We have two places of worship to struggle
with “on the present occasion,” and shall
take the freest yet most methodistical of them first.
The United Methodist Free Church that is
a rather long and imposing name is generally
called “Orchard Chapel.” The “poetry
of the thing” may suffer somewhat by this deviation;
but the building appears to smell as sweetly under
the shorter as the longer name, so that we shall not
enter into any Criticism condemnatory of the change.
This chapel is the successor, in a direct line, of
the first building ever erected in the Orchard.
Its ancestor was placed on precisely the same spot,
in 1831. Those who raised it seceded from the
Wesleyan community, in sympathy with the individuals
who retired from the “old body” at Leeds,
in 1828, and who adopted the name of “Protestant
Methodists.” For a short time the Preston
branch of these Methodists worshipped in that mystic
nursery of germinating “isms” called Vauxhall-road
Chapel; and in the year named they erected in the
Orchard a building for their own spiritual improvement.
It was a plain chapel outside, and mortally ugly within.
Amongst the preaching confraternity in the connexion
it used to be known as “the ugliest Chapel in
Great Britain and Ireland.” In 1834 a further
secession of upwards of 20,000 from the Wesleyans
took place, under the leadership of the late Dr. Warren,
of Manchester. These secessionists called themselves
the “Wesleyan Association,” and with them
the “Protestant Methodists,” including
those meeting in the Orchard Chapel, Preston, amalgamated.
They also adopted the name of their new companions.
In 1857 the “Wesleyan Association” coalesced
with another large body of persons, who seceded from
the original Wesleyans in 1849, under the leadership
of the Rev. James Everett and others, and the two
conjoined sections termed themselves the “United
Methodist Free Church.” None of the separations
recorded were occasioned by any theological difference
with the parent society, but through disagreement on
matters of “government.”
The ministers of the United Methodist
Free Church body move about somewhat after the fashion
of the Wesleyan preachers. They first go to a
place for twelve months, and if they stay longer it
has to be through “invitation” from one
of the quarterly meetings. As a rule, they stop
three or four years at one church, and then move off
to some new circuit, where old sermons come in, at
times, conveniently for new hearers. The various
churches are ruled by “leaders” men
of a deaconly frame of mind, invested with power sufficient
to enable them to rule the roost in ministerial matters,
to say who shall preach and who shall not, and to
work sundry other wonders in the high atmosphere of
church government. The “members” support
their churches, financially, in accordance with their
means. There is no fixed payment. Those
who are better off, and not stingy, give liberally;
the less opulent contribute moderately; those who can’t
give anything don’t. After an existence
of about 30 years, the old chapel in the Orchard was
pulled down, in order to make way for a larger and
a better looking building. During the work of
reconstruction Sunday services were held in the school
at the rear, which was built some time before, at
a cost of 1,700 pounds. The new chapel, which
cost 2,600 pounds, was opened on the 22nd of May,
1862. It has a rather ornamental front looks
piquant and seriously nobby. There is nothing
of the “great” or the “grand”
in any part of it. The building is diminutive,
cheerful, well-made, and inclined, in its stone work,
to be fantastical.
Internally, it is clean, ornate, and
substantial. Its gallery has stronger supports
than can be found in any other Preston chapel.
If every person sitting in it weighed just a ton it
would remain firm. There are two front entrances
to the building, and at each end red curtains are
fixed. On pushing one pair aside, the other Sunday,
we cogitated considerably as to what we should see
inside. We always associate mystery with curtains,
“caudle lectures” with curtains, shows,
and wax-work, and big women, and dwarfs with curtains;
but as we slowly, yet determinedly, undid these United
Methodist Free Church curtains, and presented our
“mould of form” before the full and absolute
interior, we beheld nothing special: there were
only a child, two devotional women, and a young man
playing a slow and death-like tune on a well-made
harmonium, present. But the “plot thickened,”
the place was soon moderately filled, and whilst in
our seat, before the service commenced, we calmly
pondered over many matters, including the difficulty
we had in reaching the building. Yes, and it
was a difficulty. We took the most direct cut,
as we thought, to the place, from the southern side passed
along the Market-place, into that narrowly-beautiful
thoroughfare called New-street, then through a yet
newer road made by the pulling down of old buildings
in Lord-street, and reminding one by its sides of the
ruins of Petra, and afterwards merged into the Orchard.
