Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875

This study considers the nature of Methodist allegiance in four south Nottinghamshire parishes from the arrival of the denomination in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century until about 1875. In this area, Methodism became strongly established against an inadequate Anglican church but never...

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Main Author: Woodcock, Anne C
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29278/
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author Woodcock, Anne C,
author_facet Woodcock, Anne C,
author_sort Woodcock, Anne C,
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study considers the nature of Methodist allegiance in four south Nottinghamshire parishes from the arrival of the denomination in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century until about 1875. In this area, Methodism became strongly established against an inadequate Anglican church but nevertheless most individuals did not exhibit an exclusive commitment. Using records from the Newark, subsequently Bingham, Wesleyan Methodist circuit, relating to the Societies in three medium-sized villages and one small market town, and looking particularly at Methodist membership and decisions regarding choice of baptismal rite, the research shows the existence of both exogenous growth and continuing fluidity of allegiance from the early period until well beyond the mid-century point of the religious census. It demonstrates a previously unidentified, significant turnover in Methodist membership throughout the period, which occurred irrespective of apparent growth, stability or decline. This lends support to the growing body of evidence about both varying and dual denominational allegiance, in particular between the Wesleyan chapel and the parish church. The research further confirms this phenomenon in relation to baptismal decisions, where some committed Methodist families continued to use the Anglican rite and many varied their choice for different children. In investigating these facets of religious life, the study also establishes the existence of emerging religious competition during the nineteenth century, evidenced additionally in competitive church building, service patterns and the provision of education. Only by the last quarter of the century were denominational boundaries clearly hardening, particularly in the town of Bingham, but this thesis demonstrates that until then allegiance was neither exclusive nor consistent.
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spelling nottingham-292782025-02-28T11:35:49Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29278/ Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875 Woodcock, Anne C, This study considers the nature of Methodist allegiance in four south Nottinghamshire parishes from the arrival of the denomination in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century until about 1875. In this area, Methodism became strongly established against an inadequate Anglican church but nevertheless most individuals did not exhibit an exclusive commitment. Using records from the Newark, subsequently Bingham, Wesleyan Methodist circuit, relating to the Societies in three medium-sized villages and one small market town, and looking particularly at Methodist membership and decisions regarding choice of baptismal rite, the research shows the existence of both exogenous growth and continuing fluidity of allegiance from the early period until well beyond the mid-century point of the religious census. It demonstrates a previously unidentified, significant turnover in Methodist membership throughout the period, which occurred irrespective of apparent growth, stability or decline. This lends support to the growing body of evidence about both varying and dual denominational allegiance, in particular between the Wesleyan chapel and the parish church. The research further confirms this phenomenon in relation to baptismal decisions, where some committed Methodist families continued to use the Anglican rite and many varied their choice for different children. In investigating these facets of religious life, the study also establishes the existence of emerging religious competition during the nineteenth century, evidenced additionally in competitive church building, service patterns and the provision of education. Only by the last quarter of the century were denominational boundaries clearly hardening, particularly in the town of Bingham, but this thesis demonstrates that until then allegiance was neither exclusive nor consistent. 2015 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29278/1/Methodist%20Allegiance%20in%20South%20Nottinghamshire%20Parishes%201770-1875.pdf Woodcock, Anne C, (2015) Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Methodist Anglican South Nottinghamshire Membership Baptism Religious Census
spellingShingle Methodist
Anglican
South Nottinghamshire
Membership
Baptism
Religious Census
Woodcock, Anne C,
Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
title Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
title_full Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
title_fullStr Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
title_full_unstemmed Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
title_short Methodist allegiance in South Nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
title_sort methodist allegiance in south nottinghamshire parishes 1770-1875
topic Methodist
Anglican
South Nottinghamshire
Membership
Baptism
Religious Census
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29278/