Wellington Church

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Wellington Church
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Location 76 University Avenue, Glasgow
Country Scotland
Denomination Church of Scotland
Website wc.thischurch.org
History
Founded 1884 (140 years ago) (1884)
Founder(s) United Presbyterian Church of Scotland
Architecture
Status Church
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Category A
Designated 6 July 1966 (57 years ago) (1966-07-06)
Architect(s) Thomas Lennox Watson
Style Neoclassical
Groundbreaking 1883 (141 years ago) (1883)
Completed 1884 (140 years ago) (1884)
Administration
Presbytery Presbytery of Glasgow
Clergy
Minister(s) Reverend Dr David Sinclair

Wellington Church is a congregation and parish church of the Church of Scotland, serving part of the Hillhead area of Glasgow, Scotland. The building is located on University Avenue, Glasgow, opposite the University of Glasgow.

Building

The building was designed by the architect Thomas Lennox Watson and built between 1883 and 1884 for the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland ("U.P."), which joined with the Free Church of Scotland to become the United Free Church of Scotland in 1900.

The exterior of church is notable for its magnificent neoclassical portico, complete with a colonnade of Corinthian columns in the style of an ancient Graecian temple. This neoclassical architecture was much favoured by United Presbyterian Church, in contrast to the Gothic Revival favoured by most other churches in the Victorian era.

History

The church's congregation was originally founded in 1792 as an "Anti-Burgher" congregation, which in 1820 became part of the United Secession Church (and in turn U.P. from 1847).

In 1828, they opened their own church building in Wellington Street near the centre of Glasgow. The congregation had outgrown this by the 1880s, so the church commissioned a new building at the junction of Southpark Avenue and University Avenue on Gilmorehill, opposite the university which had moved from the city centre the previous decade. Given that the United Presbyterian Church had no parish boundaries it was not uncommon for U.P. congregations to relocate.

Current work

File:Aedes Divus Arturus.jpg
The front of the Wellington Church

The church ministers to the surrounding Hillhead community, and to the staff and student body of the university which has grown to surround the church's site. Although the university maintains its own chapel, the University of Glasgow Memorial Chapel, in the nearby Gilbert-Scott buildings, the Wellington hosts both religious and secular university events. The church also hosts musical concerts, and recitals played on its original Forster and Andrews pipe organ.

The congregation is actively involved in social justice issues, such as the Make Poverty History campaign in 2005. The congregation had previously won Scotland's eco-congregation award in November 2004.

In 2006, it was proposed that Wellington Church merged with the neighbouring congregation of Lansdowne Church. This was due to declining attendances at both congregations and the cost of maintaining the Lansdowne building. However, in June 2007 the congregation of Lansdowne rejected the proposed vote on the union at that time. The future of the plan is unknown although the proposals remain a future possibility.

Wellington Church is within the Church of Scotland's Presbytery of Glasgow.

Ministry

The minister is the Reverend Dr David Sinclair. He was inducted to the charge by the Church of Scotland's Presbytery of Glasgow on 29 May 2008. He was formerly Secretary of the Church and Society Council of the Church of Scotland, based in the Church of Scotland Offices in Edinburgh. Sinclair is the Presbytery of Glasgow's Moderator for the Session 2013/2014.

The previous minister was the Reverend Leith Fisher, who retired in October 2006 and died on 13 March 2009, following a road collision on the Isle of Arran. His memorial service held at Wellington was attended by over 1,000 people and was conducted by the Right Reverend David Lunan, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.

Former ministers include the Reverend Maxwell Craig who served between 1973 and 1989.

See also

Other churches nearby

External links