The history of the Newcastle church of Christ

Synopsis

Central Library, New Bridge Street, Newcastle upon Tyne, Unknown, pre 1897, Copyright Newcastle City Council A church of Christ in Newcastle can be traced to 1824. It is noted that two of the key players, Robert Banks and William Dickinson, had left the Scotch Baptists in 1824, and moved from New Court Baptist Chapel to form a congregation in the Weavers Tower, New Bridge Street. (The site of the Library). The reasons for the secession in 1824 were "That the Church does not exercise the gifts of its members in exhortation and refuses to examine the Scriptures in the Weekly Communion and a Plurality of elders".

Saint Nicholas's Church, Newcastle upon Tyne, 1808, Copyright Newcastle City Council On the 3rd of February 1839, eight people left the church in New Bridge Street, and met at St Nicholas Square. This was when another church of Christ was formed in Newcastle. On the 10th February 1839, they had someone place membership in the morning, and in the afternoon, a former member and manager of a Presbyterian church was baptised into Christ.

The start of this congregation was notified by James Briggs on the 14th of February, to the Christian Messenger and Reformer. This was a magazine first produced by the Nottingham Church of Christ in 1837. However, the Christian Messenger and Reformer were informed of his death on the 24th October 1839, by which time the congregation numbered twenty three.

Back Picton Terrace, Newcastle upon Tyne, Dept of Environmental Health, c.1935, Copyright This congregation moved to Westgate Street, and then to the Cordwainers Hall in the Friars. On 1st May 1853, this congregation merged with the congregation in New Bridge Street. The united church then met at a chapel in New Bridge Street, at the corner of Picton Terrace.

The union only lasted until 1st March 1854, when a split arose as to the mode of receiving members. One group went to various places and eventually back to the Cordwainers hall in the Friars.

This split was eventually healed when Mr. Daniel Collin managed to obtain a reconciliation between the two congregations. Some of the New Bridge Street members transferred to the Cordwainers hall, while Robert Banks, and his friends remained at the New Bridge Street site until the chapel was sold.Catholic Apostolic Church, Gloucester Street, Elswick, Dept of Environmental Health, c.1964, Copyright Dept of Environmental Health

The foundation stone of a new chapel at 73 Gloucester Street, was laid by Mrs Jane Watson in 1868. The building in Gloucester street, called "The Christians Meeting House", was opened on the 24th January 1869, and had cost fifteen hundred pounds to construct.

 

The leaders of the Newcastle movement were William McDougall, William Patrick and Joseph Moffit. Mr. Mason Watson had been an elder in the New Bridge Street congregation in 1851, and had later resigned. Mason Watson was re-elected as an elder on the 26th May 1878. Daniel Scott, although he was not one of the leaders, had been another elder for a time, and was an evangelist.

Most of these men had professions. Mason Watson was listed as a Surgeon Dentist and a then as a land agent, William McDougall was listed as a butcher in 1871 and then as a Gentleman in 1873. There were two William Patricks listed in 1881, one was a butcher, the other a fruit merchant. Joseph Moffit worked for a firm, Currie M & Co.

On the 27th September 1884 a piece about the Christian's Meeting House and the Newcastle church of Christ appeared in the Weekly Chronicle. This was part of a series of articles about churches in the Newcastle area. By the 18th October 1884, members of the church wrote to the editor over errors of fact.

In 1898, the Newcastle church of Christ applied for approval to put in a lavatory, and at that time a Mr Ditchburn was listed as an owner. The Architect was a Mr. Arthur Stockwell, of 11 Pilgrim Street. He later went into business with a David Ditchburn between 1924 and 1932.

By 1898, there were two Mr. Ditchburns connected with the church. John Ditchburn senior who lived with his daughters in 30 Lawton Street, and his eldest son John Robert Ditchburn, who lived at 341 Scotswood Road. Both worked in the grocery Trade. John (Snr) as the owner of a grocery shop and John Robert as an assistant.

John Robert Ditchburn had married his fiancée, Elizabeth Laura Vincent on the 21st May 1888, at The Christian's Meeting House. They had their first child, John Oscar Ditchburn on the 14th of May 1889. There were to be no further surviving children. After the death of Elizabeth, John Robert and John Oscar moved back into the family home of 30 Lawton Street.

John Oscar Ditchburn married his fiancée, Mary Jackson Young Stoker in the last quarter of 1933. Mary died on the 14th December 1982 at the age of 82. John Oscar died on 26th August 1983. No children were born from this marriage.

Two of the daughters of John Ditchburn Senior Jessie and Mary Ditchburn both became fruiterers and stayed in the family home in Lawton Street. Jessie Ditchburn's shop in 1924 at 115 Westmoreland Road, and Mary's shop in 1930 at 53 Stanley Street. They both disappeared after 1940

Apostasy crept into the Gloucester Street congregation in the early twentieth century, when in spite of the objections of the older members, instrumental music was introduced into worship. First came a piano, and then an organ.

Old Eldon Square - Pictures of Gateshead and the Surrounding Area - Andy WilliamsonThe building continued to be listed as the Christians Meeting house in trade directories, until 1940, although the church finally closed around 1943. The remaining congregation continued to meet in the Eldon Square area.

With some congregations, the advent of World War II  caused them  to become extinct as men were called up to fight, but this  did not quite happen with the Newcastle congregation.

Some other congregations did continue in the area, but they disappeared when they joined up with the United Reform Church in 1982.

In 1947 the building was listed as a warehouse for a furniture company. The building was finally scheduled for demolition after 1964 in a general clearance of Gloucester Street, for new housing, when the road became Gloucester Way.

In an interview with Mr. David Black, the last preacher of the first planting of the Newcastle church of Christ, conducted in 1996, he continued with congregation until he moved away in 1950. The congregation consisted only of elderly people and only carried on in Eldon Square for only two years from then until it disappeared. According to an interview with a minister from the United Reformed Church the church ended its days meeting in a ground floor room in one of the properties on the East side of Old Eldon Square. In 1976 The Eldon Square area was redeveloped into the modern day Eldon Square shopping centre, but the east side was untouched so the room where the previous Newcastle church of Christ met, may still exist to this day

The end of the first congregation of the Newcastle church of Christ can now be put at 1952. This means that a church of Christ existed in Newcastle for 129 years before it became extinct.

What part the introduction of instrumental music in worship contributed to the extinction is unknown, but it must be remembered that the Ephesians were warned that if they did not repent, then the Lord would remove "their lamp stand" (Revelation 2:5).

There would not be a congregation of a church of Christ in Newcastle until 1985, but that's another story..