Langrishe Place, Methodist Chapel
Church building · Dublin
Church building
Free Church, Great Charles Street, Dublin was a proprietary episcopal chapel in Summerhill, off Mountjoy Square in Dublin. Built by Methodists, in 1800, designed by architect Edward Robbins, and initially known as the Wesley Chapel. Following a schism in the congregation in 1816, a group called the Primitive Wesleyan Methodists split from the Methodist Church, it became known as the free church.
Due to the free church being too large for their numbers, the Primitive Wesleyan Methodists opened a new Chapel nearby in Langrishe Place, Summerhill, in 1825. The church originally framed a vista of 3 storey over basement Georgian houses facing down Rutland Street Upper (now Seán O'Casey Avenue) however these houses were demolished in the 1980s. The Free Church was used by the Anglican congregation from the nearby St.
George's Church, Dublin while it was being constructed. It was reconsecrated a church within the Anglican Community on 4 May 1828 by Archbishop Magee. The landlord, the Methodist printer (who was treasurer of the Primitive Methodist Society Home Mission) R.
Bennett Dugdale(1756-1826), wanted to prevent it becoming a Catholic church, and sold it in 1826, to the Church of Ireland...