by the Strict Baptists. (fn. 37) Under the leadership of
E. E. Welton, then a student pastor, a group met in
Hoe Street until 1903, when Forest Road board
school, Greenleaf Road, was hired. A church was
formed in 1905 and a school-chapel opened and
registered in 1906 as the Central Baptist Hall,
Greenleaf Road. (fn. 38) Welton was pastor from 1905 to
1915. The chapel was enlarged in 1915 and reregistered as the Tabernacle. (fn. 39) In 1921 there were
281 members and by 1922 the church was clear
of debt, with the help of a gift from (Sir) William
Mallinson. In 1939 there were 306 members. The
Tabernacle was destroyed by bombing in 1944, but
services continued in a hall. The rebuilt Tabernacle, a contemporary compact building, opened in
1949. In 1967 church membership was 212.
Spruce Hill church, Brookscroft Road, originated
about 1904, when J. S. Rideout, caretaker of Livingstone College, (fn. 40) at the suggestion of R. H. Eastty,
minister of Erskine Road, started services in a
disused shop at the junction of Thorpe and St.
John's Roads. (fn. 41) In 1905 an iron church was erected
in Brookscroft Road and registered as Spruce Hill
Baptist church. (fn. 42) The present church was opened
in 1911. (fn. 43) The original furniture, including the pulpit, is said to have come from the Erskine Road
church, but was replaced in 1937, when the interior
was reconstructed, with a pulpit and gallery over
200 years old from a church in north London. (fn. 44)
Membership was 71 in 1939, and 37 in 1967.
Highams Park, Cavendish Road, originated in
1913 when Greenleaf Road members started a
mission in Selwyn Avenue school. (fn. 45) A church was
formed in 1915 (fn. 46) and a building erected on the
present site about 1917. (fn. 47) The present church was
opened in 1932. (fn. 48) Membership, which was 82 in
1939, rose after the Second World War from 189
in 1949 to 293 in 1956, when a Fellowship hall was
opened. (fn. 49) In 1967 there were 279 members. In 1969
pre-school playgroups were organized in the hall. (fn. 50)
Forest Road Hall, Hervey Park Road, was built
and registered in 1892. (fn. 51) It is said to have originated
earlier as the Forest mission of Wood Street Union
Church, (fn. 52) but was regarded as a Baptist place of
worship by 1903, when Sunday attendances totalled
210. It was listed as a mission of the Erskine Road
church in 1908 and until that church closed; it
continued to be listed until 1926, but was included
in 1928 among extinct or amalgamated Baptist
missions. (fn. 53) The building was, however, listed as a
mission in 1951, (fn. 54) was registered as unsectarian in
1961, (fn. 55) and was in regular use in 1970. (fn. 56)
Old Union Baptists.
Wood Street church originated in 1894 when two groups meeting in Hoe Street
under J. Hamilton and T. A. Tucker united. The
combined congregation moved to the old Independent church in Wood Street in 1895. This was occupied until 1907, when the present brick church, with
steep roof and broad entrance porch flanked by round
windows, was built farther down Wood Street. (fn. 57)
Highams Park Tabernacle, Fulbourne Road, was
founded in 1904 by T. A. Tucker as a mission in
Station Parade, moving to Hale End Road in 1905
and Cavendish Road in 1906. When the present
church in Fulbourne Road was built in 1910 the
pastor was T. H. Squire. (fn. 58)
Strict Baptists.
Church Hill (Commercial Street
Memorial) church, sometimes called Cairo Road
church, was formed by the union of Zion, Maynard
Road, and Commercial Street church (Lond.). (fn. 59)
Zion church originated in 1874 in Orford Road;
services were held in the public hall there in 1875
and in Maynard Road from 1876. In 1890 Zion was
joined by a congregation which since 1886 had been
meeting in the Grammar school, East Avenue. (fn. 60)
The Particular Baptists of Commercial Street,
whose church was formed in 1633 in Wapping,
sold their premises in 1909 and in 1911 invited
Zion to join them in building a new church at Walthamstow. The union was effected in 1913, and the
Commercial Street Memorial church was opened
in 1914. (fn. 61) A branch church was opened at King's
Road, Chingford, in 1929. (fn. 62) There were 87 members in 1939 and 21 in 1967.
Selborne Road Tabernacle originated in 1882
when J. Copeland, pastor of Zion, Maynard Road,
held meetings in St. James Street. A church was
formed in Marsh (High) Street in 1883, with H.
Dunkley as minister, and moved to Selborne Road
on the east corner of Vernon Road in 1886, probably
on completion of plans to build a church there.
The Tabernacle was sold to the Midland Railway
about 1891–2. (fn. 63)
Brethren.
The Brethren had an unusually strong
following in Walthamstow. In 1903 there were 8
separate meetings, with Sunday attendances totalling 1,511, higher than those of Brethren in any
other district in south-west Essex, and exceeded
only by Croydon and Greenwich in the whole of
London.
