The church was built between 1758 and 1776 to designs of either
William Baker or
Roger Eykyn. It was a response to population pressures resulting from the
Industrial Revolution and to the perceived threat of
Dissent and
Roman Catholicism in an area where
Anglican ministry was limited by a unique ecclesiastical structure. St John's was built as a
chapel of ease of
St Peter's Collegiate Church. The latter was a
Royal Peculiar, entirely independent of the local
Diocese of Lichfield. Its
deans and
chapter formed a
college, a corporate body within
canon law that had ecclesiastical control over a wide tract of Staffordshire in and to the north and east of Wolverhampton. The dean and chapter were absentee clergy who resented any threat, real or imagined, to their extremely lucrative monopolies: especially that on burials throughout the extensive parish and
that on pews within the town of Wolverhampton. The
deanery of Wolverhampton had been united with the far more prestigious
deanery of Windsor since the late 15th century, encouraging the deans to be absentees—a situation that applied also to most of the
prebendaries. However,
Peniston Booth, dean from 1729 to 1765, took the unusual step of establishing a home in Wolverhampton and became more susceptible to local pressure for reform. The population of Wolverhampton itself and of the towns to the east was growing rapidly as manufacturing took hold. There was a growth of
Protestant Dissent, particularly as
Methodism was preached in the town from about the middle of the 18th century: in 1761
John Wesley himself preached at an inn-yard in what he called "this furious town" of Wolverhampton.
Catholic recusancy was strong in the surrounding countryside, under the leadership of the Giffard family of
Brewood, who succeeded in building a Catholic chapel in the guise of a private house, just to the west of St. Peter's. The threat to the dominance of the
Church of England seemed urgent and Booth bowed to pressure to authorise the building of new chapels of ease at
St Thomas' Church, Wednesfield,
St Giles Church, Willenhall and
St Leonard's Church, Bilston. With considerably more persuasion, and after a major public campaign fronted by
Lord Grey, Booth finally acquiesced in the building of a new chapel of ease in Wolverhampton itself. It was authorised by an
act of Parliament, the '''''' (
28 Geo. 2. c. 34), and the fine
Neo-Classical church of St John quickly rose on a site enclosed in a square, at that time on the southern edge of the town. Initially, the building of St Johns greatly relieved pressure on space at St Peter's, but continued rapid population growth made it necessary to build two more churches very close to St John's within a few decades. (One, St Paul's, was demolished in 1960 to make way for
Wolverhampton Ring Road, and St George's was transformed into a
Sainsbury's superstore in the 1980s.) All were initially chapels of ease, dependent on St Peter's, although the circumstances of their foundation gave their
lay sponsors considerable influence, as the clergy were largely dependent on the generosity of lay benefactors for an income and for maintenance of the church building. One of these sponsors was the musical
Sir Samuel Hellier, known for the
Hellier Stradivarius; the minister at the time, Thomas Shaw, was his heir and
changed his name to Shaw-Hellier. One of his daughters, Parthenia, married the then-current minister in 1820. St John's remained a redoubt of the
high church tradition, like St Peter's itself, while the other new foundations were
low church and increasingly centres of
Evangelicalism. The Royal Peculiar was widely seen as corrupt and inefficient and was out of keeping with the reforming spirit of the 19th century. Financial reforms introduced in 1811 left the clergy of St Peter's better-paid but still dependent on St John's and the other chapels for a large part of their income in fees. Section 21 decreed that the Wolverhampton deanery should be suppressed, along with those of
Middleham,
Heytesbury and
Brecon. Section 51 restricted the rights of any appointees to positions within the colleges but allowed the existing deans to continue in office until their deaths. The dean,
Henry Hobart, died in 1846, triggering the abolition of the deanery. In 1848, the Wolverhampton Church Act abolished the ancient College of St Peter altogether and transferred all its assets to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. The Commissioners set up St John's and the other chapels of ease as independent
parish churches, within the Diocese of Lichfield, and gave their clergy a large and much-needed pay rise. St John's survived as a parish church in its own right until the end of the 20th century, when population shifts and financial pressures finally resulted in its absorption into the Central Wolverhampton Parish. ==Organ==