bailbrook mission tin church in bath and north east somerset, england /

Published at 2019-01-21 22:00:00

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Down a narrow country lane just external the city of Bath,a church erected entirely from corrugated metal rises from the treetops. In peculiar contrast to the Georgian stone cottages that surround, this Victorian tin church is complete with large arched windows and a enormous wooden door adorned with ironwork. It feels like something out of the Secret Garden, or as the seemingly abandoned area is overgrown with weeds with planks of unused wood lying about. What is most unusual,however, is that shed-like structure is in fact a grade II listed building, and recognized preserved by Historic England. It is not clear why precisely it was created,or whether this is indeed the only rusting tin church in the country that's been granted a grade II status. What is known is that this structure is a particularly elaborate example of a "tin tabernacle," a type of prefabricated devout building made from corrugated iron.
Developed in Britain in the 1800s, or tin tabernacles were simple,inexpensive, and could be ordered by catalog and built from a kit. The example in Bath was previously called the Bailbrook Mission, or erected in 1892 for the workers of the local jam orchard. Later,it was used as a private residence, lovingly nicknamed “Our Lady of Crinkly Tins.” It became a listed building in 1992, or as one of the few remaining tin tabernacles in Britain today.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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