Folkestone Road hall may have originated in
missions held at the town hall in 1884 on the application of Mr. Morris, whose plans for an iron hall
in Queens Road were approved the same year. (fn. 64) The
Brethren were certainly worshipping in the Queens
Road hall by 1886. (fn. 65) The hall was enlarged in 1887. (fn. 66)
A new hall in Folkestone Road was opened in 1889. (fn. 67)
It was rebuilt in 1963 in a contemporary style. (fn. 68)
Higham Hill gospel hall, St. Andrew's Road,
originated in 1887 when workers from the parent
assembly in Queens Road held meetings in an iron
room in Oatland Rise. (fn. 69) The present hall was built
in 1897 and opened in the following year. After
the First World War the hall was enlarged and a
baptistery built, but by 1937 membership was declining. In 1963 the hall was still associated with the
Brethren, but no Sunday services were being held. (fn. 70)
In 1970 the hall was occupied by the Church of God. (fn. 71)
Wadham hall, Wadham Road, originated in 1903
in children's services held in Chapel End school. (fn. 72)
These continued to 1938 when the former Primitive
Methodist church in Wadham Road was taken over
by the Brethren. (fn. 73) This church was demolished in
1953 and rebuilt as Wadham hall. (fn. 74)
The Christian Mission, Collingwood Road, was
being conducted by the Brethren in 1903. (fn. 75) Previously leased to the Primitive Methodists, (fn. 76) the
hall was listed as unsectarian from 1905 to 1922,
when it apparently closed. (fn. 77) In 1903 the Brethren
were also worshipping in the Clarendon hall, (fn. 78) in
a gospel hall in Selborne Road, and in the 'New
Room', Maude Road, and were holding children's
services in Maynard Road schools and the Workmen's hall. (fn. 79) The Selborne Road gospel mission
closed about 1912. (fn. 80) The Maude Road room may be
identified with the Clockhouse gospel preaching
room listed in directories. (fn. 81) Services ceased there
about the late 1950s and in 1970 the small brick
building was in use as a store. (fn. 82)
South Grove gospel hall, Markhouse Road, originated as a mission of Trinity Congregational
church. (fn. 83) It was taken over in 1925 by Brethren
from Folkestone Road, who bought the building in
1933. Brethren still worshipped there in 1970. (fn. 84)
In 1953 a former brick surface air-raid shelter
in Highams Park behind Tamworth Avenue was
registered by Brethren as a community centre. (fn. 85) It
ceased a few years later and in 1969 the shelter was
used as a council storage hut. (fn. 86)
Congregationalists.
Membership figures given below are from the Congregational Year Books.
Marsh Street church, High Street, is usually said
to have originated in 1672, when the house of Samuel
Slater, a minister removed in 1661 from the lectureship of St. James, Bury St. Edmunds (Suff.), was
licensed for Presbyterian meetings. (fn. 87) At first the
congregation does not seem to have thriven, for
Slater was assessed to the Walthamstow hearth
tax in 1672 but not in 1673, (fn. 88) and there were no
nonconformists in Walthamstow in 1676. (fn. 89) In 1690–2
a meeting at Walthamstow was being supplied by
preachers from London, at the expense of 'some
Gent'. (fn. 90) This was no doubt William Coward, a
wealthy London merchant and Jamaica planter who
settled in Walthamstow some time after 1673 but
before 1693. (fn. 91) Coward built a meeting-house in
1695 on land he owned on the north side of Marsh
Street. He registered his own house for Presbyterian
worship in 1716, and in 1718 he also registered the
Marsh Street meeting-house for Independent worship. (fn. 92) There was apparently no settled minister,
but visiting preachers included Philip Doddridge and
probably Isaac Watts also, both friends of Coward.
By his will, dated 1735, (fn. 93) Coward devised the
meeting-house to trustees for use by Protestant dissenters. He pulled it down not long after, intending
to rebuild it, but died in 1738 before doing so. His
executors, however, conveyed the site in trust for
the congregation and contributed towards erecting
another meeting-house, which was registered for
Presbyterian worship in 1739. (fn. 94) During the ministry
of Hugh Farmer (1737–80) congregations increased,
and in 1759 the meeting-house was extended on the
west side and a vestry room built on the north side. (fn. 95)
The Unitarian views of Joseph Fawcett (minister
1780–7) aroused controversy at Marsh Street, and
in 1786 the evangelical members seceded to form a
New Meeting.
The Old Meeting in Marsh Street survived to the
1830s, with the support of the Solly family of
Leyton House in the Walthamstow Slip; trustees
appointed in 1795 included three members of the
family. (fn. 96) Though the meeting was reported in 1810
to be diminished, (fn. 97) its most distinguished pastor,
Dr. Eliezer Cogan (1801–16), (fn. 98) is said to have attracted large congregations. Three brief pastorates
followed, but after 1823 there was no settled
ministry. A student pastor was appointed by Isaac
Solly in 1829, and in that year a 'Socinian' congregation was still reported in Walthamstow. (fn. 99) But in
1837 it was stated that no service had been held for
3 years. (fn. 100) The chapel, listed as Unitarian, still
existed in 1839 (fn. 101) and 1843, (fn. 102) but it had been pulled
down by 1861.
