Hope Chapel
5 Nearest Attraction
Hope Chapel Hill, Bristol BS8 4ND
Official website:
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Hope Chapel is home to Hope Community Church in Hotwells, Bristol, England.
It is a Grade II listed building.
The chapel was founded by Lady Henrietta Hope and Lady Glenorchy after visiting the Georgian natural hot spa resort in 1784.
1. Church of Holy Trinity -Hotwells
(0,2 mile - 4 min walking)
2. Harbourside
( Cumberland Basin / Underfall Yard )
(0,4 mile - 8 min walking)
3. Goldney Hall
(0,4 mile - 11 min walking)
(Clifton Hill side)
(0,5 mile - 12 min walking)
(0,5 mile - 12 min walking)
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Click to the postcode to check the map .
Nearest Public Toilet
Underfall Yard - Near Cafe
(Community Toilet Scheme)
Accessible
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Richie's opinion :
"The walk to the Hope Chapel is a little bit narrow and steep, but the area and the Polygon Ln are picturesque.
I did't check its building inside, but I heard the Chapel' has a welcoming, lovely community."
History
Hope Chapel is home to Hope Community Church in Hotwells, Bristol, England. It is a Grade II listed building.
The chapel was founded by Lady Henrietta Hope and Lady Glenorchy after visiting the Georgian natural hot spa resort in 1784.
Lady Hope gave £2,500 towards the cost and Lady Glenorchy agreed to have it done.
Lady Hope was ill and her friend decided to name it in her honour.
However they both died in 1786 so it was Glenorchy's executor that completed their wishes.
It is said that they decided to build it after finding that the only place of worship was up a steep hill in Clifton.
By 1851 the church had an attendance of 600 to 700 in the morning and 700 to 800 in the evening.
By the 1970s attendance was falling and by 1980 it was no longer used as a place of worship.
It then became a community centre named the 'Hope Centre', before reopening in 2000 as Hope Community Church, a Congregational Church.
Between 2006 and 2013 Bristol and Regional Archaeological Services (BaRAS) maintained a watching brief overseeing works to excavate the crypt ready for conversion into public space.
The south front has four bays with pilasters.
Within the hall there is a balcony supported on cast iron columns.
The interior includes memorials to many members of the congregation from the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
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