Renshaw Street Unitarian Chapel was a Unitarian place of worship in Mount Pleasant, Liverpool, England. It operated from 1811 until the 1890s and was particularly well frequented by ship-owning and mercantile families, who formed a close network of familial and business alliances.
Origins
Renshaw Street Unitarian Chapel had its origins in a Presbyterian community at Toxteth Park that was at one time ministered by Richard Mather. That began around 1687 at Castle Hey and moved to Benn's Gardens in 1727. The Benn's Gardens premises became a place of worship for Welsh Wesleyan Methodists when the new Unitarian chapel was built at Renshaw Street in 1811.
Architecture
One of its later ministers wrote, many decades after the congregation had left the building: The German words are a reference to the Bach cantata of that name, and "Ironside" is a nickname for an armoured car in use at the time of writing.
Congregation
The new chapel had a congregation that included numerous significant local business families, such as the Booths, Brunners, Gairs, Gaskells, Hollands, Jevons, Jones, Holts, Lamports, Mellys, Rathbones, Tates and Thornelys. It has been described as "the meeting house for a tightly-knit network of Unitarian ship owners and merchants who frequently formed alliances by marriage, met socially, invested in one another's ventures, shared or exchanged practical skills, embarked on philanthropic schemes, and engaged fully in the politics of reform". Historian Susan Pedersen notes that "politically as progressive as such families might be, they were intensely socially exclusive".
The move to Ullet Street
Land for a new chapel was purchased in 1895 and congregation moved to the new Ullet Road Unitarian Church, near Sefton Park, in 1899, mirroring a general move of the mercantile classes away from the city centre and towards its more salubrious peripheries. Many members built houses in the area. The Renshaw Street site is now occupied by Grand Central Hall. The chapel graveyard remains as a garden and a monument commemorates the previous use. The cemetery had been closed to new burials under the provisions of sanitary regulations but Thomas Thornely, who died in 1862, was successful in his appeal to the prime minister, Lord Palmerston, to permit, under strict conditions, the burial of people closely related to those already interred. Palmerston himself had been potentially excluded from interment in a family vault elsewhere under the same regulations.