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The Methodist Church in Cumbria

Keswick (Southey St) Methodist Church

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Every year the members of the church provide lunches, in the first two weeks, for those attending the Keswick Convention in July. If you are coming for the Convention, why not come along?

Southey St Church John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, first visited Keswick in 1749, as he travelled east from Whitehaven. There is no record that he preached there at that time, nor at any other time. Wesleyan Methodism in Keswick began towards the end of the 18th Century, meeting in houses or hired rooms to begin with. Influential in this early period was a Penrith saddler, Robert Gates. Keswick was having regular services by 1806, when it was featured on the Brough Circuit Plan.
The first chapel was built in 1814 in a small yard off Main St at a cost of £331 10s. Southey St from the side


The first Wesleyan minister to live in Keswick was Rev Edmund Warters in 1835. By 1838 there were calls to remove the minister to support the newly-formed Workington Circuit, on the basis that "he will be surrounded by plenty of work, and do something worth living for". Slowly the cause picked up momentum.

A new church, the present one on Southey St, was opened in 1863, at a cost of £1205. This was extended when a Sunday School was added in the late 1870s. The Church was also enlarged and remodelled in 1909.

Keswick benefitted from the migration from Whitehaven of rich Wesleyan families such as the Randles and Walkers. The town was also helped by new railway links and the growing tourism business.

Today the premises are regularly used by a number of community groups including an After-School Club, Yoga, Old Tyme Dancing, China Painting and Dance Classes. The Photographic Society, Natural History Society, Historical Society and Horticultural Society also use the premises.

The present membership of the church is 73.

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