Duke Street Church, Richmond Explained

Duke Street Church
Denomination:Conservative Evangelicalism
Founded Date:1870
Founder:Frederick Brotherton Meyer
Years Built:1962
Minister:Simon Pethick (Acting Senior Minister)[1]
Location:Duke Street, Richmond TW9 1DH
Country:England, United Kingdom
Website:www.dukestreetchurch.com

Duke Street Church is a conservative evangelical[2] church in Duke Street, Richmond, South West London, with a historical Baptist tradition. It is affiliated with the Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches (FIEC),[3] the Evangelical Alliance and the Affinity and South East Gospel Partnership.[4]

History

Efforts from 1868 by a student pastor Frederick Brotherton Meyer started to gain traction*, and in 1869 he wrote to the Charles Spurgeon, then President of the London Baptist Association asking for his help to establish something more permanent.[5]

It initially met with forty-seven members in 1870 as Parkshot Church in an iron tabernacle, located off Park Lane. Due to a desire to be nearer the town centre, in 1878 the original church and land were sold to a group who went on to found Christ Church, Richmond. This location now corresponds to The Gateways building on Park Lane.[6]

In 1881 the first Duke Street building was completed, octagonal-shaped and built in stone in the early French Gothic style. It was listed in its trust deeds as Duke Street Baptist Chapel, a 'particular' or Calvinistic chapel. Despite struggling initially, by 1946 it had become too small to accommodate its congregation, and Sunday evening services were being transferred to Richmond Theatre.[7]

In 1950 the adjoining Victorian dance hall (Princes Hall) was bought, and in 1962 Sir Cyril Black opened the current building as Duke Street Baptist Church with a large auditorium able to seat over 600. In the early 2000s it was again renamed to the current Duke Street Church. Subsequent works have included a cafe area, meeting rooms and offices in 2010 [8] followed by a major renovation of the auditorium completed in 2022.[9]

Other early Baptist groups in Richmond

Despite the assertion in The Duke Street Story 1870-1970 by Harry Young that "The first attempt to found a Baptist cause in Richmond was made in 1862", there is clear evidence around 1715-1730 of a Baptist church existing in Richmond, under Thomas Flood.[10] [11] In addition, by the 1850s a Strict Baptist group had formed, Rehoboth Chapel on Kew Foot Road.[12]

A disagreement in 1861 within Rehoboth Chapel led to a split, and thirteen members left to start Salem Baptist Chapel in Richmond. They met initially in rooms on Church Walk, then in 1863-1887 met in the building now known as the Dome Building [13] on the Quadrant, but known at the time as the Mechanics Institute (from 1843), the Public Baths or the Baths (1855), and the Royal Assembly Rooms (1868). In his history of this building, A. Barkas, Richmond Borough Librarian[14] [15] noted that it was being used as a Baptist Chapel after being the Royal Assembly Rooms. In 1888 [16] Salem Baptist Chapel relocated to Parkshot Road, then finally moved to Kew in 1973, becoming Kew Baptist Church before closing in 2021.

Senior Ministers

Previous Senior Ministers

[17] [18] [19]

!From!To!Name!From!To!Name
18681869Fredrick B Meyer, as student pastor19261939Fred W. Walter
18701872Robert J Colman (resigned)19401953Alan Redpath
18731875John Whittaker (resigned)19531959Stephen F. Olford
18751884John Hunt Cooke19591978John L. Bird (died unexpectedly in a medical operation on 7 May 1978).[20]
18851890James J. Ellis (resigned)19781986 ** REV. DR. WILLIAM (BILL) FREEL
18911891interim – James Tillett 19821986interim – George Beasely-Murray
18921898Ernest Matthews (resigned)19861999Robert G.M. Amess[21]
18991921Horace Warde20002012Liam Goligher[22]
19221926E. B. Greening 2013 2023John L. Samuel[23]

Sir Eric Richardson (died 2006) was a long-time member and deacon at Duke Street, being appointed CBE in 1962 and knighted for his work in higher education in 1968. He was an exponent of polytechnic education who headed three institutions that have developed into universities – Salford, City and Westminster, and was a leader of 20th-century evangelical Christianity.[24] [25]

Notes

External links

51.4617°N -0.3039°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Duke Street Church. Meet the team. 20 May 2024.
  2. Web site: Duke Street is a reformed evangelical church in West London (2013) . https://web.archive.org/web/20120722130054/http://www.dukestreetchurch.co.uk/welcome.htm . 22 July 2012 .
  3. Web site: Duke Street Church - Trustees Report 2020 .
  4. Web site: FIEC. Stevens, John. 2 May 2019. 21 May 2024. Welcome to the Family – Duke Street Church, Richmond .
  5. Web site: MERE DENOMINATIONALISM - F. B. Meyer and Baptist Life .
  6. Web site: Thames Valley Archeological Services - The Old School, Park Lane, Richmond . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303210546/http://tvas.co.uk/reports/pdf/PLR12-80dsreport.pdf . 3 March 2016 .
  7. Web site: Joint talk with Duke Street Church by Dr Matthew Bingham to mark the church's 150th anniversary . Richmond Local History Society. 9 November 2020. 24 September 2023.
  8. Book: Cloake, John . Richmond Past . Historical Publications . 1991 . 0-948667-14-1 . 94 . John Cloake.
  9. Web site: Buxton Duke Street Church - Completed . 3 August 2022 .
  10. Web site: The story of Congregationalism in Surrey (1908) . 1908 .
  11. Web site: The Baptist Board Minutes - July 29, 1728 .
  12. Web site: Key Baptist Church History - Salem and Rehoboth Baptist Chapels 1861-1888 .
  13. Web site: Dome Building, Richmond TW9 .
  14. Web site: The Home counties magazine 1908, Volume X (10) - A CHAPTER IN THE HISTORY OF OUR LOCAL INSTITUTIONS, RICHMOND, SURREY, by Albert A. Barkas, Borough Librarian . 1899 .
  15. Web site: MALDEN COLLECTION - "A Chapter in the history of our local institutions" by A A Barkas, containing accounts of The Mechanics Institution, The Old Baths and The Royal Assembly Rooms pub 1907 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161115050448/http://surreyarchaeology.org.uk/sites/default/files/SAS%20Archives%20-%20Boxes%20Indexed%20File%201%20pages%201-114.pdf. dead. 15 November 2016.
  16. Web site: Salem Baptist Chapel at Parkshot - 1888 onwards .
  17. Web site: Ebenezer F. Robbins: Kew's Centenarian Ironmonger, & Secretary of Duke Street Church .
  18. Web site: DUKE STREET BAPTIST CHURCH, RICHMOND: RECORDS 1870-1970 .
  19. Book: Young, Harry . The Duke Street Story, 1870-1970 . Lakeland . 1970 . 9780551001886.
  20. Web site: Cliff Derwent Convention 1978 - Death of Rev John L Bird by operation . June 1978 .
  21. Web site: Frederick G. Smith, The Bethesda Story Re-told: A History of Bethesda Baptist .
  22. Web site: Liam Goligher - Duke Street 2000 start and publication list .
  23. Web site: John Samuel - Elder & Senior Minister .
  24. Web site: Obituary (Guardian) – Sir Eric Richardson, Championing the cause of polytechnic education . .
  25. News: Baldock, Stephen . Obituary, Sir Eric Richardson . . 11 August 2002. 21 May 2024.
  26. Web site: Chapter 10 - Beckenham: 'Retirement' (1980-1986) .