Sandwich URC

One of the oldest meeting houses in the country still in use today.

Sandwich, Kent

Opening times

Open Sunday morning 10am to 12.30 and Thursday 9am to 12noon.

Address

Cattle Market
Sandwich
Kent
CT13 9AF

As you come up the church path you cross the site of an old coaching inn and into what was one of its outbuildings. Its date? Before 1640. That was when a small group of people known as Dissenters or Independents, who believed that Christ, not the Sovereign, was Head of the Church and therefore the Church should be independent of state control held their meetings.

They risked imprisonment by holding services here. Later the law was relaxed and in 1705 they were able to acquire the building and adapt it for use as a place of worship.

They called their churches ‘Meeting Houses’, that is, places where people could come together and meet with God and one another. They had to be somewhere where you could see what was happening. Hence the design and layout of this building. The emphasis in the services was on preaching and reading from the Bible, usually done from a pulpit, together with the communion service which was (and still is) known as the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, conducted from a table rather than an altar.

As time went by the Independents became known as Congregationalists and then more widely along with Baptists and Presbyterians as Nonconformists and in more recent times with the Methodists as the Free Churches.

The two wooden pillars are the masts of ships in which Huguenots fled from persecution in France in the 17th Century, and are tokens of the gratitude these refugees felt for the way they were received and made welcome in the town of Sandwich.

A century later John Wesley was visiting these parts and needed somewhere to accommodate the people who gathered to hear him. This church was made available and on 26th November 1788 he preached here.

During World War I Sandwich became a centre of military activity and the church was often filled with troops stationed here. In World War II it was a very different matter. Coastal towns like Sandwich were largely evacuated and some churches were forced to close. This church remained open.

  • Spectacular stained glass

  • Magnificent memorials

  • Glorious furnishings

  • Famous connections

  • Enchanting atmosphere

  • Captivating architecture

  • Walkers & cyclists welcome

  • Space to secure your bike

  • Parking within 250m

  • On street parking at church

  • Level access to the main areas

  • Dog friendly

  • Accessible toilets nearby

  • United Reformed Church

Contact information

Other nearby churches

St Peter

Sandwich, Kent

A landmark church that still rings a curfew.

St Clement

Sandwich, Kent

Set in one of Kent's prettiest little towns, St Clement's stands next to the ramparts of what was a Cinque port until the river silted up and left the town stranded.

St Augustine

Ramsgate, Kent

This Grade I listed Gothic masterpiece is Pugin's model church and it embodies the principles he followed throughout his career.