The Marsh Street New Meeting opened in 1787
on a site given by William Couldery on the south
side of Marsh Street. Part of the site became a
burial ground. In 1792 Thomas Fletcher bequeathed
£1,000 in trust for the minister's benefit. Under the
vigorous ministry of George Collison (1797–1837) (fn. 103)
the New Meeting was increasing by 1810. (fn. 104) Collison
began another meeting in Wood Street in 1807, and
by 1829 had under his ministerial direction Marsh
Street New Meeting, 2 licensed rooms elsewhere
in the parish, and a small chapel at Leytonstone,
with an average of 500 worshippers. (fn. 105) The Marsh
Street numbers continued to increase under J. J.
Freeman (1837–46) and in 1838 side galleries were
added to the church. By 1851 average Sunday attendances totalled 630. (fn. 106) In 1868 the Charity Commissioners agreed that the site of the Old Meeting,
then in the hands of Isaac Solly, son of the last of its
trustees to die, should be transferred to the New
Meeting trustees to build a larger church. This new
church, on the Old Meeting site, was opened in
1871. It was built of stone in the Gothic style, to
the design of John Tarring & Son. The Conway
hall, built in memory of Samuel Conway (minister
1871–95), was added in 1899. By 1903 the church
had 369 members and total Sunday attendances of
770, besides attendances totalling 713 at the Conway hall and 2 other associated missions. Church
membership at Marsh Street was 257 in 1939 but
had fallen to 171 by 1949. As a result of bomb
damage in 1944 the steeple became unsafe and was
taken down in 1954. (fn. 107) The church closed in 1965,
its congregation joining Trinity church. The church
and Conway hall were demolished in the same year
and replaced by shops. (fn. 108) The original New Meeting
in Marsh Street was retained as a mission from 1871
to 1875, when it was let to the Primitive Methodists. (fn. 109) In 1899 the building was sold to them, but
the graveyard, including the grave of George
Collison, was retained by the Congregationalists
until soon after 1962, when it was sold to the borough
council. (fn. 110) The Primitive Methodists faced the front
of the church with decorative stucco, inserted
tracery in the windows, and added a porch, but the
original structure of 1787 can still be recognized.
It is a large rectangular building of brown brick
with a rear gallery internally. The tall round-headed side windows are set in arched recesses
below a dentil cornice. The altered two-storeyed
front has similar windows with a central Venetian
window above the entrance, the whole being crowned
by a low-pitched gable. After the original New Meeting was taken over in 1875, the Marsh Street mission
was transferred to the Marsh Street British schools
built opposite Buxton Road in 1872. (fn. 111) When the
schools were conveyed to the school board in 1881
the church reserved the right to their evening and
week-end use, and the mission was conducted there
until the buildings were sold in 1938. The following
year a new Marsh Street mission, built by the
Shaftesbury Society, was opened in Truro Road on
the site of the previous Unitarian church; it is
conducted jointly by the Congregationalists and the
Society. (fn. 112) Marsh Street's Coppermill Lane mission,
begun in 1896 and reorganized in 1898 as a branch
church, ceased during the First World War.
Wood Street church, Vallentin Road, originated
in 1807, when George Collison, minister of Marsh
Street New Meeting, registered a 'new house' in
Wood Street for Independent worship. (fn. 113) It was a
small low-ceilinged hall opposite the Duke's Head,
and was probably the meeting 'not of long date'
described as 'Methodist' in 1810. (fn. 114) A small leasehold church was built on a different site in 1811, (fn. 115)
and was under Collison's oversight in 1829. (fn. 116) When
the lease expired, the landlord, Richard Jones,
accepted a nominal rent for the church, but in 1843,
after his bankruptcy, it was put up for sale with his
other property. (fn. 117) It was bought in 1844 by Ebenezer
Clarke, (fn. 118) who demolished it and in 1845 built
another church on the site. Wood Street Independent church (fn. 119) was formally constituted in 1848 with
8 members, including 5 from the Clarke family.
