Maybole Baptist Church | |
---|---|
55°21′13″N4°41′06″W / 55.35358°N 4.68497°W | |
Location | Maybole, Ayrshire |
Country | Scotland |
Denomination | Baptist Union of Scotland |
History | |
Status | Parish church |
Founded | 20th century |
Consecrated | 30 October 1914 |
Architecture | |
Functional status | In use |
Architect(s) | Hugh Campbell |
Architectural type | Traditional gable with end projection porch |
Specifications | |
Capacity | 320 seats + 120 standing |
Administration | |
Presbytery | Baptist Union of Scotland |
Maybole Baptist Church is a Baptist church in Maybole, South Ayrshire, Scotland. It arose from a Maybole prayer group started in 1898 that was admitted to the Baptist Union of Scotland in 1901. [1] The church building opened in 1914. [2] It has operated for over a hundred years, one of 164 active Baptist churches in Scotland in the early twenty-first century serving 14,000 members. [3] [4] [5]
The church building features red sandstone, a traditional gable with projected front porch and arched doorway. Designed by architect Hugh Campbell (1863-1926) [6] of Glasgow it is a recognized noteworthy building in Maybole and the wider Carrick area of southern Scotland. [7] [8] The church grounds feature minimal space due to a small plot size. [9] Maybole town, within which the church is located, is also noted for distinctive architecture. [10] [11] [12]
Maybole Baptist Church is located at 14 Carrick Street, Maybole, Scotland, KA19 7DN. Carrick Street lies immediately north of the A77 road which passes through Maybole. The church's National Grid Reference (NGR) is NS 29880 09900, [3] Canmore ID is 203792 and Site ID is NS20NE 60. [13] The church is marked on Google maps [14] and UK streetmap. [15] [16]
It is estimated new Christian congregations in Scotland increased from a handful mid-nineteenth century to 184 assemblies in southern Scotland by 1900. [17] Maybole was part of this trend. The setting for a Maybole Baptist Church further benefited from the new Baptist Union for Scotland, formed in 1869, [18] [19] the "Maybole Revival," an evangelist movement during the 1870s, which also published "The Maybole Evangelist" magazine, [20] a new Maybole Presbyterian Church opened in 1880, [21] a Baptist Theological College established in Glasgow in the 1890s, [22] and flourishing missionary work in the expanding British Empire. [23]
Nineteenth century industrialization also impacted Maybole, with the town seeing much new manufacturing of agricultural implements and shoes. [24] This was significant because Baptist churches in Scotland attracted commercially active and middle class congregations. [25] [26] Some Maybole worshippers were also less open to the strict doctrine of older Maybole churches, for example the Church of Scotland stress on avoiding work on Sundays. [27] [28]
Scotland's Baptist Union admitted Maybole Baptist Church in 1901, despite the lack of a church building. The Maybole Baptist Church established a building fund in 1903. [29] Maybole Baptist Church arose from a prayer group of 17 parishioners, formed in the 1890s, a common start for churches at the time. [30] Before the church opened the Maybole prayer group used private homes and the disused Maybole Methodist Church. [31] Early leaders included Thomas Ramsay (1857-1934).
Maybole Baptist Church opened on 30 October 1914, two months after the Great War started, eleven years after construction started. It was described as "The Youngest Church in Maybole" with seating for 320 and standing room for 120. [32] Construction cost £1,720, on a self-funding basis by the congregation. As comparison, the nearby Maybole Library was built in the same decade for £2,500, based on one donation from American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. [33] [34] Even though the church's first pastor, Thomas Ramsay, and other elders made personal donations Maybole Baptist Church carried debt for some time. The retiring first pastor made a further gift of a manse in 1919, citing the Great War as motivation. [35]
During and after the Great War, members of Maybole Baptist Church supported a "daughter church" in Girvan, 19 km to the south. This emerged from a Girvan prayer group, established in 1907. [36] [37] The Girvan Baptist Church opened in 1920, closed in 2001 and was destroyed by fire in 2013. [38]
The inaugural pastor of Maybole Baptist Church, Thomas Ramsay, was elected President of the Baptist Union of Scotland in 1921. [39]
Maybole Baptist Church installed electricity within the church building in 1935, which is marked by a memorial plaque. [40] The registered congregation numbered 105 in the 1930s, a high point, after which congregations declined, in line with Scotland-wide declines in Baptist congregations. [41]
Up to the 1950s, Maybole Baptist Church admitted 404 people to the Baptist Union, and up to the 1960s, it baptized 288 people. [42] Although congregations declined from the 1930s peak some modest increase in attendance at Baptist churches within Scotland happened in the late 20th century. [43]
Maybole Baptist Church remains active in the early twenty-first century. Activities include regular Christian services and community use of the church building, [44] registered charity status with the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (number SC021239), [45] participating in Remembrance Sunday services held each 11 November, and participating in the annual gala of the Maybole Council of Churches. [46] [47]
South Ayrshire is one of thirty-two council areas of Scotland, covering the southern part of Ayrshire. It borders onto Dumfries and Galloway, East Ayrshire and North Ayrshire. South Ayrshire had an estimated population in 2021 of 112,450, making it the 19th–largest subdivision in Scotland by population. With an area of 472 sq mi, South Ayrshire ranks as the 15th largest subdivision in Scotland.
