Active the connexion has 22 congregations in
England and "more than 30" in
Sierra Leone. A UK-registered charity provides financial help with ministers' wages and training and for Connexion schools and teaching salaries in the latter country. Of the UK churches, seven normally have full-time pastors: Eastbourne, Ely, Goring, Rosedale, St. Ives, Turners Hill and Ebley. Total regular attendance at all churches is approximately 1,000 adults and children.
Earlier churches Connexion churches were formerly active in: •
Bath, Somerset: founded in 1765, later Trinity United Reformed Church and now the
Museum of Bath Architecture •
Bodmin,
Cornwall: in January 1880 the congregation bought the "very desirable" property known as Springfield for a minister's residence. •
Brighton,
East Sussex, the first of the churches, was founded at North Street in 1761. •
East Grinstead, West Sussex: Zion Chapel founded in 1810, now the
West Street Baptist Church •
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire Portland Chapel, North Place was built at the expense of Robert Capper in 1816 for a Connexion congregation. It was later joined by and then merged with a Baptist Congregation from Golden Valley, Cheltenham. •
Fordham, Essex was active in the 19th century. •
Preston, Lancashire, founded before 1826, in Pole Street, is now closed. •
South Stoke, Oxfordshire, founded in 1820, is now a private house. •
Steyning, West Sussex:
Jarvis Hall, a Connexion church from 1835 to 1841 • St John's Free Church,
Westcott, Surrey remains as a community centre. •
Tyldesley,
Greater Manchester, founded in 1789, known as
Tyldesley Top Chapel, now belongs to a
Pentecostal congregation. •
Worcester,
Worcestershire had closed as a chapel by 1970. It is now a concert hall known as
Huntingdon Hall. • York Street,
Dublin, built in 1808 ==References==