Building    From 1845  To 1852

Jireh Chapel, Hanbury Street

Categories: Religion

Building

A group of Baptists moved into the building 1845/1846 and occupied it, with its new name, but by 1852 they had disbanded.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Jireh Chapel, Hanbury Street

Commemorated ati

Hanbury Hall - white plaque - removed

Christ Church Hall Built in 1719 as a French Hugeonot {sic} church it stood b...

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Other Subjects

Commissioner Silvia Cox

Commissioner Silvia Cox

Commissioner  in the Salvation Army in 2015.

Person, Religion

1 memorial
Stratford Martyrs

Stratford Martyrs

The church website has done a very thorough job on the history not just of the memorial but the church and the area so we quote them here on the background to the martyrs: "In 1553 Queen Mary Tudor...

Group, Execution, Religion

1 memorial
Rev. Thomas Beasley

Rev. Thomas Beasley

From Uxbridge Gallimaufry: "Thomas Beasley grew up in Daventry, and later trained for the Congregational ministry. His first pastorate was at Walsall, where he met and married his wife, Phoebe. In ...

Person, Religion

1 memorial
Rev. T. D. C. Morse

Rev. T. D. C. Morse

Vicar at Christ Church, Newgate Street in 1888. Wikisource gives: Thomas Daniel Cox Morse. Church of England clergyman and educationist; Rector of Drayton, Nuneaton; Vicar of Christ Church in Lond...

Person, Religion

0 memorials
Dr Joseph Herman Hertz

Dr Joseph Herman Hertz

Chief Rabbi of the British Empire.  Born Slovakia, then part of Hungary.  When he was aged 11 the family moved to New York.  Worked for a time as a rabbi in Johannesburg.  1911 returned to New York...

Person, Religion, Hungary, South Africa, USA

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Citroën

Citroën

French motor company founded by André Citroën. The company commenced manufacture in Britain at the Slough Trading Estate in 1926 and continued building cars until 1965 when the operation became ded...

Group, Transport, France

1 memorial
World War 1

World War 1

We'd always assumed that this war was known as the Great War until WW2 came along at which point it was renamed as World War One or the First World War. But the term was first used in print in 1920...

Event, Armed Forces, Tragedy

402 memorials
Savoy Theatre

Savoy Theatre

The Savoy Theatre opened in 1881. Despite this date it is a delightful example of Art Deco, explained on the Savoy Theatre website as follows: The theatre closed on 3 June 1929 to be internally com...

Building, Theatre

3 memorials
Little Dorrit

Little Dorrit

A novel by Charles Dickens first published in serial form 1855 and 1857.  The title character is the daughter of a man imprisioned in Marshalsea prison for debt.

Fiction, Literature

6 memorials
Spike Milligan

Spike Milligan

Goon. Born as Terence Alan Milligan near Bombay, India, his father being an Irish soldier who met his wife, Florence Winifred Kettleband, in India. Both parents were amateur, would-be professional,...

Person, Cinema, Humour, TV & Radio, India

7 memorials