W. H. Hooper (minister 1851–80) was a Baptist.
During his pastorate Wood Street grew rapidly to a
peak of 292 members in 1880. In 1854 a new church,
which became known as Wood Street Union, was
built in Vallentin Road. (fn. 120) The old church survived
as no. 160, Wood Street, with a shop-front, until
1969, when it was derelict. (fn. 121) In 1860 a gallery was
added to the new church and the building was
widened a few years later. In 1861 the church, with
the help of Marsh Street, was supporting a mission
near Markhouse Lane, and another at Hale End,
perhaps in the building registered in that year for
'Protestants'. (fn. 122) Forest mission work at Whipps
Cross, begun in the open by a missioner employed
by the Barclay family in the 1860s, was later developed by Wood Street members. It was being
conducted by 1886 in Miss Barclay's school hall (fn. 123) in
Western Road, until 1891, when the hall was taken
over by St. Stephen's church. (fn. 124) The mission was
known as the Forest, Whipps Cross, or Chestnut
Walk mission. It is said to have moved to Forest
Road Hall, Hervey Park Road, but does not appear
to have been associated with Wood Street after
1893. (fn. 125) In 1880 Wood Street was affiliated to both
the Congregational Union and the Baptist Association. The Baptist affiliation ceased in 1930 when
the church became Wood Street Congregational
church. (fn. 126) In 1903 there were 203 members, but
during the pastorate of W. E. Bickerstaff (1909–16)
some members left, suspecting his interest in the
New Theology; in the First World War the issue of
pacifism further divided the congregation. There
were only 85 members in 1921, but 118 by 1939.
In 1940 the church was wrecked by bombing, but
services continued in the adjoining halls. The
church was demolished in 1952 and a smaller one
was opened in 1956. (fn. 127) In 1968 there were 36 members.
Trinity, Orford Road, originated in 1861, when
some Marsh Street members seceded, and after
holding private services built a small wooden hall
called the Ark, where student-pastors officiated. (fn. 128)
A brick church was opened in 1864. The present
church was built adjoining it in 1870, and enlarged
in 1900. The earlier church became the lecture hall.
Under J. W. Ellis (1878–90) the church grew. The
South Grove mission was started in 1881 in an
iron hall in South Grove (later Brunner) Road; a
permanent mission and schoolroom were built in
1889 fronting Arkley and Markhouse Roads. (fn. 129) In
1882 Trinity also built a large Sunday school in
West Avenue. (fn. 130) Under D. H. Cooper (1893–1903)
membership rose to 370 by 1903, when Sunday
attendances totalled 632, besides 266 at two missions.
The second mission, in Church Hill Road, had been
built by Mrs. Carter of the Limes, Shernhall
Street, some time before 1882, (fn. 131) and was taken
over by Trinity in 1898. From 1901 to 1915 Trinity
also superintended a third mission, Spruce Hill. (fn. 132)
During the pastorate of S. B. James (1906–16),
who favoured the New Theology and later became
a Socialist, many members left. In 1921 membership was 136. To ease growing financial difficulties
the church reduced its responsibilities. In 1925 the
South Grove mission was handed over to the Brethren (fn. 133) and the Church Hill Road mission to the
London City Mission. (fn. 134) In 1935 the West Avenue
Sunday school was let for storage; it was sold in
1952 and in 1970 was occupied by a pet-food firm. (fn. 135)
Membership in 1939 was 109. In 1944–5 the church
was severely damaged by bombing. It was restored
in 1959 and in 1965 was joined by the Marsh Street
congregation. The combined membership in 1968
was 93. In 1969–70 the church building was much
altered. (fn. 136)
Highams Park church, Malvern Avenue, originated as a mission of Woodford Union church. (fn. 137)
Services were started in a cottage at Hale End in
1875 by both Baptist and Congregational members
in the early months of their secession from Woodford Congregational church. A small iron hall was
built in 1881 (fn. 138) and enlarged in 1887. In 1893 a
church of 23 members was formed in fellowship
with Woodford Union church. A new church was
built in 1897 and registered the following year as
Congregational and United Free Methodist. (fn. 139) It
was also known as Hale End Free church. In 1905
it became independent of the Woodford Union
church, and in 1915 it was reregistered for Congregational worship. (fn. 140) From about 1912 the church
was known as Highams Park church. (fn. 141) In 1927 a
hall was built, where services were held after the
church was damaged by bombing during the
Second World War. (fn. 142) The church was reopened
after restoration in 1949. There were 79 members
in 1968.
Spruce Hill church, Brookscroft Road, originated
in 1893 as a mission begun independently by some
members of Trinity church. (fn. 143) A mission church was
built in 1900. (fn. 144) In 1901 Trinity accepted its oversight and about this time A. A. Mathews became
superintendent. (fn. 145) A men's Brotherhood founded by
this mission later became the Mathews Memorial
United Methodist church. (fn. 146) The mission appears to
have become independent of Trinity in 1915. (fn. 147)
Membership was always small. The church was
temporarily closed in 1942 but reopened with a lay
pastor in 1943. It closed about 1946. The building,
which was opposite Woodend Road, was sold about
1952 and demolished; in 1969 the site was occupied
by shops. (fn. 148)
Friends.
