Tom Allan was called to his first parish of Glasgow's
North Kelvinside in 1946, an inner city area of mainly tenement buildings housing 10,000 people. Congregational membership increased from 487 to 611 in his first year. In 1947 Allan issued an invitation to
D.P. Thomson to conduct a visitation campaign in North Kelvinside. Volunteers from Seaside Mission teams and from the congregation visited all homes in the parish, speaking of faith in Christ and offering invitations to church. Thomson described the campaign in a leaflet:
Visitation Evangelism. Public attention was caught and further increased when Allan published his own reflections in
The Face of My Parish (1954) which led the
World Council of Churches to invite him to join their Commission on Evangelism. During Allan's seven year ministry, North Kelvinside's congregational membership grew towards 1,200. The emergence of a Congregational Group from all ages, sexes and backgrounds, committed to the work of evangelism, was central to Allan's ministry, offering training in prayer, bible study and application in Christian service. In
The Face of My Parish, however, Allan described the divisive impact of the 1947 campaign and its aftermath and commentators since have picked up this point. ==Broadcasts==