Bethesda Chapel | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Demolished |
Type | Church |
Architectural style | Georgian |
Location | Granby Row, Dublin 1 |
Country | Ireland |
Coordinates | 53°21′15″N6°15′59″W / 53.354274°N 6.266512°W |
Demolished | Following a fire (1839) Change of use (1910) Final (2005) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Unknown (1784) Frederick Darley (1840) Batchelor & Hicks (1910) - conversion to cinema |
Developer | William Smyth (1784) |
The Bethesda Chapel, Dublin, was an Episcopal Church of Ireland, church on Granby Row and Dorset Street, Dublin. [1]
The Bethesda chapel was founded in 1784 by Dublin merchant William Smyth (Smythe), nephew of the bishop of the same name, who appointed two clergy to officiate at the Chapel. Its development was part of the evangelical movement within the Church of Ireland. [2] It did not secure episcopal recognition until 1825. [3]
The Bethesda Chapel was sometimes known as the Bethesda Mission, or the Bethesda Episcopal church. The original 1785 chapel on the site was burned down after a great storm in January 1839: a new chapel was built on the site, designed by Frederick Darley and opened in December 1840. The Bethesda Female Orphan School at 77 then 23 Upper Dorset Street was affiliated to the Chapel from 1787. 77 Dorset Street became the Presbyterian Female Orphan School associated with the Ormond Quay Presbyterian church. On the 19th of March, 1794, the Lock Penitentiary [4] was opened by Mr. Walker: it housed females leaving Lock Hospital: as a result of it being part of the site, the church was sometimes called Locks Chapel. The penitentiary or asylum was funded by benefactors and by church collections; also its inmates made a living washing and mangling clothes. [5] Arthur Guinness and his wife served on the governing committee of the Penitentiary, as did J.D. La Touche. The penitentiary was also destroyed in the 1839 fire.
The founder of Methodism, John Wesley, preached at the chapel on a number of occasions in April 1787, during his tour of Ireland. [6] The chapel would have been supported by Lady Huntingdon who supported many non-conformists in Ireland and Britain. [7]
Following the death of William Smyth, the control of the Chapel was passed in 1794 to a board of five trustees, all members of the clergy.
Chaplains to the Chapel included Rev. Edward Smyth (Brother of founder William Smyth, who was a friend of John Wesley and perceived as a Methodist though he had been expelled from his position in Ballycutter in the Derry Diocese), Rev. William Mann, Rev. John Walker from 1793 until 1804 (a dissident who left to found The Church of God), [8] gave the Chapel a more Calvinistic ethos, other ministers at the church were Rev. Henry Maturin, [9] Rev. Benjamin Williams Mathias (pastor from 1805 until 1835), John Gregg (future Bishop of Cork; chaplain from 1835 until 1839), the noted preacher Rev. William Henry Krause (from 1840 until his death in 1852; many of his sermons were published after his death), [10] Rev. John Alcock AM, (chaplain/perpetual curate from 1852 to 1866). [11] and Rev. Charles H. H. Wright, D.D. In 1878, Rev. Ambrose Wellesley Leet D.D. was appointed to the Bethesda Church, Dublin. The evangelical hymn-writer Thomas Kelly was a trustee and preached at Bethesda. [7]
Bethesda was within the Church of Ireland Parish of St. Mary's, whose main church was St Mary's Church, Mary Street, Dublin, it was a few minutes walk from The Episcopal chapel of the Rotunda (Lying-in) Hospital and even closer to the Bethesda Episcopal chapel and even closer to the St. Mary's Chapel of Ease.
Bethesda ceased to be a chapel and was secularised in 1908.
In 1910 the building was converted into a cinema, under various names: Shanleys Picture Hall, The Dorset Picture Hall and The Plaza Cinema. [12] It got a major facelift in the 1960s and in 1981 it closed as a cinema and was later reopened as the National Waxworks Museum, owned by former TD and Senator Donie Cassidy. The building was demolished in 2005, and the site was redeveloped by Cassidy as a hotel. [1] The Maldron Hotel owned by the Dalata Hotel Group operate the hotel as of 2022. [13] [14] [15] [16]
Dorset Street is an important thoroughfare on the north side of Dublin, Ireland, and was originally part of the Slighe Midh-Luchra, Dublin's ancient road to the north that begins where the original bridging point at Church Street is today. Subsequently, yet prior to the street being given its current name in the 18th century, the road was known as Drumcondra Lane and was shown on maps as such. It is divided into Dorset Street Lower and Dorset Street Upper.
The National Wax Museum Plus is a waxworks in Dublin, Ireland. First opened in 1983 as the National Wax Museum, it was later relocated and renamed.
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St Mary's Chapel of Ease, also known as "The Black Church", is a former chapel in Dublin, Ireland. Now deconsecrated, it was a church of the Church of Ireland located on St Mary's Place, Broadstone, Dublin. It is constructed from local calp limestone which takes on a dark hue when wet. This is the origin of the building's nickname. A chapel of ease is a church building, other than a parish church, that is located within the bounds of a parish for the convenience of those who cannot conveniently reach the main church. The parish's main church, now also deconsecrated, was St Mary's on Mary Street.
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Kirwan House or The Female Orphan House was a Church of Ireland-run female orphanage initially at 42 Prussia Street (1790-93), next on Dublin's North Circular Road (1793-1959) and latterly at 134 Sandford Road in Ranelagh (1959-87).
Thomas Kelly was an Irish evangelical, known as a Church of Ireland cleric to 1803, hymn writer and founder of the Kellyites.
John Walker (1769–1833) was a Church of Ireland cleric and academic of evangelical and Calvinist views. He seceded, as founder of a sect calling itself the Church of God, sometimes known as the Walkerites.
William Henry Krause (1796–1852) was a Church of Ireland priest and noted preacher.
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