Ayr is a town situated on the southwest coast of Scotland. A former royal burgh, today it is the administrative centre of the South Ayrshire Council, and the historic county town of Ayrshire. With a population of 46,982, Ayr is the 15th largest settlement in Scotland and second largest town in Ayrshire by population. The town is contiguous with the smaller town of Prestwick to the north. Ayr submitted unsuccessful bids for city status in 2000 and 2002, and as part of the wider South Ayrshire area in 2022.
Girvan is a burgh and harbour town in Carrick, South Ayrshire, Scotland. Girvan is situated on the east coast of the Firth of Clyde, with a population of about 6,450. It lies 21 miles (34 km) south of Ayr, and 29 miles (47 km) north of Stranraer, the main ferry port from Scotland to Northern Ireland.
Kyle and Carrick was one of nineteen local government districts in the Strathclyde region of Scotland from 1975 to 1996.
Maybole is a town and former burgh of barony and police burgh in South Ayrshire, Scotland. It had an estimated population of 4,580 in 2022. It is situated 9 miles (14 km) south of Ayr and 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Glasgow by the Glasgow and South Western Railway. The town is bypassed by the A77.
Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock is a county constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It was created for the 2005 general election from parts of the old Ayr and Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley constituencies. It has been represented since 2024 by Elaine Stewart of Scottish Labour.
Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley is a county constituency of the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood, covering parts of the council areas of South Ayrshire and East Ayrshire. It elects one Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) by the plurality method of election. Also, it is one of nine constituencies in the South Scotland electoral region, which elects seven additional members, in addition to the nine constituency MSPs, to produce a form of proportional representation for the region as a whole.
Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley was a county constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1983 until 2005. Half of the constituency was incorporated into the new Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock constituency, with the remainder incorporated into the new Central Ayrshire constituency and the expanded Kilmarnock and Loudoun constituency.
The Ayrshire Post is a weekly Scottish local newspaper serving the communities of South Ayrshire and parts of East Ayrshire with local news, issues and sports coverage. The Ayrshire Post primarily serves the towns of Ayr, Prestwick, Troon, Cumnock, Maybole, Girvan and their surrounding communities.
Maybole railway station is a railway station serving the town of Maybole, South Ayrshire, Scotland. The station is owned by Network Rail and managed by ScotRail and is on the Glasgow South Western Line.
The Abbot of Crossraguel was the leader of the Cluniac monastic community of Crossraguel Abbey, near Maybole in Carrick, south-west Scotland. It was founded in 1260s by Donnchadh mac Gille Brigte, earl of Carrick with monks from Paisley Abbey. Owing to the lack of surviving records and its distance from the core of Lowland Scotland in the western Gàidhealtachd, few of the abbots are known by name. The abbots were replaced by commendators in the 16th century, and the abbey came to an end when its lands were taken over by the bishops of Dunblane in 1617.
The Maidens and Dunure Light Railway was a railway in Ayrshire, Scotland built to open up coastal communities by connecting them to the main line railway network.
Dunduff Castle is a restored stair-tower in South Ayrshire, Scotland, built on the hillside of Brown Carrick Hills above the Drumbane Burn, and overlooking the sea above the village of Dunure.
St Oswald's Church is a congregation of the Scottish Episcopal Church located in Maybole, Ayrshire, Scotland. The current Priest-in-Charge is The Rev. Liz Crumlish.
