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Building    From 1693  To 1913

Orange Street Chapel

Categories: Religion

Orange Street Chapel

Also known as the Leicester Fields chapel. Founded by Huguenot refugees who fled from France at the time of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. Occupied:
- 1693-1776 by the Huguenots,
- 1776-1787 by members of the Church of England,
- 1787-1888 by Congregational Dissenters.
There is an 1888 book "Lux Benigna, being the history of Orange Street Chapel..."

From : "... shortly before the outbreak of the First World War, Westminster Council served a demolition order on the church claiming it was unsafe." and then in 1925 used some of the site for their new library. "On the rest of the site the present temporary chapel was erected. On Sunday 16th June 1929, the re-opening service was conducted."

The Rev. Augustus M. Toplady, author of 'Rock of Ages' was one of its CofE ministers.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Orange Street Chapel

Commemorated ati

Orange Street Chapel - arch

The dates given are the "start" dates of the two churches which have been ere...

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Orange Street Church

{On the plaque to the right of the door:} Orange Street Congregational Churc...

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Sir Isaac Newton's house- detailed

plaque inside building at top of stairway directly facing entrance

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Other Subjects

George Searles

George Searles

Burnt at the stake in Bow (or possibly Stratford) for his Protestant beliefs.

Person, Execution, Religion

1 memorial
John Felton

John Felton

Catholic lay priest and martyr. Father of Thomas Felton. A wealthy man, he lived at Bermondsey Abbey (the mansion built on the site) and supposedly fixed a copy of the papal bull excommunicating Qu...

Person, Religion

1 memorial
John Owen, DD

John Owen, DD

Church leader.  Born Oxfordshire.  Chaplain to Cromwell.  Died Ealing.  Buried in Bunhill burial ground.

Person, Religion

1 memorial
Lydia Rogers

Lydia Rogers

Supposed witch. The wife of carpenter John Rogers, she belonged to a radical religious sect called the Anabaptists. She was accused of making a blood pact with the devil, who was said to have cut a...

Person, Paranormal, Religion

1 memorial
Mary Fletcher

Mary Fletcher

Methodist deaconess. Born Mary Bosanquet at Leytonstone Manor (or Forest House, depending on source), Leytonstone, Essex. A close friend of John Wesley, her house served as a meeting place for pray...

Person, Religion

1 memorial