The Churches of Britain and Ireland
Barton-Upon-Humber, Lincolnshire
Barton-Upon-Humber
on
Wikipedia. A photo of the demolished St. Chad's Mission Church can be seen here, on an external website. It stood at circa TA 0286 2279. The 1968 O.S. map shows a now-demolished Kingdom Hall standing close to the Wesleyan Chapels (see below) at about TA 0286 2285. Its site is shown in a Streetview from 2022 - running roughly from the blue van to the gap in the front wall. There are two Mortuary Chapels in the cemetery on Barrow Road, to the east of the town. They can (just) be glimpsed behind vegetation in a Streetview from 2025. A good photo on Geograph, where the chapels are dated to 1867. TA 0380 2185. St. Augustine Webster (R.C.) on Barrow Road and Whitecross Street, as seen by Streetview in 2009 - 1, 2. TA 0332 2173. The church website dates it to 1988, has an interior photo, and a photo of its predecessor built 1928-1938. This stood on the same site - structural problems caused it to be demolished. There was an earlier R.C. chapel on Priestgate at TA 0325 2190. Dating from 1842, a small garage stands on its site, seen by Streetview in 2022. Bardney Hall, close to the present church, on Whitecross Street, is marked on some maps from between the wars as a Convent - 2022 Streetview. TA 0329 2167. Grade II* listed - wherein it's dated to the 18th century. A general history of Catholicism in the town here. St. Mary the Virgin. Another view. TA 0333 2201. Both © Alan Craxford. Interior view, © Mike Forbester. Link. Grade I listed. St. Peter (redundant). One of the select few British churches with significant remaining Anglo-Saxon stonework, the tower and baptistery being late 10th century. TA 0347 2194. © Mark Turbott. Another view, © Alan Craxford. Three interior views - 1, 2, 3, all © Mike Forbester. Link. Grade I listed. Salvation Army Citadel on Queen's Street, formerly the Primitive Methodist Chapel dating from 1867. Its Wikipedia entry says it closed as P.M. in 1961, re-opening as S.A. in 1965. It also says the P.M. Chapel has predecessors of 1838 on Newport, and an even earlier one on King Street. TA 0315 2211. © Alan Craxford. Grade II listed. It was presumably closed in 2017 when a new S.A. Church (2022 Streetview) on Tofts Road was opened. TA 0255 2147. Link1. Link2. Trinity Methodist Chapel, on Chapel Street. Another view. TA 0306 2195. Both © Alan Craxford. Link. Grade II listed. The former U.R.C. (2009 Streetview) on Chapel Street. Originally Congregational, its grade II* listing dates it to 1806, closing in 1991. The former Wesleyan Methodist Chapels on Waterside Road. The larger of the two (perhaps this was the one built in 1868) appears to be in commercial use. Another view. Old maps show the chapel as Mission Hall rather than Chapel, suggesting that it might have been subsidiary to the nearby Trinity Methodist Chapel (see above). TA 029 229. All © Martin Richter (2013).
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01 August 2025
© Steve Bulman