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A tin tabernacle, also known as an iron church, [1] is a type of prefabricated ecclesiastical building made from corrugated galvanised iron. They were developed in the mid-19th century, initially in the United Kingdom.
Mansfield Museum. The Mansfield Museum is a local authority museum in Nottinghamshire run by Mansfield District Council. Originally called the "Tin Tabernacle", the Museum was given to the town of Mansfield by the wealthy collector and natural historian, William Edward Baily in 1903.
Tonbridge and Malling is situated in the west of Kent. The Golden Green Mission Church, a 100-year-old tin tabernacle, is still in religious use.. Tonbridge and Malling borough covers 50,440 acres (20,410 ha) of the Kentish Weald in the west of Kent, England's southeasternmost county. [5]
St. Peter's Church in Laragh, County Monaghan, Ireland, is a tin tabernacle constructed in 1890 from corrugated iron and timber. [1] History
This tin tabernacle was erected in the late 19th century as a chapel of ease in the parish of St George's Church, Arreton. It was later extended in brick, but closed in the late 20th century and has been incorporated into the premises of a business which sells fruit and vegetables. [7] [13] [19] Wesleyan Methodist Church (More images) Blackwater
A product of the Oxford Movement, St Edward's was originally constructed in 1915, as a tin tabernacle, one of several in Cardiff at the time. The original structure unconventionally faced the west (rather than the east as is usual in churches). It opened in March 1915.
Warren Row was formed by a few group of cottages on the boundaries of three estates - Hall Place, Rosehill and Park Place. [2] St Paul's Mission, the tin tabernacle church, was built in 1894 and was purchased for just over £100. [3]
A tin tabernacle dedicated to St Columba (click for image) was erected in Catisfield in 1891 and opened in July 1892, but by the 1960s it was too small for the growing population west of Fareham. A new church was designed in 1961, the first stone was laid in May 1962 and the new St Columba's Church opened on a different site in February 1963.