Congregationalism in the Court Suburb

audiobook

Congregationalism in the Court Suburb

by John Stoughton

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

The work opens with a thoughtful portrait of Kensington at the turn of the nineteenth century, when the first Nonconformist congregation took root amid an almost pastoral landscape. Its author, a former minister of the local chapel, blends personal reminiscence with meticulous research, guiding listeners through the parish’s shifting boundaries and the countryside that once surrounded its streets. Early chapters set the scene by contrasting the quiet meadows, hedgerows and garden‑rich farms with the burgeoning streets that would later define the Court suburb.

From there the narrative unfolds into a vivid account of the chapel’s emergence, the modest yet striking architecture of its surroundings, and the social fabric of a community balancing rural charm with urban growth. Listeners will hear anecdotes of nightingales in Holland Park, the modest pension granted to a grieving widow, and the transformation of once‑rural lanes into bustling thoroughfares. The book offers a richly detailed snapshot of a pivotal era, inviting anyone fascinated by local history or the evolution of early English dissenting churches to step back in time.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (191K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2013-08-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Stoughton

John Stoughton

1807–1897

A prolific Victorian Congregational minister and church historian, he wrote widely on English religious life, from the Puritans and the Church of the Restoration to memoirs, devotional works, and historical studies. His books combine a preacher’s warmth with a historian’s eye for character, conflict, and belief.

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