Wednesday, May 10, 2017

History of Low Row United Reformed Church


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History of Low Row United Reformed Church

The history of Low Row United Reformed Church has to start with Philip Lord Wharton who was born in 1613.  On the death of his grandfather in 1625 he became the fourth Lord Wharton, his own father having died when Philip was only nine years old. He inherited land, money and responsibilities, but all these were held in trust until he was 21 years old.  He entered Exeter College in Oxford at the age of 13, and later spent three years travelling on the continent of Europe with his brother Thomas and a Tutor. He was called to the Court of Charles 1 where he quickly became known for his abilities in dancing.  At the age of 19 he married.  All this before he was 21!

At the age of 21 (in 1634) he should have taken his seat in the House of Lords but could not do so because the King refused to call Parliament.  The House of Lords did not sit until 1640.  From then on Philip Lord Wharton was active in Parliamentary affairs.

In 1642 Philip Lord Wharton raised a regiment of foot and a troop of horse to fight in the Battle of Edgehill.  They behaved less than gloriously as Wharton himself reported later to Parliament. Lord Wharton not only ran away but is said to have hidden in a sawpit, thus earning for himself the parliamentary nickname of Sawpit Wharton.

In 1645 during the Commonwealth period Philip Lord Wharton wrote to Lord Fairfax concerning the vacancy in the Parish of Grinton. He inherited/owned land and property extensively in Swaledale, including Smarber Hall which had been used as a shooting lodge.

In 1690 towards the end of his life Philip Lord Wharton founded and endowed Smarber Chapel (later known as Low Row United Reformed Church). 


Smarber Chapel


Today, the foundation stone is found set into the surviving walls of the old Smarber Chapel up on the hillside above Low Row.  Philip Lord Wharton built the Chapel, appointed the first minister and endowed the church in 1690.
 
Site of the first Independent Church in Swaledale, founded by Philip Lord Wharton in 1690. The ruins of the old Smarber Chapel were on a hill above the present Church.


Joy visited the ruins of Smarber Chapel in 2007.

 
Site of the First Independent Church in Swaledale Founded by Philip Lord Wharton in the year 1690

Peter at Smarber Chapel, Low Row.  We found the ruins by walking up a track about 200 metres west of the Church, across two fields, remembering to shut the gates as we went. We saw rabbits and lots of wildflowers.

View across the dales from Smarber Chapel at Low Row was beautiful. Very green, grey stone houses and fences.  Swaledale River meandered it way below.

View from Smarbar Chapel, Low Row



John Allason wrote in 1821:
Smarber Hall Chapel was situated upon the side of a steep mountain in a central station for the accommodation of the surrounding population.  Being a large old thatched building much exposed to boisterous storms it was repeatedly unroofed and otherwise damaged particularly in 1739.  In 1759 it was nearly demolished.  The roof blown away and end wall destroyed.  A collection was made and 12 Pounds 15 shillings obtained,  In 1761 Thos Wainwright Esq of Hatton Garden, London, generously sent 50 Pounds for its enlargement and reparation.  In 1778 Mr Benn collected at Manchester 20 Pounds which was expended in rebuilding the north wall, then ruinous.  In 1810 in consequence of its ruinous and dangerous condition it was taken down and a new Chapel erected at Low Row which cost 500 Pounds – a debt of near 100 Pounds remains upon it”.

A new Chapel was built on the present site next to the main road in 1809.  The land was given by the Rev Thomas Smith, Lord of the Manor, and the building was registered or licenced in the Consistory Court of the Archdeaconry of Richmond on September 27th 1810.

The building was extensively renovated in 1874 at a cost of about 600 Pounds.  It was reopened on December 18th 1874. During 1875 some visitors to Swaledale wrote in the “Christian World Paper”:
“We noticed by the roadside a simple, substantial-looking little stone chapel, with a bell, and a much more ecclesiastical and comfortable aspect than is usual in such out of the way regions.  It has been nearly rebuilt and repewed, and now it is a model of simplicity and neatness, and we hear is well attended every Sunday.”

In the 18th century the Church was occasionally described as a Presbyterian Church but in the 19th century was clearly Congregational and a member church of the Congregational Union. In 1972 there was a national union of Congregational and Presbyterian churches to form the United Reformed Church, so the church fellowship is now United Reformed Church. 

From 1690 to our present time there has been 28 Ministers serving the Low Row area.

Rev David Simpson served from 1787 - 1807
David Simpson was born at Orwell, near Kinross in Scotland and was educated at both St Andrew’s & Edinburgh Universities before working as a domestic tutor in a nobleman’s family.  He came to England in 1780 and ministered at Eastwood near Halifax and Holcombe near Bury before coming to Swaledale on November 25th 1787.

