Albert Street Uniting Church


Albert Street Uniting Church is a heritage-listed Uniting church at 319 Albert Street, Brisbane City, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by George Henry Male Addison and built from 1888 to 1889 by Thomas Pearson & Sons. It was originally known as Albert Street Methodist Church and Central Methodist Mission. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.

History

First Methodist church

The first Methodist church in Brisbane, a modest brick chapel, was constructed in 1848–49 at a cost of £150, on the corner of Albert Street and Burnett Lane. Many of the bricks and stone used in its construction had come from a demolished building on the corner of Queen and Edward Streets. It was opened on 10 March 1849, with the first service conducted by a Presbyterian minister, Rev. Thomas Mowbray. The building measured 35 feet long and 18 feet wide, and could seat 150 people. A parsonage was also built in 1849 behind the church facing Burnett Lane, and originally consisted of only two rooms, with two additional rooms added later.

Second Methodist church

The first church was replaced in 1856 by a larger building. It was built by Joshua Jeays, who also built Parliament House and the first stage of Old Government House. It cost £2667, was 80 feet long by 40 feet wide, and could seat 500 people. This building had stained glass windows, some of which were transferred to the current church building. Several pews from the first building were kept, whilst additional pews were crafted for the second building. These pews are now located in the gallery of the current church building. The first service in the second building was conducted on 6 December 1856 by Rev. John Eggleston.

Third Methodist church

By the early 1880s the congregation had grown substantially and in 1884 purchased a site on the corner of Albert and Ann Streets. A competition was held for the design of a new church which was won by G H M Addison. The third church was built for a cost of by contractor Thomas Pearson & Sons. Other tradespeople included Petrie & Son, and Exton and Gough. In keeping with the importance placed on music in Methodism, a large pipe organ was installed. It was built by George Benson of Manchester for a cost of. Five foundation stones were laid by prominent congregation members on 18 August 1888. These members were John Sargent Turner, member of the Queensland Legislative Council, Sir Arthur Rutledge, member of the QLC, Frederick Thomas Brentnall, member of the QLC and former minister at Albert Street Church, Mr R. Edwards, and Mr. C. M. Foster. The church was officially opened on 8 November 1889 by Lady Alice Norman, the wife of the Governor of Queensland, Sir Henry Norman.
In the 1920s, a marble honour board was erected in the front entrance vestibule commemorating the members of the congregation who served in World War I. Additional stained glass windows were installed as memorials in 1944 and 1947. Restoration work was undertaken in 1974–75 and involved the replacement of the slate roof. Further repair work on the building has been undertaken over the years.
In 1907, the church became known as the Central Methodist Mission in recognition of its wider responsibilities as the main Methodist church in the city. The congregation has been involved in a variety of welfare activities and has developed an extensive network of accommodation and other services for aged people.
On Thursday 1 March 1928, John Gladwell Wheen, the President-General of the Methodist Church of Australasia, unveiled a memorial tablet for Henry Youngman in the church, a year after Youngman's death.
The church served as the symbolic centre of Methodism in Queensland. The Annual Conference was opened each year in the church and significant occasions for Methodists were celebrated there. With the formation of the Uniting Church in 1977, the church was renamed Albert Street Uniting Church.

Description

Albert Street Uniting Church is built of red brick with trimmings in white Oamaru limestone, now painted, and has a slate roof. It is an example of a Victorian Gothic Revival church with its cruciform plan shape, steeply pitched roof forms, the imposing spire beside the entry, and the heavy buttressing of the facades.
The entry to the church is from an open porch with three Gothic arches at the end of the nave. Similar arcades exist down the sides of the church. A single large Gothic opening with fine tracery is located above the entry porch. To the right of the entry is a tower rising to the octagonal spire which has tall dormers on four of its faces and four pinnacles at the corners of its base. The top of the spire has a wrought iron finial.
The roof on the nave also has small dormer ventilators. A side entry is to the right of the base of the tower and has a broad Gothic arch with a steeply pitched parapet topped by a Christian cross. The end of each transept has a rose window in the gable end above a pair of Gothic arched windows that in turn are above groups of smaller openings.
Internally, the nave floor slopes down towards the pulpit and the walls are rendered, with a timber boarded dado. The galleries contain tiered seating and are supported on cast iron columns with ornate capitals. The main ceiling and gallery soffits are diagonally boarded and finely carved timberwork is incorporated into the gallery railings, roof structure and furnishings.
The focus of the interior is the pulpit and organ. The pulpit is raised several metres above the floor, and reflects the importance in the Methodist tradition that was given to preaching. Above and behind the pulpit is a large decoratively painted pipe organ which reflects the value placed by Methodists on music and singing.