Hillhead Baptist Church is a Baptist church in the west end of Glasgow, Scotland. It is affiliated with the Baptist Union of Scotland. It has operated for over 125 years, one of 164 active Baptist churches in Scotland in the early twenty-first century.
Thomas Ramsay (1858–1934) was a Scottish lay pastor and businessman. In addition to commercial success in shoe manufacturing during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, he played a formative role in establishing Maybole Baptist Church, opened 1914, and later in the Baptist Union of Scotland, of which he was president during the 1920s.
Reverend Robert Guy Ramsay (1895–1976) was a twentieth-century Scottish Baptist minister and author, most closely associated with Hillhead Baptist Church, Glasgow, Scotland. Rev Guy Ramsay was President of the Baptist Union of Scotland during the late 1940s.
Minishant is a village bordering the A77 in the old county of Carrick, South Ayrshire, Scotland. It is located in Maybole Parish, 3+1⁄2 miles from Maybole and standing close to the River Doon. The village was originally named Culroy after the Culroy Burn that runs through it.
Maybole Castle is a 16th-century castle located on High Street in Maybole, South Ayrshire, Scotland. Originally built for the Earls of Cassillis, it is an L-shaped construction with Victorian two-storey extensions. It is associated with a legend of John Faa, in which an earl killed Faa and imprisoned his wife, the Countess of Cassilis, in the castle.
In November, 1898, evangelistic services [in Maybole] were conducted by Mr. Thomas Ramsay in the Methodist Chapel, which had just closed...[Maybole Baptist Church] was admitted into the Union in October, 1901, at the Session held in Paisley. Mr. Thomas Ramsay was the first Pastor, and continued until 1919.
In 1914 at a cost of £1,720 the [Maybole] Baptist Church was built in Carrick Street...
As of 2006, there were 176 churches with 13,769 members affiliated with the Baptist Union of Scotland
...set up practice on his own account at 156 St Vincent Street, Glasgow, Scotland
Situated in Carrick Street, the [Maybole Baptist] church with its red sandstone frontage makes a roomy alternative to the small hall in Abbott Street, the former meeting place of the congregation
[Maybole Baptist Church]...is a small rectangular, brick built structure, with a red sandstone front gable and porch with an arched doorway.
Like the Episcopal Church it [Maybole Baptist Church] is crammed into a very small site which does nothing to improve its appearance and it would seem building sites were either scarce (or expensive) when these churches were built.
Maybole is a small market town 9 miles south of Ayr, with some fascinating architecture. Maybole is a town whose lengthy history is evident from the many fine buildings on view.
Maybole is the ancient capital of Carrick… Today's visitor finds a town whose lengthy history is evident from the many fine buildings on view.
The town contains the post-office, commercial bank, townhall, a cumbrous old pile with a spiral tower, situated near the cross, the toll-booth, once the town residence of the lairds of Blairquhan, and the Castle. This last was the ancient residence of the earls of Cassillis, the principal branch of the Kennedys. ... [and] ... Among the ruins of religious houses, the finest are those of the abbey of Crossraguel, in the parish of Kirk-Oswald not far from Maybole. This abbey has stood above 600 years, and is still the best preserved in the west of Scotland.
There were only a very few Open Brethren assemblies prior to 1860, but in the decade after at least thirty assemblies came into existence, and by 1887 one source calculated that there were 184 assemblies. They were formed mainly in those Lowland communities which had known recent social and economic change.
The Union was formed in 1869, when 51 Scottish Baptist churches agreed:"That a Union of evangelical baptist churches of Scotland is desirable and practicable, and that its objects should be to promote evangelical religion in connection with the baptist denomination in Scotland, to cultivate brotherly affection and to secure co¬operation in everything related to the interests of the associated churches."
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)The Maybole Evangelist founded in 1874, a periodical tract which was issued around the houses of the town… [and] the Maybole Revival of the 1870s affected all the town's churches
Maybole now disappeared from the list of supplemented churches, owing, perhaps, to the generosity of the minister. In 1867 a manse was built... the present church, with 380 sittings opened on Sabbath, 19th December 1880, by Dr Thomson of Broughton Place
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)In 1890 there was an establishment of the Baptist Theological College in Glasgow. It continues to the present
…in Scotland Evangelicals gained most ground in the vast parishes of the Highlands as well as in the new industrial regions… Land for erecting a chapel was far more likely to be available in open parishes where landownership was fragmented.
