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The German Lutheran, Hull, Yorkshire

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The German Lutheran, Hull

The German Lutheran, Hull
46. NILE STREET. Trinity Independent chapel. Built 1827 and used by the Independents until 1842. It was then used by Baptists 1845-7, and Primitive Methodists 1847-9, before becoming St. Luke's Anglican Church fora period in 1856. Then in 1858 it was acquired by the German Lutherans. By 1910 the building was too small to accommodate an expanding congregation. It was demolished and a new church, designed by Oswald Hillerns, was constructed at a cost of £1,577 in a simplified Gothic style. The first service was held on the 22 March 1911. On the outbreak of the Great War services ceased and the building passed into the care of the Osborne Mission. It reopened on a restricted basis on 22 June 1933, but it was not until 4 July 1935 that the Lutherans regained full possession of the building. During the Second World War the church again closed, being used by Clover Dairies until mid 1948. Services recommenced on 19 June 1949. The church was compulsorily purchased and demolished in the mid 1960s to make way for the construction of the South Orbital Road. The site now lies under the Mytongate roundabout. [The Lost Churches and Chapels of Hull]

Picture and text by Courtesy of David Neave from the book "The Lost Churches and Chapels of Hull, 1991"
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The German Lutheran is located at OS Grid Ref. TA0932228410

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