To neither the right nor the left did we swerve, but
moved on, the chapel being directly is front of us;
but in a few moments afterwards we found ourselves
surrounded by myriads of pots and a mighty cordon of
crates it was the pot fair. Thinking
that the Orchard was public ground, and seeing the
chapel so very near, we pursued the even tenour of
our way, but just as we were about sliding between
two crates, so as to pass on into the chapel, a strong
man, top-coated, muffled up, and with a small bludgeon
in his hand, moved forward and said “Can’t
go.” “Why?” said we; “Folks
isn’t allowed in this here place now,”
said he. “Well, but this is the town’s
property and we pay rates,” was our rejoinder,
and his was “Don’t matter a cuss, if you
were Lord Derby I should send you back.”
We accused him of rudeness, and threatened to go to
the police station, close by; but the fellow was obstinate;
his labours were concentred in the virtuous guardianship
of pots, he defied the police and “everybody;”
and feeling that amid all this mass of crockery we
had, for once, unfortunately, “gone to pot,”
we quietly walked round to the bottom of the ground,
for the crates and the pots swamped the whole place,
came up to the chapel door, within four yards of the
Lord-Derby-defying individual, and quietly went into
the building.
There are about 300 “members”
of the church. In the Preston circuit, which
until recently included Croston, Cuerden, Brinscall,
Chorley, and Blackpool, and which now only embraces,
Cuerden and Croston the other places being
thought sufficiently strong to look after themselves there
are about 400 “members.” What are
termed “Churches” have been established
at all the places named; Preston being the “parent”
of them. A branch of the body exists at Southport,
and it was “brought up” under the care
of the Preston party. Orchard Chapel will accommodate
between 700 and 800 persons; but, like other places
of worship, it is never full except upon special occasions;
and the average attendance may be put down at about
400. In the old chapel the father of the late
Alderman G. Smith preached for a time. The first
minister of the chapel, when rebuilt, was the Rev.
J. Guttridge an energetic, impetuous, eloquent,
earnest man. He had two spells at the place; was
at it altogether about six years; and left the last
time about a year ago. Mr. Guttridge, who is
one of the smartest ministers in the body, is now
residing at Manchester, connected regularly with no
place of worship, on account of ill health, but doing
what he can amongst the different churches. The
congregation of Orchard Chapel consists principally
of well-dressed working people a quiet,
sincere-looking class of individuals, given in no
way to devotional hysteria, and taking all things
smoothly and seriously. They are a liberal class,
too. During the past two years they have raised
amongst themselves about 800 pounds towards the chapel,
upon which there is still a debt, but which would
have been clear of all monetary encumbrances long
since if certain old scores needing liquidation had
not stood in the way. The members of the choir
sit near the pulpit, the females on one side and the
males on the other. They are young, good-looking,
and often glance at each other kindly. A female
who plays the harmonium occupies the centre.
The music is vigorous and, considering the place,
commendable. On Sundays there are two services
at the chapel morning and evening; and during
the week meetings of a religious character are held
in either the chapel or the adjoining rooms.
The present minister of the chapel
is the Rev. Richard Abercrombie. He has only
just arrived, and may in one sense be termed the “greatest”
minister in Preston, for he is at least six feet high
in his stocking feet. He is an elderly gentleman, must
be getting near 70; but he is almost as straight as
a wand, has a dignified look, wears a venerable grey
beard, and has quite a military precision in his form
and walk. And he may well have, for he has been
a soldier, Mr. Abercrombie served in the British army
upwards of twenty years. He followed Wellington,
after Waterloo, and was in Paris as a British soldier
when the famous treaty of peace was signed. His
grandfather was cousin of the celebrated Sir Ralph
Abercrombie, who defeated Napoleon’s forces
in Egypt, and his ancestors held commissions in our
army for upwards of four generations. Tired of
military life, Mr. Abercrombie eventually laid down
his arms, and for 33 years he has been a minister
in the body he is now connected with. It is worthy
of remark that, before leaving the army, he occasionally
sermonised in his uniform, and 35 years ago he preached
in his red jacket, &c., in the old Orchard Chapel.
Mr. Abercrombie is a genial, smooth-natured, quiet
man talks easily yet carefully, preaches
earnestly yet evenly; there is no froth in either his
prayers or sermons; he never gets into fits of uncontrollable
passion, never rides the high horse of personal ambition,
nor the low ass of religious vulgarity keeps
cool, behaves himself, and looks after his work midly
and well. He has two or three sons in the United
Methodist Free Church ministry, and one of them, called
after the general who defeated the Napoleonic forces,
is the only man belonging the body who has a university
M.A. after his name.