Several Quakers lived in the parish in the
late 17th century, (fn. 149) and one family in 1778, (fn. 150) that
of Lewis Weston of High Hall, who refused to pay
his rates in 1779. (fn. 151) Though such wealthy 19th-century residents as John Harman of Highams,
John Gurney Fry of Hale End House, and Joseph
Gurney Barclay of the Limes were Quakers, (fn. 152)
there was no meeting-house in the parish until
about 1870, when the Friends had a small place of
worship at Higham Hill, which was also a day-school. (fn. 153) This meeting-house was taken over by the
Baptists about 1888. (fn. 154) In 1903 a mission hall opened
in Greenleaf Road as a branch of the Bedford
Institute Association. Friends' hall, adjoining the
mission hall, was opened in 1906. (fn. 155) In 1921 the
Walthamstow Educational settlement was established at the hall, which became a centre of educational and social work among adults and young
people. (fn. 156) An extension was opened in 1964. (fn. 157) The
settlement is maintained jointly by the Friends and
the borough council.
Methodists.
The three Methodist connexions
which united in 1932 had 11 churches in Walthamstow in 5 different circuits. One church closed
in 1937. In the same year the ex-United and
ex-Primitive Methodist Walthamstow circuits
combined to form a Walthamstow (Amalgamated)
circuit, which was joined at the same time by the exWesleyan church previously in the Wanstead and
Woodford circuit. The ex-United church previously
in the Hackney circuit joined the Walthamstow
circuit in 1941. By then every church in the circuit
faced financial problems, some very serious. (fn. 158) One
church was destroyed in the Second World War and
two were so severely damaged that eventually they
closed. The remaining 7 churches were still in use
in 1970, all of them in the Walthamstow and
Chingford circuit (fn. 159) which had been formed in
1968.
In the individual accounts below ex-Wesleyan
(W), ex-Primitive (P), and ex-United (U) churches
are treated in that order. Membership figures for
1969 are taken from the circuit plan. (fn. 160)
In 1810 a Methodist meeting-house 'not of long
date' was reported, (fn. 161) but this was probably the
Independent meeting-house registered in Wood
Street in 1807. (fn. 162) In 1816 H. E. Webster registered
a building at Chapel End; no denomination was
given, but in 1819 he registered premises at Leytonstone as 'Wesleyan'. (fn. 163) In 1821 George Lawrence
registered premises in Wood Street for Wesleyan
worship. (fn. 164) Methodist services were held in Mr.
Penn's house in Union Road for a short time in
1858. In the 1860s there was a Methodist Sunday
school at Higham Hill and services were also held
at the public hall in Orford Road. (fn. 165)
Church Hill (W) originated as a church built on
Prospect Hill in 1872. (fn. 166) It was at first in the Hackney
circuit and from 1876 in the Clapton circuit. In
1898 a new church was opened on Church Hill and
Prospect Hill was taken over by the Presbyterians. (fn. 167)
In 1941, when the church transferred to the new
Chingford circuit, it was in debt, its manse, still
mortgaged, had been demolished by bombing, and
total Sunday attendances had fallen to 50. (fn. 168) In 1944
the church itself was destroyed by bombing; it was
not rebuilt, and the site was later sold for offices. (fn. 169)
Blackhorse Road (W) originated about 1881 when
a building near the Clock House was used as a
mission for the St. James Street district. An iron
church in the Clapton circuit was opened in 1883,
and a larger red-brick church in 1899. (fn. 170) The church
was damaged by bombing in 1940. (fn. 171) When it was
transferred to the Chingford circuit in 1941 it was
being used as a furniture store, while sparsely
attended services were held in the iron building. (fn. 172)
The society dispersed not long afterwards. The
church was occupied in 1970 by a basketware
firm. (fn. 173)
Handsworth Avenue, formerly Highams Park
(W), originated in 1906–7 as a society in the Wanstead
and Woodford circuit. (fn. 174) The church was opened
in 1909. In 1937 it was transferred to the new amalgamated Walthamstow circuit (fn. 175) and assumed its
present name. In 1969 there were 49 members.
Primitive Methodism was brought to Walthamstow in 1875 by R. S. Blair and other preachers
of the Eighth London (Poplar) circuit. It was
spread from 1876 by an intensive campaign led
by Thomas Jackson, a missionary from Sheffield. (fn. 176)
Four churches were established in eight years. The
Walthamstow churches were attached to the Home
Mission department until 1890, when they were
transferred to the London Mission. In 1916 they
were formed into the Walthamstow (P) circuit,
which in 1937 amalgamated with the Walthamstow
(U) circuit to form the Walthamstow (A) circuit. (fn. 177)
High Street (P) originated in 1875 when Blair
took a lease of the old Marsh Street New Meeting
Independent chapel. (fn. 178) This, once 'considered to
have the most aristocratic congregation in the
neighbourhood', became a centre for work among
the poor. (fn. 179) After conducting a nine-month mission,
Blair offered the chapel to the General Missionary
Committee, which appointed Thomas Jackson in
1876 to open a Walthamstow mission and also
temporarily to superintend the existing Bethnal
Green mission. (fn. 180) The latter closed in 1879, but the
new mission flourished. (fn. 181) By 1880 the Walthamstow
society had 61 members, and missions had been
opened in Wood Street, on Markhouse common, at
Chapel End and Higham Hill, and on the Tower
Hamlets estate. (fn. 182) In 1899 the freehold of the church
was bought from the Congregationalists and the
building was altered with financial aid from (Sir)
William Mallinson and Sir W. P. Hartley. (fn. 183) The
church was enlarged in 1926 by a first-floor extension at the back, built on stilts over the old
Congregational burial ground. (fn. 184) Although the building had been altered High Street survived in 1969 as
the oldest nonconformist place of worship still in use
in Waltham Forest. There were then 76 members.
