St Matthew
Sheffield, Yorkshire
Situated a stone's throw away from the heart of Sheffield, we are a Victorian church displaying various items from the Arts & Crafts era, such as fine copperware and reredos.
A large Victorian building with a rose window and twin towers, similar to London’s Bloomsbury Baptist Church, with refurbished refurbished welcoming entrance spaces and hall windows with etched glass co-designed with the community.
Sheffield, Yorkshire
The church was founded in 1839 and members soon built a chapel in the city centre in 1841. As the membership grew, in 1859 they moved to a new three storey building constructed of stone, brick and slate on the edge of the city (at that time), a mile away on Cemetery Road. Further buildings were added in the 1860s and in 1900, providing a wide range of teaching accommodation. The whole complex was listed Grade II in 1993 and features in Pevsner’s Guide. The church became the mother church for several smaller Baptist churches in the suburbs of the city.
The church building is situated at the interface between the relatively affluent suburbs of southwest Sheffield and the economically and socially deprived parts of the Sheffield’s inner city. In recent years, apartment blocks have been built on previous industrial and housing land near the church. Most of the now small congregation, of around 100 adults and 30 children, commute to the church.
The church has a long history of welcoming immigrants, notably the 'Windrush' generation, whose descendants are a core part of the church fellowship. It has hosted Karen refugees, from Burma/Myanmar; and Congolese refugees, who contribute their own vibrant style of worship and meet for services in their own language. It has pastored a considerable number of refugees and asylum seekers, mainly from Iran who attend the church’s Sunday services and hold their own fellowship meetings in the Farsi language. Many of these have been baptised at Cemetery Road over the past few years.
During the pandemic the church was without a lead minister and lost members and friends through death, or by people moving away. Some are still too cautious to return to worship on a regular basis. In March 2023, the church welcomed a new minister.
Sheffield, Yorkshire
Situated a stone's throw away from the heart of Sheffield, we are a Victorian church displaying various items from the Arts & Crafts era, such as fine copperware and reredos.
Sheffield, Yorkshire
Visitors are always welcome to this 300 year old city centre Unitarian Chapel.
Sheffield, Yorkshire
The cathedral is easy to miss and almost seems hidden away, which gives you a clue to its origin.