The Society's origins trace back to 1787, as a
nonconformist congregation, led by
Elhanan Winchester, rebelling against the doctrine of
eternal damnation. The congregation, known as the
Philadelphians or
Universalists, secured their first home at Parliament Court Chapel on the eastern edge of London on 14 February 1793.
William Johnson Fox became minister of the congregation in 1817. By 1821 Fox's congregation had decided to build a new place of worship, and issued a call for "subscriptions for a new Unitarian chapel, South Place, Finsbury". File:South Place Chapel postcard.jpg|Postcard of South Place Chapel File:Front of Interior of South Place chapel.jpg|Front of interior of South Place Chapel. File:Rear of interior of South Place Chapel.jpg|Rear of interior of South Place Chapel. File:South Place Plaque.png|Commemorative plaque describing the South Place Chapel. Subscribers (donors) included businessman and patron of the arts
Elhanan Bicknell. In 1824 the congregation built a chapel at South Place, in the
Finsbury district of
central London. The chapel was repaired by
John Wallen, of a family of London architects and builders. This chapel later became the home of South Place Ethical Society. The chapel stood on the site of what is now the office building known as 8 Finsbury Circus; the building has an entrance in South Place which bears a plaque commemorating the chapel. In 1929 they built new premises,
Conway Hall, at 37 (now numbered 25)
Red Lion Square, in nearby
Bloomsbury, on the site of a tenement, previously a factory belonging to James Perry, a pen and ink maker. Conway Hall is named after an American,
Moncure D. Conway, who led the Society from 1864 to 1885 and from 1892 to 1897, during which time it moved further away from
Unitarianism. Conway spent the break in his tenure in the United States, writing a biography of
Thomas Paine. In 1888 the name of the Society was changed from South Place Religious Society to South Place Ethical Society (SPES) under
Stanton Coit's leadership. In 1950 the SPES joined the
Ethical Union. In 1969 another name change was mooted, to The South Place Humanist Society, a discussion that sociologist Colin Campbell suggests symbolized the death of the ethical movement in England. The original name, South Place Ethical Society, was retained until 2012, when it changed to Conway Hall Ethical Society. In November 2013 Elizabeth Lutgendorff was elected Chair of the Conway Hall General Committee, becoming the youngest Chair in the society's history. On 1 August 2014 the society became a
Charitable Incorporated Organisation with a new charitable object: "The advancement of study, research and education in humanist ethical principles". This replaced the previous object: "The study and dissemination of ethical principles and the cultivation of a rational religious sentiment." ==Humanist ceremonies==