Wadham Road (P), Chapel End, originated in
1878 as a mission of Marsh (later High) Street.
Services were held in the open and in a disused
skittle-alley until a mission hall and site were given
in 1880 by John Hitchman of Wadham Farm. (fn. 185) In
1903 it was the smallest of the Primitive Methodist
churches. A new hall was built in 1923, (fn. 186) but closed
in 1937 when its members transferred to the
Mathews Memorial church. (fn. 187) The hall was later
used by the Brethren. (fn. 188)
Higham Hill (P), Gloucester Road, originated as
a mission of Marsh Street (later High Street). A
school-chapel was opened in 1879 on a site given by
John Hitchman; there were 10 members in 1880.
A second schoolroom opened in 1904 and a third in
1908. Membership, however, remained small, and
the projected church on the corner of Gloucester Road
was never built. (fn. 189) In 1969 there were 20 members.
Hawthorne Road (P) originated in 1880, when
missionaries from Marsh Street held open-air
services on the Tower Hamlets estate. A church was
built in 1882 with financial aid from John Hitchman.
It had closed by 1917, and was bought in 1924 by
St. Luke's church as a parish hall. (fn. 190) In 1964 the
building was bought by the borough council for
demolition, (fn. 191) but it still existed in 1970 in use as a
store. It is a well-proportioned yellow-brick building
designed in a 'classical' nonconformist style, with
stone dressings and brick pilasters. (fn. 192)
A mission hall in Colchester Road was leased for a
year by the Walthamstow (P) mission in 1886. In
the following year a newly-built mission room in
Collingwood Road was leased instead and retained
until 1897, when it closed for lack of workers. (fn. 193)
Of Walthamstow's United Methodist churches
four had originally been Free Methodist, two in the
Hackney circuit and two in the Fifth London
(later Forest Gate) circuit. The earliest was founded
in 1888 and the other three by 1903, when their
total congregations almost equalled those of the
long-established Congregationalists. They were all
included in the Walthamstow circuit formed in
1913, to which one other church was later added.
In 1937 Walthamstow (U) circuit amalgamated with
the Walthamstow (P) circuit. (fn. 194)
The Lighthouse (U), Markhouse Road, originated
in 1887, when members of Pembury Grove in the
Hackney circuit opened a Walthamstow mission in
Myrtle Road. A church was formed in 1888. (fn. 195)
In 1889 Captain King of the Bullard King line of
steamers, who was already associated with Free
Methodist churches in West Ham, (fn. 196) helped to
provide the present site and gave an iron hall. The
permanent church was opened in 1893; its unusual
design, with a lighthouse angle turret and revolving
beam, was perhaps influenced by Captain King's
seafaring connexions. A Young People's institute
was opened in 1902. This was the best-attended
nonconformist church in Walthamstow in 1903,
with total Sunday congregations of 1,523; there were
361 members by 1904. (fn. 197) The members were drawn
from the working classes of the district and became
noted for their missionary and social activities. (fn. 198)
In 1941 the Lighthouse transferred from the Hackney to the Walthamstow circuit. (fn. 199) There were 82
members in 1969.
Shern Hall (U), Shernhall Street, originated in
1896, mainly through the efforts of (Sir) William
Mallinson. A temporary iron church, in the Fifth
London (Stratford), later Forest Gate, circuit, was
opened in 1897, and by 1898 there were 88
members. (fn. 200) The permanent church, designed by
G. Baines & Son, opened in 1901. It is of red brick
with stone dressings, in the Gothic style, with a
clock-tower. The land required to enlarge the original
site was given by Mallinson. By 1904 the society
had 252 members. An institute, designed by Sir
A. Gilder, was built in 1907–9 in Oliver Road,
adjoining the church. It replaced the old iron church,
which was sold. (fn. 201) In 1913 Shern Hall, with 339
members, became the head of the new Walthamstow
circuit. (fn. 202) As Mallinson intended at its foundation
the church became a lively centre of social Christian
work. He was treasurer of the church from 1896
until his death in 1936 and contributed lavishly to
its funds. Among his larger benefactions were the
Wadham Lodge sports ground in Kitchener Road,
vested in trustees in 1920, houses in Oliver Road
given to provide Shern Hall with income, and the
remodelling and furnishing of a side room as a
chapel in 1934 in memory of his wife. In 1925 he
vested in trustees £10,000 deposited in his name
in the Shern Hall (Methodist) Building Society,
founded in 1922, (fn. 203) the interest to help to maintain
churches in the circuit and support their ministers
and the capital to form a reserve fund for the building society. Shern Hall was severely damaged by
bombing in 1940 and in 1944–5, but was later
restored. In 1969 there were 170 members. In
1965 the Equity and Atlas Building Societies were
merged in the Shern Hall (Methodist) Building
Society, which in 1967 merged with the Magnet and
North West Building Society and became known
as the Magnet Building Society. (fn. 204)
Lloyd Park (U), Forest Road, originated in 1902,
when missionaries from the Lighthouse held services in the Empire cinema. (fn. 205) An iron building,
called the Lloyd Park hall, was opened in 1903,
in the Hackney circuit. In 1911 the society transferred from the Hackney to the Forest Gate circuit,
and in 1913 to the new Walthamstow circuit. (fn. 206) A
permanent church, Lloyd Park Central hall, was
completed in 1914. This incorporated shops for
letting. An institute was added in 1923. The church
was severely damaged by bombing in 1940 and
1944. Services continued in the Institute until the
church closed in 1956. The premises, which had
been burdened with debt, were sold to the Salvation Army in 1958.
