
Zion Church Hall was previously a Congregational Chapel built after a campaign led
by Thomas Humphries who was Collier Manager at Frog Lane coal mine. He compiled an
Address that went to influential people, pleading for a chapel for the inhabitants,
many being employed in hatting and collieries. His Circular Address reads: -
The Bristol Congregational Union provided lay-
Meanwhile George Pocock was conducting a lively “Tent Methodist Mission -
The inspired ministry of Rev William Mends Howell made it necessary to provide a larger building so in 1873 the current Zion Chapel opened at cost £1558, though sadly the Minister died aged 34yr prior to its completion. This new chapel had seating for 200 with walls of rubble pennant sandstone and limestone coins & dressings.
Parish Councils came into being in 1894, since prior to this the Anglican priest and churchwardens managed civil affairs at the Parish vestry. In Frampton Cotterell the first elected Parish Council had Rev Peter Grant, minister of Zion, as Chairman with 5 Congregationalists, 3 Methodists and one Episcopalian, while the Rector himself was not elected.
After the 2nd World War an explosion of housing estates changed Frampton Cotterell
from self-
In 1989 attached cottages that once housed a caretaker was demolished and replaced by a new building with meeting rooms and offices. The Church Hall was extensively refurbished in 2004 to provide access for disabled people with upgraded kitchen and toilets. Zion Graveyard is accessed along Upper Chapel Lane holds over 300 interments but filled by 1940s. Invasive weeds made it unsightly and dangerous so following publicity the Church Authorities removed gravestones in 1985 to convert this to a garden of remembrance, while headstones were fixed along the west boundary wall.
“The neighbourhood is enveloped in gross darkness, infidelity and iniquity.
These people are poor and foolish and do not know the Way of the Lord”.
No these are not the words of our present pastor rather that of Thomas Humphries