Showing results 61 to 70 of 4038
Museum Ref No: Batting/Box 11/Victory (model of)/No.3Replica of "Victory" at Poole Quay alongside "Horizon". H.&A. Burden in background. (Batting photograph)
Photograph
Museum Ref No: Batting/Box 11/Victory (model of)/No.2Replica of "Victory" under full sail. (Batting photograph)
Photograph
Museum Ref No: Batting/Box 11/Victory (model of)/No.1Replica of "Victory" under full sail with Harbour Master's launch alongside. (Batting photograph)
Photograph
Museum Ref No: Batting/Box 12/Ships 4/No.6 - Westward, LondonFour-masted schooner "Westward" at anchor. Poole Quay in background. (Batting photograph)
Photograph
Museum Ref No: Batting/Box 14/Unlabelled box 2/No. 11Cruiser "Winston C" and 3 crew. (Batting photograph)
Photograph
Museum Ref No: Bristowe2_134The "Wooden Schooner" moored at Poole Quay in 1920 with an unidentified family posing alongside. Wessex shipyard can be seen behind.
From the Ernest Bristowe collection.
Photograph
The covenants were adopted by the membership of the Great Presbyterian Meeting House, Hill Street, Poole and both arose from divisive disputes.
The first concerned church governance, the authority to appoint the minister, in particular. It was a key factor in a secession of members from St. James’ Church, resulting in the formation of the Hill Street meeting house.
The second arose from theological differences, which contributed to an unknown number of members leaving in 1739 and later the same issues resulted in a large number leaving to set up the Lagland Street Congregational Chapel, the predecessor of the Skinner Street Congregational Chapel (founded in 1760 and 1777 respectively). SSCC
Factfile
Densham & Ogle, the authors of The Congregational Churches of Dorset (1899)
quoted the whole constitution in their book, mentioning that the original was stored in the Skinner Street Congregational Chapel safe.
However, when the church archive was catalogued in early 2019, it was not found and is therefore assumed to be lost to posterity.
SSCC
Factfile
This letter reveals the acrimonious ending to Rev. Philipps’ ministry, which had spanned a total of 12 years of ministry, first in Hill Street and later in Lagland Street, Poole (1753 – 1765).
In the seventh year of his ministry (1760), he was ejected from the Great Presbyterian Meeting House, Hill Street, Poole, but he continued his ministry in the newly founded Congregational Chapel in Lagland Street, to which many members from Hill Street seceded with him.
Readers may be interested in the footnotes, which give more details about the circumstances surrounding the letter.
Factfile
This is the certificate for worship issued for the newly built 1777 Skinner Street Congregational Church, Poole.
SSCC
Factfile