Heritage listing

Albert Street Uniting Church was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992 having satisfied the following criteria.
Demonstrating the evolution or pattern of Queensland's history.
  • As an excellent example of a Victorian Gothic Revival church, climatically adapted with side colonnades and front porch; and internally a good example of the major attributes of the Methodist tradition.
  • For its association with the Methodist Church in Queensland
  • As a dominant element on the corner of Albert and Ann Streets, and for its contribution to the townscape at King George Square
  • As one of the major works of the architect G H M Addison.
Demonstrating the principal characteristics of a particular class of cultural places.
  • The church is an excellent example of a Victorian Gothic Revival church, climatically adapted with side colonnades and front porch; and internally a good example of the major attributes of the Methodist tradition.
  • As one of the major works of the architect G H M Addison.
Aesthetic significance.
  • As a dominant element on the corner of Albert and Ann Streets, and for its contribution to the townscape at King George Square.
Strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons.
  • For its association with the Methodist Church in Queensland.

List of ministers

Superintendent ministers
NameImageTenureNotes
William Moore
1847–1849Conducted his first service in Brisbane on 24 October 1847 one week after arriving. Oversaw the construction of the first Albert Street church building from 1848–49. Father of Samuel Wilkinson Moore.
William Lightbody
1849–1850
John Watsford
1850–1851First Australian-born minister appointed to Queensland.
John Gane Millard
1851–1854
William Jones Killick Piddington
1855–1858Oversaw the construction of the second Albert Street church building in 1856. Later Anglican Archdeacon of Tamworth 1880–1897.
Father of William Henry Piddington and Albert Bathurst Piddington. Grandfather of Ralph Piddington and great-grandfather of Jack Piddington.
Samuel Wilkinson
1858–1861
Joseph Horner Fletcher
1861–1864President of Newington College in Sydney from 1865-87.
Father of Joseph James Fletcher and Norman Vyner Fletcher. Nephew of William George Horner. Uncle of Charles Brundson Fletcher, Michael Scott Fletcher, and Lionel B. Fletcher.
Theophilus Beazley
1864–1868
Isaac Harding
1868–1871Founded the Methodist book depot in Brisbane.
William George Taylor
1871–1874
Frederick Thomas Brentnall
1874–1877Husband of Elizabeth Brentnall née Watson.
William Alexander Wilson
1877–1879
Dr. Richard Sellors, D.D.
1879–1882President of the New South Wales and Queensland Conference of the Australasian Wesleyan Methodist Church sometime prior to March 1893.
President of the Queensland Conference of the Australasian Wesleyan Methodist Church in March 1893.
Matthew H. Parkinson
1882–1885
James Adams Nolan
1885–1888Husband of Sara Susan Nolan. Father of Howard Henry Nolan and Percy Leonard Nolan.
Henry Youngman, D.D.
1888–1891Considered "the Father of Methodism in Queensland". Oversaw the construction of the third and current Albert Street church building from 1888–89. President of the Queensland Methodist Conference in 1893, 1898, and 1907. President-General of the Methodist Church of Australasia from 1910-13.
Brother-in-law of John Laskey Woolcock.
Arthur John Webb
1892–1895
Joseph Bowes
1895–1898Son of Euphemia Bridges Bowes née Allen. Brother-in-law of Peter Board and uncle of Ruby Board.
Charles Edward James
1899–1902
Joseph Snell
1902–1906Married Violet Rabone Rutledge, a daughter of Sir Arthur Rutledge.
George Edwards Rowe, D.D., V.D.
1906–1926Established the Central Methodist Mission in 1907, which would eventually become Wesley Mission Queensland.
Died of a heart attack whilst minister at Albert Street Methodist Church.
A. Taylor1926-1927Temporarily appointed after the death of Reverend Rowe.
Harold Manuel Wheller OBE
1927–1952President-General of the Methodist Church of Australasia from 1941-45. Wheller on the Park Retirement Village in Chermside is named after him.
George Nash OBE
1952–1976Nephew-in-law of William Jolly.
Raymond Fletcher Hunt OBE
1976–1994Minister when Albert Street Methodist Church joined the new Uniting Church in Australia in 1977. Also Moderator of the Uniting Church in Queensland from 1985–1986.
Dr. William Duncan Adams
1994–2000
Dr. David Pitman AM2000–2005Also Moderator of the Uniting Church in Queensland from 1996–1999 and 2005–2008.
Lynette Burden OAM
2006–2018First female superintendent minister of Albert Street Uniting Church.
Dr. Peter Hobson
2018–2024

Congregational ministers
NameImageTenureNotes
Thomas Brassingtonc. 1889
Professor Hubert Hedley Trigge
c. 1930's
Francis Chownsc. 1958
Dr Apichart Branjerdporn
c. 1990's-2000's
Anne Hulbert?-2011
Daniel Skippen2011–2020
Melanie Wheeley
?-2024
Brian Hoole
2024-current
Amy Yang
2025-current