Christian Pioneers
Christianity in Steyning was founded by St. Cuthman, who was born in 681 at Chidham, near Bosham, an important Anglo-Saxon missionary centre. When his father died, he took care of his invalid mother, making a special litter for her in the form of an elongated padded wheelbarrow, which he used to haul behind him by means of a rope over his shoulders.He lived with her as a hermit, but took to the roads to seek for alms.
The story goes that the rope broke in Steyning, which he took to be divine inspiration that it was a good place to stop. After settling there, he later built the original simple wooden church that was replaced in the 13th century with the current St. Andrews Church. The field between this and the Methodist Church is still called St. Cuthman’s Field – although it is now a car park. He died in Steyning and was buried there.
However, King Edward the Confessor later handed over responsibility for the Steyning church to the monks of Fécamp in Normandy. They enlarged the church, but took the saint’s remains back to their French abbey to be enshrined. (His statue, contemplating the current St Andrew’s Church, was completed in the year 2000 by Penelope Reeve as part of the Millenium Celebrations.)
At the time of the Domesday Book, Steyning was recorded as an Anglo-Saxon borough with 123 houses.
Some centuries later Steyning was for a while the home of William Penn, one of America’s founding fathers who later gave his name to Pennsylvania. There was an active Quaker group in the town, and William Penn is known to have preached at what is now called Penns Cottage at the western edge of the town.
The First Methodists
The first records that we have of Methodists in Steyning begin in the 1840’s. Here we are indebted to a booklet “A History of Steyning Methodist Church” written by the late John Norwood and published by the Church Council in 1979. The following is an extract from it:
Tantalizingly little is known about the origins of Methodism in Steyning, and we have to look for clues in a number of places for evidence as to a commencing date. A Lewes and Brighton Wesleyan Circuit, consisting of societies as far apart as Eastbourne, Crowborough and Arundel, was founded in 1807 and during the early years of the century it underwent a good deal of rearrangement. By 1841 the Circuit comprised (in order of membership size) Brighton, Worthing, Shoreham, Horsham, Hurst, Rottingdean, Lancing, Goring, Mannings Heath and Dorking.
If we begin our search by checking the official records, we find that the Brighton Circuit Book ending in August 1841 contains no mention of Steyning, while the book covering the subsequent period to December 1843 is missing; but the next book, opening with details of the Quarterly Meeting of 28 March 1844 records a membership of 33 at Steyning with collections for the quarter of £3. The existence of a thriving society at least sixteen months earlier can, however, be inferred from a paragraph in the Brighton Herald of 18 November 1843:
The anniversary of the Steyning Branch Wesleyan Missionary Society was held in the Wesleyan Chapel on the 6th inst. The chair was taken by T.Compton, Esq., of Sompting, and the meeting was addressed by the Revds. John Crofts, of Brighton; – Rowe, of Worthing; and Cargin of Shoreham (independent); and other gentlemen. The meeting was numerously attended, and the speeches were peculiarly interesting. A considerable interest has been taken by this infant society during the past year in the mission cause, and, including the collection at the meeting, have it has [sic] upwards of £9 to the Parent Society. The children in the Sabbath and day schools sent a quantity of thimbles for the girls on the mission stations.
Brighton Herald of 18 November 1843
This is believed to be the earliest published reference to the church. The date of the church’s establishment was thus some time within the 14 months September 1841 – October 1842. Fortunately, two documents of quite different character exist which enable us to narrow the gap further. The first is a conveyance dated 13 October 1843, legalising the sale of a chapel in Jarvis Lane to a group of Methodist trustees, which contains the sentence ‘…which said Chapel and premises are now and have for some time past been in the occupation of the said parties hereto of the third part or some of them…’ (i.e., the local Methodists). This indicates that the latter had been meeting in a consecrated building for a good while, probably two years, as the conveyance refers to a document of June 1841 surrendering the lease.
Jarvis Lane Chapel
The picture at right shows the ground plan of the original chapel in Jarvis Lane. The chapel, with the land on either side, passed into the hands of a Brighton butcher, John Scrase, who then sold it to the Methodist Trustees for £350. The chapel remained in use until 27 May 1878, when it was sold at auction for £235.
[Never ones for turning a quick profit, us Methodists! – Ed]
Photo of the old Jarvis Lane chapel [The photo shows the old chapel as it is now – converted into two houses. On the ground plan the chapel is shown shaded, with two areas of empty land each side, but these were evidently built on later. The facade of the building has a round recess (now empty) at the top of the end gable. There is a reference in the financial records to the cost of repairing the clock, and this recess may have originally held that clock.- Ed]
High Street Chapel
However, during the preceeding years the congregation had been hard at work organising a new building just around the corner, whose foundation stone had been laid on 12 July 1877. The new building, including some rework such as fixing roof leaks [a continuing problem!], cost a total of £1220 10s. [Photo at right]
The photo shows the interior of the new chapel as it would have been soon after its construction. The door on the left of the central pulpit opens into the minister’s vestry, while the door on the right opens into a short passageway to the schoolroom at the back. There are two small rooms on the right of this passageway, with a cellar below the central chancel accessed by two trapdoors on the left of the passage. This cellar originally housed the coke-fired central heating system, later replaced by a gas-fired boiler, but has been unused since 1957, when electric heating was installed (now replaced by a blown hot air system).
A new hand-pumped organ was installed at Steyning in 1912, passed on from the Steyne Gardens church in Worthing. The Schoolroom was extended in 1925 by adding three small rooms behind it, one of them a kitchen. The foundation stones were laid on 4th February 1925, but are no longer visible. Major renovations were undertaken in 1968, where the pulpit was moved to the left and the chancel area levelled off. The old hand-pumped organ was removed and replaced with an electronic organ from Whitefield’s Tabernacle in London. The chapel at the start of these renovations is shown in the photo at right.
The schoolroom was extended with an extra meeting room in 1978, and the rooms which had been added in 1925 were re-modelled to provide a much larger kitchen. The schoolroom had a false ceiling added which hides the vaulted wooden roof, but which does make it easier to heat and much more comfortable. At the same time, the old second-hand organ was replaced by a new modern electronic one.
The Future
So, where do we go from here? We are very grateful for our heritage and our building, and we want to keep its character and its simplicity. Yet the continuing cost of upkeep is a headache, and we are aware too that although our Faith is unchanging, our forms of worship aren’t. In 2001 we replaced our pews with chairs, in order to allow room for more flexible forms of worship and to be able to use the chapel itself for other purposes.
As part of our refurbishment we have therefore now replaced our pews with chairs, in order to allow room for more flexible forms of worship and to be able to use the chapel itself for other purposes.
We put a large window in the entrance of the church to allow more light to come in, and to make the church more welcoming and open to the community.
In 2010 the Hall was refurbished by the Probation Service, so we are now able to offer a more comfortable environment to those who use our buildings.
The history of the chapel is one of continuous change to meet changing situations. We trust and pray that its future will be, too.