Ely Street, Primitive Methodist Church
Ely Street, Primitive Methodist Church
HER Number
              8293
          District
              Gateshead
          Site Name
              Ely Street, Primitive Methodist Church
          Place
              Bensham
          Map Sheet
              NZ26SE
          Class
              Religious Ritual and Funerary
          Site Type: Broad
              Place of Worship
          Site Type: Specific
              Primitive Methodist Chapel
          General Period
              POST MEDIEVAL
          Specific Period
              Victorian 1837 to 1901
          Form of Evidence
              Extant Building
          Description
              The head of Gateshead's second Primitive Methodist circuit. 1873 by Thomas Southrow of South Shields. Enlarged in 1887. A large Italianate town chapel with a full gallery. Last used by the Methodists in 1963, then sold to the Christadelphians. The building is now a mosque.
Ashlar and coursed rubble with ashlar dressings. Slate roof with coped gables and kneelers, plus single gable stack. Red ashlar cill bands and ground floor lintel bands, moulded eaves. 2 storey. Ely Street front: 3 bay with projecting single storey porch. Pedimented centre has 2 round headed doorways with moulded hoods and eitherside square corner piers with pairs of upper pilasters with unusual facing and pulvinated frieze, each topped by a squat obelisk.Set back eitherside are pairs of round headed windows and concave surrounds. Above central bay has round arch rising in to the large pediment above, with 3 round headed plain sashes, the central one broader, with panels below and above a circular panel. Eitherside single pilasters supporting the arch, and beyond single and round headed plain sashes with moulded hoods and imposts. East front: 5 bay, with 5 tall round headed arches with moulded hoods and continuous moulded impost band. Within 5 sunken plain sashes below and 5 sunken round headed tall plain sashes above, with sunken panels below the windows.
Interior: Internal fittings include round ended gallery supported on iron columns with foliate capitals, gallery has panelled front with short baluster balustrade; contemporary pews, combined reading desk, pulpit and organ with flanking side screens; coved plaster ceiling supported on moulded plaster brackets now hidden above C20 false ceiling. LISTED GRADE 2
          Ashlar and coursed rubble with ashlar dressings. Slate roof with coped gables and kneelers, plus single gable stack. Red ashlar cill bands and ground floor lintel bands, moulded eaves. 2 storey. Ely Street front: 3 bay with projecting single storey porch. Pedimented centre has 2 round headed doorways with moulded hoods and eitherside square corner piers with pairs of upper pilasters with unusual facing and pulvinated frieze, each topped by a squat obelisk.Set back eitherside are pairs of round headed windows and concave surrounds. Above central bay has round arch rising in to the large pediment above, with 3 round headed plain sashes, the central one broader, with panels below and above a circular panel. Eitherside single pilasters supporting the arch, and beyond single and round headed plain sashes with moulded hoods and imposts. East front: 5 bay, with 5 tall round headed arches with moulded hoods and continuous moulded impost band. Within 5 sunken plain sashes below and 5 sunken round headed tall plain sashes above, with sunken panels below the windows.
Interior: Internal fittings include round ended gallery supported on iron columns with foliate capitals, gallery has panelled front with short baluster balustrade; contemporary pews, combined reading desk, pulpit and organ with flanking side screens; coved plaster ceiling supported on moulded plaster brackets now hidden above C20 false ceiling. LISTED GRADE 2
Easting
              425500
          Northing
              562460
          Grid Reference
              NZ425500562460
    Sources
              Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest; Gateshead Council, 1999, Conservation Area Policy Guidelines, Strategies and Character Statements, Coatsworth Conservation Area, pp 25-31; Peter Ryder, 2017, Nonconformist Chapels of Gateshead