Carrs Lane Church
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Carrs Lane Church, also known as The Church at Carrs Lane is a church in Birmingham and is noted as having the largest free-standing cross in the country.


History

The church was founded as an independent chapel in 1748 and then enlarged in 1812 at a cost of £2,000 to seat 600 people, not least due to the popularity of the preaching of John Angell James. A further enlargement was undertaken in 1820 to designs by the architect Thomas Stedman Whitwell, which was then re-fronted by Yeoville Thomason in 1876. The church became part of the Congregational Union in 1832. The current building was begun in 1968 by Denys Hinton and Partners and completed in 1971. It became part of the United Reformed Church when the Presbyterian and Congregational churches merged in 1972. The church bears a
blue plaque A blue plaque is a permanent sign installed in a public place in the United Kingdom and elsewhere to commemorate a link between that location and a famous person, event, or former building on the site, serving as a historical marker. The term i ...
erected by Birmingham Civic Society in 1995 to commemorate Dr R. W. Dale, minister at Carrs Lane from 1854 until his death, and prominent preacher of the "
Civic Gospel The Civic Gospel was a philosophy of municipal activism and improvement that emerged in Birmingham, England, in the mid-19th century. Tracing its origins to the teaching of independent nonconformist preacher George Dawson, who declared that "a to ...
". Since the closure of the Methodist Central Hall, Birmingham, the building has been shared with the Methodist Congregation, as a local ecumenical partnership under the name "The Church at Carrs Lane".


Organ

The church has a pipe organ by Hill Norman and Beard dating from 1970. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.


Organists

*Samuel Stanley 1792 - 1803 (afterwards organist at Ebenezer Church until 1822) *Adam Wright ???? - 1845 - 1876 *William C. Stockley 1876 - 1889 *Walter Humphreys 1889 - 1895 (formerly organist of Wesley Chapel, West Bromwich) *C.H. Pett 1895 - 1901 *Maurice Davies 1901 - ???? *R.A. Ernest Payne ???? - 1915 *
Charles William Perkins Charles William Perkins (4 October 1855 - 2 August 1927) was Birmingham City Organist from 1888 to 1923. Life He was born in 1855 the son of Robert A Perkins, jeweller, and Hannah. He studied organ under Andrew Deakin, organist of the Church of ...
1915 - 1920 *Graham Godfrey 1920 - 1930 *Cyril Stanley Christopher 1930 - 1967


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Birmingham Churches completed in 1971 United Reformed churches in Birmingham, West Midlands