real time web analytics
Report - - Loxley Chapel, Sheffield, South Yorks, March 2017 | Other Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Loxley Chapel, Sheffield, South Yorks, March 2017

Hide this ad by donating or subscribing !

HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
1. The History
The Chapel was built in 1787 by the Rev Benjamin Greaves (the then curate of Bradfield) together with some of his associates. Shortly after its completion consecration was refused because the builders, for some unknown reason, would not install an east-facing window. It was eventually sold at auction for the princely sum of £315 and became an independent chapel. A decade later it started performing baptisms in 1799. The first officer of the Titanic, Henry Tingle Wilde was apparently christened here. Unsurprisingly, a significant number of the 240 dead from the Great Sheffield Flood of 1864 are buried in the cemetery. This includes members the Armitage family, who tragically lost twelve family members, including five children.

Here's what the chapel looked like in the later 1800's:

22500336220_41594305ff_c.jpg


Latterly the chapel became known as the Loxley United Reformed. It was a Grade II listed building and was on English Heritage at risk register as of August 1985. It closured in 1993 after the congregation had reached an unsustainable level and was bought by Hague Farming of Bradfield who also own Canon Brewery, Thornsett Lodge and the Hallam Tower Hotel (spot a trend here?). One major issue is that while the Hague’s had freehold possession, the grave plots still belong to the respective families of the dead.

Gradually deteriorating but securely sealed for a long time, the chapel became unsealed and a number of reports on urbex sites appeared. Sadly, the local pondlife got in and started smashing the place up.

This is a year or so before it was torched:

l

Things went from bad to worse when flames ripped through the church in the early hours of Wednesday August 17th last year. South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue were called out at around 3am when they dispatched three fire engines. The fire-fighters put out the flames by about 7am but by then the place was a burnt-out shell by that point.

2. The Explore
The recent fires in Belfast and Derby made me think of this place again. I’d tried to explore here a few times, but it wasn’t until November 2015 that I finally managed to get in. See the report HERE. I visited again after the fire in March 2017 and obviously didn’t deem it worth posting a report up. But given no one else has posted anything since the fire and the current state of things, thought I’d knock a retrospective report together,

Remember at the time a wave of sadness washing over me when I saw the chapel as a burnt-out wreck. How would you feel if the place that your loved ones were buried and commemorated in was burnt down by local yobbos?

3. The Pictures

A few of the overgrown graveyard first:

33609091096_a9f4cbba4f_b.jpg


33265999250_75ebd691f8_b.jpg




Oh deary me…

32833548193_2606e1a6be_b.jpg


And the old girl comes into sight:

32807043864_b999b4d643_b.jpg


32803717374_4b49ab0d56_b.jpg


32832539993_31b7f2f347_b.jpg


33646171535_5b34abe068_b.jpg


33649564245_2d6eab6e2f_b.jpg


33518819281_8e8c1c6f32_b.jpg


32805218444_8a22fa0996_b.jpg


33646096025_8b1c452aff_b.jpg


33518680611_65f182eb55_b.jpg


33647923035_74c6d47f9a_b.jpg


33518633721_487c9b35e6_b.jpg


It’s pretty grim inside:

33263454860_19a0ab3f08_b.jpg




33647698015_c3f177d806_b.jpg


And not much remains. The old iron pillars remain steadfast however:

33518386741_775f7e205d_b.jpg




Some wall plaques have been removed:

33647498875_6d766603ca_b.jpg


But this one remains in situ:

32805092354_9c7e94ab29_b.jpg


Some scorched remembrance headstones:

32833772683_ef21ed4877_b.jpg


A broken wall plaque:

33491037072_9852021681_b.jpg


Old metal piping:

33606933766_f0d90567bf_b.jpg


And a few charred beams:

33490759762_f51eabf199_b.jpg


33606887106_95aa6d39d0_b.jpg


And some bits of old metal:

33606786036_0713ebaaf9_b.jpg
 
Last edited:

Who has read this thread (Total: 151) View details

Top