Author Topic: Malinslee Chapel  (Read 162 times)

Offline Shrop63

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Malinslee Chapel
« on: Tuesday 16 January 24 12:55 GMT (UK) »
Found a marriage record of one ancestor who married in said chapel in 1845, however, i just read it was a ruin by 1700! Anyone? Thanks
Parton
Poole
Clare
Jones
Ellis




Vaughan
Watkiss

Online Viktoria

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Re: Malinslee Chapel
« Reply #1 on: Tuesday 16 January 24 13:13 GMT (UK) »
Might there have been another built?

Happened in another part of Shropshire.
A “ Tin Hut “ Baptist chapel on a mine site ,as the congregation grew another purpose built with sunken Baptism pool in a very pretty location about half a mile away.
That still stands .
Viktoria.

Online emeltom

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Re: Malinslee Chapel
« Reply #2 on: Tuesday 16 January 24 13:16 GMT (UK) »
The Genuki site has this

 MALINSLEE, a township in the parish of Dawley Magna, county Salop, 4 miles W. of Shiffnal. It is a station on the Coalport branch of the London and North-Western railway. Most of the inhabitants are employed in the collieries. The living is a perpetual curacy* in the diocese of Lichfield, value £150, in the patronage of the Incumbent of Dawley. The church is modern."

The local church, which was built in 1805 is St Leonards.
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Online fiddlerslass

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Re: Malinslee Chapel
« Reply #3 on: Tuesday 16 January 24 13:32 GMT (UK) »
"In 1805 the church of ST. LEONARD was built on the south-west edge of Malinslee township by I. H. Browne, owner of Malinslee, and Thomas Gisborne, with money left for charitable purposes by Browne's great-grandfather Isaac Hawkins. (fn. 70) Although intended to replace Dawley old church, St. Leonard's remained a chapel of ease until 1843 when it was assigned a district chapelry covering Malinslee township and Dawley Bank. (fn. 71) The benefice was in the gift of the vicar of Dawley Magna. The living was abolished in 1975 when Malinslee became part of the new parish of Central Telford. (fn. 72)"

See
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/salop/vol11/pp127-130
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