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The history of Methodism, and subsequently the United Church, in Newfoundland dates
back the 1765. However, early Methodists were without a minister until 1791 and a church until
1815. Until the construction of their own church, the Methodists used the Congregational church
for their services.
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© 1998 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
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In 1815 the Methodists completed a church, but a fire a year later on February 12, 1816,
destroyed it. The next church lasted until 1856 when they built a larger structure. The Great Fire
of 1892 claimed the third church. In response to the disaster, the congregation sought the advice
of English architect Elijah Hoole. They wanted him to design a distinctive church that would
rival both the nearby Roman Catholic and Anglican Cathedrals. A Romanesque Revival church
with some Gothic attributes was the product of Hoole's efforts.
While workers were building the new church, the congregation erected a "tabernacle" to
hold services. Construction began in 1894 and took two years to complete. Inspired by eleventh
and twelfth centuries Continental European Romanesque structures in Germany and Northern
Italy, Hoole combined various elements in the new structure. The church is set apart by the use
of red Accrington brick and panels of terra cotta ornaments on the building's exterior. There
were also Gothic elements such as the spire in the southeast corner, however these
were removed due to damage in 1935.
The church's interior hammerbeam roof was also Gothic inspired,
drawing on English examples from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries.
Workers completed the present day Gower Street United Church in the fall of 1896. On
October 4, Rev. Dr. John Potts, Educational Secretary the Methodist Church of Canada led
the consecration service. Also there was Rev. William Swan, ex-president of conference,
and Rev. Levi Curtis, who was the new minister of the church. Newfoundland's world
renowned opera singer Georgina ("Marie Toulinguet") Stirling also treated the congregation to
several solos.
Since its opening, the structure has undergone some secondary modifications. Both gas
and electrical lights originally provided lighting. When electricity became a more reliable source
in the 1920s, they removed the gas fixtures. In 1930 a large Casevantes pipe organ caused a
modification in the choir gallery. Stained-glass windows were also added to the building.
The Gower Street United Church became a Registered Heritage Structure in September 1995.

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