He married Lydia Phillips who was the daughter of the Rev Daniel Phillips of Hopton, Norfolk.  The Rev Dr Nathaniel Phillips, Presbyterian Minister in Sheffield, was Lydia’s brother.

David Simpson ministered at Low Row for 20 years and died there on March 22nd 1808 aged 69 years.  He was buried at Smarber Chapel on March 25th 1808.  On his death he left 50 Pounds to pay a schoolmaster in Low Row.

Rev John Allason served from 1807 - 1835.
John Allason was born at Cotherstone, near Barnard Castle, and was educated at Homerton Academy.  He became a minister of a dissenting church in Uppingham Rutland in January 1802 and it was there that he met and married his wife Susannah Sewell on 21 February 1804 (she was 16 years at the time).  He left Uppington to come to Swaledale in 1807 as assistant to David Simpson.  After David Simpson’s death John continued as minister.  He started a day school and by 1833 there were 20 boys and 6 girls attending this school but most of the 50 Pounds left by David Simpson to pay for a schoolmaster had been spent on debts on the building.

John and Susannah Allason had eight children but tragically only three survived to mature adult life.  Susannah herself died in 1833 aged 43 years and John Allason died in 1836 at the age of 62 years. There is a monument to the Allason family on the wall of the present church.

A number of John Allason’s letters have survived showing him to have had a keen interest in, and knowledge of local dissenting church history, to have often been in poor health because of comsumption and lumbago, and to have often be seen seeking to improve his low income with applications for various grants and charities.  At the same time he generously sent gifts of grouse or cheese to his benefactors. 

Low Row United Reformed Church, built 1809. Joy & Peter Olney visited in 2007, 200 years after Joy's great great great grandfather John Allason was the minister from 1807-1836.

Interior of United Reformed Church in Low Row. Peter in the pulpit 200 years later. Memorial Plaque on the wall to remember Rev John Allason, his wife and 5 children who died between 1828 and 1836.


Rear of United Reformed Church in Low Row in 2007.



View from United Reformed Church at Low Row in 2007


Bible Charity established by Philip Lord Wharton.

Philip Lord Wharton also founded and endowed his Bible Charity in 1693, a scheme devised on a grand scale for encouraging children from poor families to read and study the scriptures. He left land near York which subsequently became known as the Bible Lands Trust.  His intention was to present Bibles to children to be their personal possession (not just for use in Sunday School or Church).  Initially Bibles were available in those parts of England where Philip Lord Wharton had lived or owned property but by the twentieth century this became expanded to include all parts of the United Kingdom.  The conditions were that the recipient had to be able to read, and to be able to recite from memory Psalms 1,15,25,37,101,113 and 145. 

Lord Wharton was a puritan and a non-conformist.  His original instructions were that the Shorter Catechism as approved by the Westminster Assembly of Divines (and still known today as the Scottish Catechism) should be distributed with the King James translation of the Bible to the recipients. Over the years the original trustees died and were replaced in the main by Anglican clergymen who misinterpreted Lord Wharton’s wishes and began including the Church of England Catechism instead of the Scottish Catechism, and by the nineteenth century the Bible and the Book of Common Prayer (sometimes in separate volumes, sometimes combined) were distributed almost exclusively through the Church of England.

However a few free church ministers (including John Boyd from Low Row in Swaledale) knew the history of the Trust and approached the Charity Commissioners for re-dress.  This was partially successful in that the Charity Commissioners decreed that the Trust should be divided into two - one half to be administered by the Church of England and the other half by the free churches.  Although at the time some free-churchmen still felt that they had been cheated it is to be remembered that Lord Wharton himself was always in favour of toleration and comprehension and so would probably not have disapproved of the present day arrangement.

Today the Trust is still alive and active and presents Bibles to under 18 year olds.  In keeping with modern educational practice the conditions now require bible study rather than too much learning by rote, and modern translations of the Bible are also available.

Many thousands have been presented through more than 300 years but it does show that the original recipients worked hard to earn their Bibles and will probably have treasured them for a lifetime.

Philip Lord Wharton died in 1696 and is buried in Woburn Parish Church, Buckinghamshire.


 
Portrait of Philip Lord Wharton by Van Dyk in 1632 at 19 years of age.


Portrait of Philip Lord Wharton by Kneller in 1685 at 72 years of age.



If you have any comments or corrections, please contact the author, Joy Olney by email:
joyolney@gmail.com