Item List (6)

  • Tags: John Robinson

‘Mayflower church destroyed by Nazis’, The Sphere (05 April 1941).
The Memorial Church of the Pilgrim Fathers was one home of the Congregationalists in London, and stood in Buckenham Square, New Kent Road in Southwark, from the 1860s to 1941. After the mid-19th century growth of interest in the Mayflower, the…

Type: Monument

Scrooby Manor (2017)
Scrooby, in Nottinghamshire, is famous today for its associations with the Pilgrims as the home of William Brewster and a meeting place for the Brownist congregation led by John Robinson and Richard Clyfton. It was not until the late 1840s, however,…

Type: Plaque

IMG_3520.JPG
Norwich’s celebrations were talked of at least a year in advance of the tercentenary. The previous May, the Norfolk Protestant Dissenters’ Benevolent Society met for its 120th annual meeting, during which the various members discussed the…

John Robinson Memorial Church, image from A. C. Addison, The Romantic Story of the Mayflower Pilgrims: And Its Place in the Life of To-day, (1911), p.173.
Interest in the Pilgrim Fathers was growing among Congregationalists on both sides of the Atlantic in the late 19th century. In 1891, the first International Congregational Council was held in London - an opportunity for Americans to tour the Pilgrim…

Type: Monument

Charles West Cope, The Embarkation of the Pilgrim Fathers
After the Palace of Westminster was destroyed by fire in 1834, a Royal Commission was set up in 1841 to deal with the question of how to decorate the new palace (by then already under construction). A series of competitions and exhibitions of…

Type: Public Art

The White Church, Fairhaven (2011)
The Fairhaven Congregational Church was opened in 1912, perhaps the peak period for Congregationalism in Britain. Known locally as ‘the White Church’ for good reason, its tall tower and three domes are built in a striking Byzantine style. But, as the…

Type: Monument