GENUKI Home page    Hull Hull  

HULL:
Hull-Bowl Alley Lane Congregational Church History up to 1868.

Source=h:/!Genuki/RecordTranscriptions/ERY/ERYCongChurches.txt

HULL-BOWL ALLEY LANE.
(PRESBYTERIAN.)

After the taking of York by the Parliamentary party, Lord Fairfax gave to the Rev. JOHN SHAWE, M.A.,* the living of Sherringham, near York, whence he was invited to Hull,*1 ministering first in the Low, and afterwards in the High, Church of that town (see p. 43). Shawe preached in York Cathedral at the raking of the solemn league and covenant (1644). He was afterwards appointed master of the Charter House (1653). He was a prominent minister in the political movements of the period, both in York and London, where he frequently preached before the Lord Protector. After the Restoration, though he was chaplain to Charles II., he was removed from his pulpit in the Trinity Church at Hull, without any reason being assigned. He continued, however, to preach at the Charter House, and the inhabitants flocked in crowds to hear him, so that the other churches were deserted. As, however, this became after a while interdicted, and his entrance into the town was forbidden, Mr. Shawe removed from Hull to Rotherham (1662), of which place he had been heretofore vicar. The congregation at Bowl Alley may have thus arisen.

NOTES:-
* There is a MS. volume of Shaw's Sermons in excellent preservation in the valuable Theological Library in the Vestry of Bowl Alley Lane Chapel. The sermons are full of Evangelical truth and holy fervour.
*1 Shaw published two sermons before the Judges, 1648, and a memoir of his wife, entitled, "The Saint's Tombstone."
*2 "Mr. Charles died at Hull in 1703." -" Hist. of Hull."

Transcribed by Colin Hinson © 2014
from the Appendix to
Congregationalism in Yorkshire
by James C. Miall, 1868.

This page is copyright. Do not copy any part of this page or website other than for personal use or as given in the conditions of use.
Web-page generated by "DB2html" data-base extraction software ©Colin Hinson 2024