Castle Gate Congregational Centre

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Castle Gate Congregational Centre
Castle Gate Congregational Centre
DenominationFormerly Congregational now Independent

Castle Gate Congregational Centre is in Nottingham. It is a Grade II listed building.[1]

Daughter churches

The congregation formed in the 1650s. The first meeting house on Castle Gate was established in 1689 under the Act of Toleration.[2]

The present building was erected in 1863 to designs by the architect Richard Charles Sutton,[3] and opened for worship in 1864. The congregation suffered from some embarrassment in 1866 when Henry Walter Wood, local architect and surveyor petitioned for divorce from his wife on the grounds of her adultery with George Eaton Stanger, surgeon and a deacon of the Chapel. The trial in 1867 lasted three days and was widely reported in the National press. Wood was awarded £3,000 from Stanger in damages.[4]

In 1972 the congregation joined the United Reformed Church and three years later merged with St. Andrew's United Reformed Church, Goldsmiths Street. In 1980 the congregational federation purchased the buildings back again.

In 2010, the El Shaddai International Christian Centre took out a 5-year lease on the building.[5]

The church was successful and spawned other churches, including:[6]

Ministers

Organ

References

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