Catalogue description ST PAULS AND TRINITY UNITED REFORMED CHURCH, BOOTLE

This record is held by Merseyside Record Office

Details of M285SPT
Reference: M285SPT
Title: ST PAULS AND TRINITY UNITED REFORMED CHURCH, BOOTLE
Description:

Trinity Church: (for post-1941 records see below)

 

1 Management committee 1855-1947

 

2 Session 1875-1933

 

3 Communicants roll books 1856-1915

 

4 Seat-letting books 1863-1939

 

5 Ledgers 1903-1938

 

6 Collection book 1856-1878

 

7 Membership records (1850)-1933

 

8 Missionary committee 1861-1932

 

9 Marriage/burial register 1920-1940

 

10 Annual reports 1863-1930

 

11 Photographs

 

St Pauls St Pauls and Trinity:

 

12 Management committee 1885-1957

 

13 Session 1883-1957

 

14 Communitance roll books 1926-1959

 

15 Financial records 1947-1952

 

16 Miscellaneous 1910-1955

Date: (1850) -1959
Held by: Merseyside Record Office, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

St Paul's and Trinity United Reformed Church, Bootle, Lancashire

Physical description: 16 series
Access conditions:

Access to non printed material less than 30 years old is subject to the approval of the church.

Immediate source of acquisition:

The records were deposited on permanent loan by Mrs E Goodall and the Rev W I Williams, MA BD, Provincial Archivist on 19 Sept 1980 (ref CA-1980-63/URB) and 4 June 1981 (ref CA-1981-38/URB).

Subjects:
  • Bootle, lancashire
Administrative / biographical background:

The church was constituted in 1855, as the United Presbyterian Church, in response to the growing number of Scots in Bootle and their dissatisfaction with existing provision of religious worship through the Episcopalian church (for an account of this see 1/1). Originally on Derby Road, (next to the Mersey Hotel), the church moved to new premises in 1885 on the corner of Hawthorne Road and Trinity Road, becoming known as Trinity Presbyterian Church. In 1941 it united with St Pauls Presbyterian church, Peel Road after that church was bombed, and the records of the two churches were thereafter combined. Trinity Church originally served the area between Waterloo and Great Homer Street, Liverpool which was divided into 14 districts. It also supported a mission in Millers Bridge.

Link to NRA Record:

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