From its founding in
Saxon times, Hastings has been a fishing town; fishermen have worked on
The Stade at
Rock-a-Nore, near the
Old Town, throughout the town's history, during times of prosperity (particularly the Middle Ages, when the industry was at its height), change (such as the 19th century, when the town was transformed into a holiday resort) and stagnation. Until the
Victorian era, when the area's good climate and seaside location were exploited for tourism, Hastings' fortunes were dependent on the success or failure of the fishing port's activities and the associated boatbuilding industry. By 1801, there were only two survivors of the original seven medieval churches in Hastings: All Saints Church and St Clement's Church. The rapid growth of the town thereafter encouraged church-building, and by the 1840s the
rectors of the two churches were considering providing a church in the heart of the fishing area to encourage fishermen and their families to attend: many worshipped infrequently or not at all, preferring to work on Sundays. Rev. J.G. Foyster, the rector of St Clement's Church, arranged for a
missionary, Tom Tanner, to base himself at Rock-a-Nore, and he commissioned architect William Gant to build a church. Gant, who had worked with architect Sir
William Tite in London, had moved to Hastings in 1852 and was primarily a house and
estate designer. His simple stone building cost £529 (£ as of ) and was built in early 1854; The church was not parished: it was instead designated as a
chapel of ease to All Saints Church. The fishing community was initially hostile to the church, and it closed during the 1870s; the selection of a popular new chaplain, Rev. Charles Dawes, re-energised it, and by the 1880s the 290-capacity building was full at every service. When World War II started, the church's strategic location on
The Stade made it attractive to the military, who
requisitioned it and turned it into an ordnance store. It suffered damage, and its future as a church was endangered when Hastings Council (into whose ownership it had passed) only offered a short-term
lease. The
Diocese of Chichester therefore closed it, and in the early 1950s it was used for general storage by fishermen and traders on the beach. ==Opening of the museum==