Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Capel Heol Dŵr was a Calvinistic Methodist chapel in the town of Carmarthen, Carmarthenshire, Wales. The building dates from 1831 and is located at Water St, Carmarthen. It was designated as a Grade II listed building on 19 May 1981.
Presbyterian Church of Wales; Calvinistic Methodist confession of faith, 1823, Creeds of Christendom website; Two Calvinistic Methodist Chapels 1743–1811: the records of two key London chapels (the London tabernacle and Spa Fields chapel). Originally published by the London Record Society, included here on British History Online.
Tabernacle Chapel is a Calvinistic Methodist chapel in the town of Llandovery, Carmarthenshire, Wales. The present building dates from 1836 and is located in Queen Street, Llandovery. It was designated as a Grade II* listed building on 26 February 1981. Tabernacle Calvinistic Methodist Chapel was built in 1836, refurbished in 1869 and renovated ...
The building was commissioned as a Calvinistic Methodist Chapel, [1] and erected on a mound (Welsh: twyn) to the southeast of Caerphilly Castle. [2] It was built in rubble masonry and completed in 1791. [3] The chapel was rebuilt in the Gothic Revival style at a cost of £800 in around 1880. [4]
The village is linked with Daniel Rowland, born here in 1713, and the Welsh Methodist revival in the 18th century. Rowland served as curate at Llangeitho and Nantcwnlle . The village chapel, built in 1760, became famous throughout Wales as a Calvinistic Methodist centre.
The Tabernacle Calvinistic Methodist Chapel and the Bethesda Baptist Chapel followed in 1840 and 1882 respectively. [7] The prosperity at the turn of the 20th century can be seen in the ornate facade of the Bethania Calvinistic Methodist Chapel (1906–7) on Brynlloi Road and in the large Gothic-tinged Brynseion Independent Chapel (1909–10 ...
Beulah Calvinistic Methodist Chapel, also known locally as "The Round Chapel" and in Welsh as "Capel y Groes", is a Grade II*-listed building in Margam, Port Talbot, Wales. It originally built in the mid-nineteenth century and had to be dismantled and moved in 1974 to make way for the new M4 motorway .
The current chapel was built in 1871 and altered in 1887. [32] The chapel closed in early 2010 but services are still held in the vestry . Bethany Calvinistic Methodist Chapel (English-speaking Presbyterian Church of Wales) was also built in 1871 as one of the 'Inglis Côs' ('English cause') chapels that were advocated by Lewis Edwards and ...