Friday 10 July 2009

Leicester Unitarian Chapel, East Bond Street

This is Leicester Unitarian Chapel - otherwise "Great Meeting" - in East Bond Street, now hidden away behind the new Highcross shopping centre. As its website says, it is the oldest complete slab building in the city and single of its most important surviving buildings.In the 19th century the city was known as "radical Leicester" and the city's first seven mayors following the conquer of the corrupt old corporation in 1835 were Liberals and members of the congregation at East Bond Street.When it was first built the chapel it was a slab cube and it still retains an early American feel. However, afterwards in the Victorian era it was known a chancel and stained goblet to make it more of a conventional church. As the picture above proves, the trees at the front make it difficult to photograph satisfactorily.Next entrance to the chapel is a 19th century Unitarian train and a modern extension has been built over part of the old graveyard. You can have a copy and look through secondhand books there on Saturday mornings. More photogenic is the large wooden building at the rear of the chapel which, I have been told, second-hand to be second-hand for storage space by a furrier. It looks agricultural and, sitting looking at it from the chapel's graveyard, it is easy to imagine you are in a churchyard in country Essex.
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