Maybole had risen from an impoverished little country town to become a thriving place of industry which produced boots and shoes for all districts in Britain and agricultural implements, from the famous works of Jack & Son, for all countries in the world. The last half of the nineteenth century was the boom period for Maybole and its townsfolk prospered exceedingly well.
Baptists had mixed social compositions of urban middle classes, especially in Glasgow and Dundee, and peasant and fishing communities in the northeast, Orkney and some west-coast ports and islands.
(Hugh B McFadzean obituary) ...his profound interest in agricultural engineering. Hugh McFadzean... was a founder of the Maybole Baptist Church and was, we understand, a life deacon. (Ed: from 1945)
Although most of the Maybole men were staunch Covenanters and strict sabbatarians some were also hard headed farmers who considered the reaping of their hard won crops was of primary importance... At a Sunday morning service in September, 1807, the Rev. James Wright intimated from his pulpit that, as the day was good and ideal for harvesting the crops, those who wished to do so could work in their fields... Such an intimation was tantamount to heresy to many of the congregation... Finally the matter was taken to the Synod in October, 1808. The Synod ruled that all members of the church "must be sensible as to the sanctification of the Sabbath"
[Maybole Church of Scotland minister] ... noted at the close of his forenoon service one Sabbath in the autumn of 1807, he told his people that, the weather being critical, any of them who chose might in his opinion devote the afternoon to harvest labour.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)The first mention of a larger building was minuted on 15/12/03 when it was decided that a Reserve Fund should be opened, for building or other purposes.
...churches emerged spontaneously out of the small groups that were meeting for Bible study in the wake of the revivals.
It was built, mainly through the efforts of Pastor Ramsay, to replace the former meeting place of the Baptist congregation which was a hall in Abbot Street near the Old Cemetery and which is now used by the Roman Catholics as a recreation hall.
In 1914 a new Church was completed, situated in Carrick Street, and was opened on Friday, October 30th, 1914, the Pastor presiding. A short service was held, and an address given by Rev. Joseph W. Kemp, Edinburgh. On the following day (Saturday) the public opening of the building took place. Rev. Principal Coats, D.D., conducted the service and preached.
In 1905 Andrew Carnegie gifted the small sea-side town of Maybole a sum of £2500 towards the erection of a library and recreation rooms. The additional cost of providing the recreation rooms and books for the library was met by public subscription.
Location of Maybole Library
On 26th February, 1919, Mr and Mrs Ramsay intimated that they had agreed to present their half-villa, Lilybank Culzean Road, to the church as a manse, as a thank-offering for the safe return of their only son, Robert Guy Ramsay, from the first World War.
At Maybole and Girvan churches were begun through the influence and service of Mr. Thomas Ramsay. For 19 years he carried on the pastoral work of the young cause at Maybole, while attending to the onerous duties of his business; and at the end of that period, he had the satisfaction of introducing his successor to a prosperous, self-supporting church.
The Girvan church proper was started on 1st Sunday in April, 1920, under the direction of the Ayrshire Baptist Association. The oversight was in the hands of a committee, with Mr Thomas Ramsay as pastor and guide. A great deal of the initial success of the Girvan cause is due to Mr Ramsay, also to Rev D. M. Simpson, and other Maybole helpers.
The former Baptist Church was gutted in a blaze that may have been deliberate.
Mr Thomas Ramsay of Maybole Baptist Church was elected President in 1921
It was decided to install electric light in the church and hall as a Memorial to Mr Ramsay, and the light was switched on by Rev Wm McInnes, in September, 1935. An engraved brass plate at the back of the pulpit (marks the occasion)
But in the main neither the Baptists nor the Congregationalists achieved high growth rates, tending to remain socially diverse and geographically scattered
During the fifty years the church has been responsible for the baptism of 288 persons...
Only one denomination which has experienced membership decline in Scotland has sustained a late-twentieth-century reversal - the Baptist Church. Baptist membership declined from the 1930s until 1976, and then started a modest but steady growth in the last quarter of the century.
Maybole Baptist Church holds services twice on Sundays (morning and evening) plus morning communions during the week. The church also supports a Women's Fellowship (Mondays), Kids Club (Wednesdays), Prayer & Bible study (Thursdays) and a community cafe (Fridays)
Maybole Baptist Church charity status. Registered Charity Number: SC021239
... Maybole Baptist Church, selected "As the Deer Pants for the Water"; Amazing Grace"...
Maybole Baptist Church, selected What a Friend We Have in Jesus...