Methodism has a very long history in Stewkley, both the "Wesleyan and Prim strands" had a chapel in the village at one time.
The picture below is of the present building, dated 1903.
Early Years
Prior to 1839 house groups were meeting
and in 1839 a Wesleyan Methodist Chapel was built which is now 57/57a
High Street North, Stewkley.
In 1839 this was moved to Chapel Square and in 1873 the Sunday School opposite
was built. These are both now private houses.
In the south of the village the first Primitive Methodist Chapel was built in 1839 at No.1 Orchard Lane (then
known as Chapel Lane).
A plaque on the house records this fact.
When this Chapel became too small, although the congregation had little
money, they acquired the site of the present Methodist Chapel and Sunday
School in High Street South, Stewkley.
As time passed they despaired of
raising enough money to build a new place of worship, so, after praying for
guidance, they sent two members to ask the owner of the house next door to
the site to buy it ( he was known to be interested ). He was not at home and,
when the emissaries reported this to the meeting, it was decided that the
"message of God" was to build the Chapel and Sunday School and,
later, the Manse next door.
Sacrificial giving and working made this possible, and it was completed in 1903.
The "Prim" Chapel in the south of the village
(including the pipe organ) cost about £3,000 and the Sunday School about £2,000.
The original coloured leaded-light windows remain. (and have been completed renovated.)
The Chapel has always had its own minister. The first was appointed in 1902
and he looked after a Circuit of five other Chapels in neighbouring villages.
In 1932 the Act of Union between the Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist Churches took place, which ultimately resulted in the closure of the "north" / "central"
Wesleyan chapel, the two Stewkley Chapels amalgamated, forming one methodist congregation.
During the sixties the Stewkley Circuit joined with the Leighton Buzzard Circuit, with two ministers running
the Leighton Buzzard Circuit.
In 1996 a large porch was added, built in a sympathetic style to the rest of the listed building, it is now titled High Street Methodist Church, Stewkley.
Stewkley has now transferred to the Aylesbury Circuit.