Very good schools are connected with
Orchard Chapel. The average day attendance is
140; and on Sundays the average is about 350, In the
last place, we may observe that the people belonging
Orchard Chapel are, generally, getting along comfortably
in all their departments. Formerly they had feuds,
and fights, and church meetings, at which odd pieces
of scandal were bandied about they may have
morsels of unpleasantness yet to encounter; but taking
them all in all they are moving on serenely and well.
Passing not “from pole to pole,”
but from the Orchard to Pole-street, we come to the
Baptist Chapel in that, thoroughfare a
rather dull, strongly-railed-off place, which seems
to be receding from public sight altogether.
About 45 years ago, a small parcel of Preston people,
enamoured of the Calvinistic Methodism which the Countess
of Huntingdon recognised, worshipped in a building
in Cannon-street. In 1825 they built, or had
raised for them, a chapel in Pole-street, which was
dedicated to St. Mark. At this time, probably
on account of its novelty, the creed drew many followers
the new chapel was patronised by a somewhat numerous
congregation, which kept increasing for a period.
But it gradually dwindled down, and a total collapse
finally ensued. In 1855 a number of General Baptists,
who split from their brethren worshipping in the old
Leeming-street chapel, struck a bargain with the expiring
Lady Huntingdon section for their building in Pole-street,
gave about 700 pounds for it, forthwith shifted thereto,
and continue to hold the place. There is nothing
at all calling for comment as to the exterior of the
chapel; and not much as to the interior. It will
accommodate about 900 persons. The pews are high,
awkward to sit in, and have a grim cold appearance.
The building is pretty lofty, and is well galleried.
The pulpit is at the far end, and the singers sit
on a railed platform before it. The congregation
seems both thin and poor. Very lately we were
in it, and estimated the number present at 84 rather
a small party for a chapel capable of holding 900.
The building possesses about the best
acoustical properties of any place of worship in Preston.
The late Mr. Samuel Grimshaw, of Preston, who, amongst
many other things, had a special taste for music,
used to occupy it at times, with his band, for the
purposes of “practising.” He liked
it on account of its excellent sounding qualities.
Once, after some practice in it, Mr. Grimshaw offered
a “return” said he would give
the brethren a musical lift with his band during some
anniversary services to be held in the chapel.
His promise was accepted, and when the day came there
was a complete musical flood. The orchestra,
including the singers, numbered about 50, and the
melodious din they created was something tremendous.
“Sam” had the arrangement of it. There
were tenors, baritones, bass men, trebles, alto-singers,
in the fullest feather; there were trumpeters, tromboners,
bassooners, ophicleideans, cornet-a-piston players,
and many others, all instrumentally armed to the very
teeth, and the sensation they made, fairly shook and
unnerved the more pious members of the congregation,
who protested against the chapel being turned into
a “concert-hall,” &c. The music after
all, was good, and if it were as excellent now there
would be a better attendance at the place. The
present orchestra consists of perhaps a dozen singers,
including a central gentleman who is about the best
shouter we ever heard; and they are helped out of any
difficulties they may get into by a rather awkwardly-played
harmonium.
The Rev. W. J. Stuart is the minister
of the chapel, and he receives from 70 to 80 pounds
a year for his duties. He has a gentlemanly appearance;
looks pretty well considering the nature of his salary;
is getting into the grey epoch of life; is not very
erudite; but seems well up in scriptural subjects;
is sincere, mild, primitive in his notions; has fits
of cautiousness and boldness; is precise and earnest
in expression; has an “interpretational”
tendency in his sacred utterances; is disposed to
explain mysteries; likes homilising the people; can
talk much; and can be very earnest over it all.
He has fair action, and sometimes gets up to 212 degrees
in his preaching. We won’t say that he
is in any sense a wearying preacher; but this we may
state, that if his sermons were shorter they would
not be quite so long. And from this he may take
the hint. We are told that the attendance at
the chapel is slightly increasing; but as compared
with the past it is still very slender. The admission
to either the platform or pulpit of the chapel, not
very long ago, of a wandering “Indian chief,”
and a number of Revivalists, who told strange tales
and talked wildly, has operated, we believe, against
the place annoyed and offended some, and
caused them to leave. The minister, no doubt,
admitted these men with an honest intention; but everybody
can’t stand the war-whooping of itinerant Indians,
nor the sincere ferociousness of Revivalists; and
awkward feelings were consequently generated in some
quarters by them. In the main, Mr. Stuart is
a kindly, quiet, gentlemanly person, and barring the
little interruption caused by the dubious Indian and
the untamed Revivalists, has got on with a small congregation
and a bad salary better than many parsons would have
been able to do.