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Independents

(Also
known as Congregationalists)

Snow
Hill Congregational Church in the 1920s.
transcripts
of some Nonconformist registers pre-1837
are available on our website
The origins
of Independency date back to Elizabethan and Jacobean Protestant
religious dissent. More immediate origins can be found in a group
of Calvinist ministers reacting against the Laudian Church of England
of the 1630s.
They did
not believe in the authority of ministers, nor any form of national
church. Instead they were governed by their Church Meeting. They
chose their own ministers whose authority lasted only as long as
the congregation wanted it to. They collaborated with Presbyterians
culminating in the formation of the 'Happy Union' of 1691. This
actually re-awoke the fundamental differences between them and the
union did not last long.
Despite
their desire for autonomy, local chapels began to form County Unions,
the first being Bedfordshire in 1797. From 1832 the County Unions
came together nationally as the Congregational Union of England
and Wales. Most Congregational and Presbyterian Churches came together
in 1972 to form the United Reformed Church.

Click
the image to enlarge


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