Winchester Road (U), Highams Park, opened in
1903 in an iron building on a site given by John
Hitchman. (fn. 207) The permanent church was opened in
1904. It was in the London Fifth (Stratford), later
Forest Gate, circuit until 1913 when it was transferred to the new Walthamstow circuit; there were
then 133 members. (fn. 208) The society in its early years
received much help from Shern Hall members. The
church was damaged in 1940 (fn. 209) but was later repaired. After the Second World War a community
centre was built beside the church, comprising the
Sunday school (1956) and the Memorial and Hodgson halls (1960). (fn. 210) These new buildings are of greyishpink brick in a contemporary style. In 1969 the
church had 179 members.
Mathews Memorial (U), Penrhyn Crescent, originated as a men's meeting connected with the Spruce
Hill Congregational mission and led for many
years by A. A. Mathews (d. 1921). (fn. 211) In 1908 the old
iron church from Shern Hall was bought for the
meetings and erected in Brettenham Road. It
became known as the Men's Own Brotherhood
hall, Chapel End. (fn. 212) In 1924 the hall was reconstituted
as the Mathews Memorial United Methodist church,
in the Walthamstow circuit. A permanent church,
in Penrhyn Crescent, was opened in 1930, and
buildings for youth work were added in 1962. The
church had 128 members in 1969.
Presbyterian Church of England.
St. Columba's
church, Prospect Hill, originated in 1898 when
Presbyterians took over the former Wesleyan church
there. (fn. 213) A new church was built on the site in 1906. (fn. 214)
It was almost destroyed by bombing in 1941, but
services continued in improvised premises until
it was rebuilt in 1957. (fn. 215) It was closed in 1968 and
demolished by 1971. (fn. 216)
Presbyterian Church of Wales (Calvinistic Methodists).
Moreia, Church Hill, later in High Road,
Leytonstone, originated in 1901, when Welsh residents began to meet for worship under the supervision of the Stratford Welsh church. (fn. 217) From 1901
to 1927 services were held in the Modern school,
Grove Road, whose owner, J. O. Davies, was one of
the church's first deacons. The church joined the
London Welsh Methodist Presbytery in 1903.
When the school closed in 1927 a Congregational
church hall in Pembroke Road was hired, then the
Y.M.C.A. hall on Church Hill until it was sold in
1932. D. A. Davies then bought Church Hill House,
demolished it, (fn. 218) and converted the stable in 1933 into
the Moreia church. (fn. 219) In 1958 the Walthamstow congregation, with help from members of the former
Welsh church at Stratford in West Ham, (fn. 220) built a
new church in High Road, Leytonstone. (fn. 221) It is a
brick building in a contemporary style, designed by
T. & H. Llewelyn Daniel. The Walthamstow Moreia
was taken over by the Church of the Nazarene. (fn. 222)
The Salvation Army.
The Walthamstow Citadel,
Forest Road, originated in a tent mission after
which, in 1888, the Army registered for worship
premises at a school in High Street. (fn. 223) A Citadel, with
shops below, designed by W. Gilbee Scott, was
built about 1891–2 on the site of Ball's boxing
booths. (fn. 224) By 1903 its Sunday congregations totalling
932 were second only to the Lighthouse among
nonconformist places of worship. In 1958 the Army
bought the former Lloyd Park Methodist church,
which was registered as the Citadel in 1961. (fn. 225) In
1970 the old Citadel was occupied as shops and
storage.
A hall at the corner of Oatland Rise and St.
Andrew's Road, Higham Hill, was registered in
1901. (fn. 226) A Young People's hall was added about
1929. (fn. 227) The buildings were destroyed by bombing
about 1941–2 and in 1970 St. Andrew's Court flats
stood on the site. (fn. 228)
In Wood Street the Army was using the old
Independent church in 1894, and from c. 1899 to
the 1920s ran a Women's Social Work home at the
Clock House, Whipps Cross. (fn. 229) A hall which was
registered in 1908 was closed in 1922. (fn. 230)
At Highams Park a hall registered in the Avenue
in 1909 may have been associated with the work
of an Eventide home being run there about 1912. (fn. 231)
A hall was registered in Hoe Street in 1910. (fn. 232)
Spiritualists.
