Theme Explorer

Page 5 of 15 270 Records Found

Ebenezer Methodist Church, Newcastle-under-Lyme

The Ebenezer Methodist Church on Merrial Street, Newcastle-under-Lyme, with the Manse to the left. The church was built in 1858 to replace an earlier chapel. By the early 1970s with the congregation ...

Eccleshall Boy Scouts

Eccleshall Boy Scouts band pictured outside their headquarters, a former chapel on Newport Road, now a private residence, in about 1915-1920.

Eccleshall Methodist Chapel

This chapel stands on Stone Road, Eccleshall. The foundation stone was laid on 21 September 1871 by Mrs Broadhurst, wife of a local tanner, and was constructed by local builder Charles Barratt. The total ...

Edward Johns, Armitage Pottery

Photograph of Edward Johns (c.1822-1893), owner of the Armitage Pottery 1867-1893. A small pottery was in existence in Armitage by 1817 and by 1851 this had begun to produce sanitary ware. In 1867, ...

Elim Pentecostal Church, Glascote, Tamworth

Elim Pentecostal Church, main road, Glascote, which was originally a Primitive methodist church.

Fancy Dress, Congregational Sunday School, Stone

Amongst those pictured are: Back row: Monica Bowdidge (far left), Margaret Slinn is dressed as a chimney sweep (2nd left); ? Pearson wearing glasses and a check shawl; Glenys Harvey (3rd from right); ...

Fegg Hayes Methodist Church, Stoke-on-Trent

Fegg Hayes Methodist Church stood on the corner of Fegg Hayes Road (formerly North Parade) and Oxford Road. it was opened in 1874 and originally known as the North Parade Wesleyan Chapel. The church ...

Fegg Hayes Primitive Methodist Chapel, Stoke-on-Trent

Fegg Hayes Primitive Methodist Chapel stood at the corner of East Terrace and Fegg Hayes Road. Also known as the Lear Memorial Chapel, the building dates from 1882 although later extended. The red brick ...

Fegg Hayes Road and Chatterley Whitfield Colliery, Stoke-on-Trent

Looking east along Fegg Hayes Road towards Chatterley Whitfield Colliery. Oxford Road is at the end. Fegg Hayes Road was originally called North Parade. On the right edge is the entrance to the Lear ...

Fenton Methodist Chapel, Fenpark Road, Fenton

The camera is looking westwards along Fen[park Road towards Fenton. The photograph was taken from just outside the United Methodist Chapel at the corner of Fenton Park. This chapel was built in 1900, ...

First Christian Service at Perton

The first Christian service held at Perton, Christmas Eve 1976 at the home of Mr and Mrs Holden, Biggin Close, Perton. Soon after construction of housing on the former Perton Airfield site started ...

First Meeting House, Mow Cop

A postcard view of the first building used as a meeting place for the Primitive Methodists at Mow Cop. The Primitive Methodists held their first open-air prayer meeting at Mow Cop in 1807.

Fisher Street and Outclough Road, Brindley Ford, Stoke-on-Trent

The junction of Fisher Street (left) with the main Outclough Road (right) in Brindley Ford. The camera is looking north. Going off to the right is Finch Street (formerly Chapel Street). There are typical ...

Friends' Meeting House, Overton Bank, Leek

The Meeting House was built in 1694 for the Quakers of Leek and the surrounding area. Between 1896 and 1936 the building became the William Morris Labour Church. The author of the drawing, W.R. Kean, ...

Friends Meeting House, Uttoxeter

The Society of Friends was given a house on this site in Carter Street in 1700. The meeting house was rebuilt around 1770 and remained largely unchanged until it was refurbished in 1961-2.

Gaydon Close, Perton

Church houses at numbers 5 and 7 Gaydon Close, Perton, first occupied on 1 August 1978. Perton Airfield was constructed in 1940 as a Royal Air Force Relief Landing Ground. Later during the Second World ...

Girl Guides and Brownies, Stone

Congregational Church (St. John's) Girl Guides and Brownies meeting at the Congregational Church Hall, which stood at the rear of what is now St. John's Methodist Reformed Church on Granville Terrace. ...

Girl Guides on Sunny Bank, Alstonefield

Alstonefield Girl Guides had their headquarters at the Reading Room. prior to that they were based at the Old Cheese Factory in Hope Dale. Back row: Eileen Bonsall, Margaret Adams, Marjorie Bonsall, ...