In April 1693 a new meeting-house was proposed. Ground was bought on 20 June at Plungen's Meadow (now Cross Street); the building was begun on 18 July, a gallery was added as a private speculation by agreement dated 12 February 1694, and the meeting-house was opened by Newcome on 24 June 1694.[2] The "Dissenters' Meeting House" holds a special place in the growth of nonconformism within the city.
It was wrecked by a Jacobite mob during the 1715 England riots on 10 June[3] but it was rebuilt and enlarged. The building was renamed the Cross Street Chapel and became a Unitarian meeting-house c.1761.[4] It was destroyed during the Second World War Manchester Blitz in December 1940. A new building was constructed in 1959 and again in 1997.
In 2012, the chapel became the first place of worship to be granted a civil partnership licence when the law changed in England.[5]
During the construction of Manchester Metrolink's second city crossing in the City Zone, 270 bodies from what used to be the chapel's graveyard had to be exhumed and reburied in Chorlton’s Southern Cemetery. The work took place from 2014–17.[6]
The chapel
The present structure dates from 1997. The Gaskell Room of the new building houses a collection of memorabilia of novelistElizabeth Gaskell.
Notable ministry and congregation
Urban historian Harold L. Platt notes that in the Victorian period "The importance of membership in this Unitarian congregation cannot be overstated: as the fountainhead of Manchester Liberalism it exerted tremendous influence on the city and the nation for a generation."[7]
^Hotz, Mary Elizabeth (Summer 2000). ""Taught by death what life should be": Elizabeth Gaskell's representation of death in "North and South"". Studies in the Novel. 32 (2): 165–184. JSTOR29533389.(subscription required)