The Churches of Britain and Ireland

Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland

Berwick on Wikipedia.
 

Baptist Church on Golden Square. NT 9973 5299. © Steve Bulman. Another view, © David Gallimore (2009). Link.

Church of The Holy Trinity & St. Mary, the parish church off Wallace Green. Another view. NU 0003 5320. Both © Steve Bulman. Another view, © Stan Walker. Link. Grade I listed, wherein it's dated to 1648-52. O.S. maps indicate Holy Trinity Church (Site of) just to the south of the present church, in the churchyard. In this 2018 Streetview, the old church would have stood between the churchyard wall and the church. NU 0005 5317.

Methodist Church on Walkergate. NT 9991 5314. © Steve Bulman. Another view, © David Gallimore (2009), and another © Bill Henderson (2013). By the time of a visit in 2021, the church had closed and been converted into Berwick Visitors Centre.

The access to Our Lady and St. Cuthbert (R.C.) on Ravensdowne, as seen by Streetview in 2008. The church website includes a photo. NU 0013 5292.

The former Presbyterian Church on Bank Hill. Its grade II listing has it as United Presbyterian, dating from the early 19th century. NT 9969 5297. © Steve Bulman (2021).

St. Aidan's Peace Church on Church Street is indicated by a sign to the left of the arch. Whether it was the building seen in the photo, or another through the arch (though there was nothing obvious there), or whether it survives at all, I've not been able to discover. © Steve Bulman (2021).

St. Andrew (CoS) on Wallace Green. It's labelled as Presbyterian on older maps, and dated to 1858-9 in its grade II listing. Another view. NT 9998 5316. Both © Steve Bulman (2021). Link.

Old maps (e.g. 1855) mark a United Presbyterian Church at the southern end of Chapel Lane, at NT9993 5299. The building on the site today seems to occupy the same footprint, but looks modern, so has either had a very recent facelift, or is a recent build in chapel-style. Despite not being labelled as a place of worship on a map from 1899, this source says it was in use up to 1917, and dates it to 1756. It also has an older photo, showing substantial differences in the windows to today's building. © Steve Bulman (2021).

 

 

 

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28 August 2006

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