The National Spiritualist church,
Vestry Road, originated in 1920, when services were
started in a hall adjoining the Post Office sorting
office. (fn. 233) In 1924 the congregation took over the
present premises, the old National school, opposite
the museum. (fn. 234) Walthamstow Spiritualist Lyceum
church was meeting in the Workmen's hall, High
Street, in 1929. (fn. 235) Its present church in Coleridge
Road was opened in 1933. (fn. 236) Walthamstow First
Christian Spiritualist Church, Prospect Hill, was
registered in 1953 but ceased by 1954. (fn. 237)
Unitarians and Free Christians.
The Free Christian church, no. 60 Orford Road, originated in
1897 when a Unitarian iron church was erected
in Truro Road. (fn. 238) R. W. Sorensen, who became
honorary pastor of the church in 1916, still held
that office in 1970. He was Labour M.P. for Leyton,
1929–31, and without break from 1935 to 1964,
when he was created a life peer. (fn. 239) Under his leadership the church was notable for the courage of its
convictions. During the First World War the
members held pacifist meetings in the open, and
in 1919, during the blockade of Germany, put up
posters with the text, 'If thine enemy hunger feed
him'. In 1938 the church was sold, (fn. 240) but the congregation continued to meet in borrowed halls (fn. 241) until
bombing and evacuation scattered them in the
Second World War. In 1945 services were resumed
in a house in Orford Road. In 1970 the church had
30 members.
Undenominational Missions.
Brandon Road railway mission was founded about 1883 and an iron
hall built beside the railway in 1886. The hall was
damaged by bombing in the Second World War,
but rebuilt, and another prefabricated hall was
bought in 1949. (fn. 242) The mission was still in use in
1969 in spite of the redevelopment of this area. (fn. 243)
The London City Mission conducted a mission in
Wood Street in the old Independent church from
1886 to 1893. (fn. 244) In 1925 the L.C.M. took over the
Church Hill Road mission hall from Trinity Congregational church and rebuilt it in 1951. (fn. 245) The
mission closed in 1970. (fn. 246)
Other Churches and Missions.
Bethesda mission
hall, Wood Street, was registered in 1892 but had
ceased by 1899. (fn. 247) Seventh Day Adventists formed a
church in 1922 on the site previously occupied by
the Walthamstow and Leyton synagogue on the
corner of Boundary and Devonshire Roads. The
present red-brick church was built in 1928. (fn. 248) The
Pentecostal Hall, Wood Street, was registered in
1926; its members moved the same year to Emmanuel Hall, Erskine Road, where services of the
Pentecostal Church of the Assemblies of God were
still being held in 1970. (fn. 249) The Assembly hall,
Maynard Road, was registered by Christians in
1937, but this had ceased by 1954. (fn. 250) Bethany hall,
no. 69 Grove Road, was registered in 1940. (fn. 251)
Christian Tulipeans registered Tulip hall, no. 18
Montalt Road, in 1942; this had ceased by 1954. (fn. 252)
Christadelphians were meeting in Roberts hall,
Wadham Road, in 1958. (fn. 253) The Church of the Nazarene took over the Welsh Presbyterian church on
Church Hill in 1958; (fn. 254) it still existed in 1970.
Jehovah's Witnesses bought the Fiesta Co-operative
hall (originally a Salvation Army hall) in Hoe Street
in 1962 and registered it as Kingdom hall in 1963;
they were still worshipping there in 1970. (fn. 255) In
1970 members of the Church of God were meeting
in Higham Hill gospel hall, previously occupied by
the Brethren. (fn. 256)
JUDAISM.
Walthamstow and Leyton synagogue,
Boundary Road, was founded in 1902, on the corner
of Devonshire Road. (fn. 257) Sabbath attendances totalled
72 in 1903. (fn. 258) Between 1914 and 1922 the synagogue
took over the former Boundary Road Baptist
church. (fn. 259) The Samuel Goldman Memorial hall
adjoining was built in 1956. (fn. 260) The New Federated
synagogue, Queens Road, was established in 1923,
and rebuilt in red and yellow brick in 1928. (fn. 261)
In 1968 the Boundary Road and Queens Road
congregations amalgamated to form the Waltham
Forest Hebrew Congregation, worshipping mainly
at the Boundary Road synagogue, but still holding
high festival services at the Queens Road synagogue. (fn. 262)
Highams Park and Chingford Affiliated Synagogue,
Marlborough Road, was founded in 1932, in hired
premises. A yellow-brick single-storey synagogue
opened in 1937. Membership rose from 274 in 1949
to 400 in 1964. In 1968 the Marc and Adele Blair
hall for youth work was built on to the synagogue,
in matching style, completing a symmetrical front. (fn. 263)