Tin tabernacle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Tin tabernacle" is common name for church and related buildings made of corrugated iron, formerly built in Great Britain and elsewhere. Many designs were available in kit form, and could be highly decorated. These buildings were often established as mission halls or temporary shelter for new congregations. Very often, if a congregation prospered and was able to build an edifice of brick, stone, or some other material, the tin tablernacle would be destroyed, removed, or converted to some other purpose. Rusting makes the maintenance of tin tablernacles difficult.
Relatively few tin tabernacles survive as places of worship today, and some that do have been made listed buildings.
[edit] External links
- Tin Tabernacles
- Tin Tabernacles Churches, Chapels & Mission Halls in Britain book promotion website with current historical photographs
- "Unholy row over tin tabernacle" BBC News, 27 October 2001
- Unitarian Chapel, Bedfield, Suffolk. In use, 1895 construction
- Short story of 3 Iron Churches