| Event | Date |
|---|---|
| Funeral Service for Frank Blake | 08/09/2010 - 12:30pm |
| Inaugural Daytime Housegroup Meeting | 09/09/2010 - 9:30am |
| ‘Heirlooms & Mementoes’ at Monday Club | 13/09/2010 - 8:00pm |
| KMC Ramblers next ramble | 15/09/2010 - 10:15am |
| Knutsford Lions Concert at KMC | 17/09/2010 - 7:30pm |
| Nigel Ogden Organ Concert at KMC | 01/10/2010 - 7:30pm |
History
Knutsford Royal May Day
KMC has a long tradition of supporting Knutsford Royal May Day, one of the great traditional street festivals of England.
Though May Day has its roots in pagan festivals, and celebrations were banned by Cromwell in 1644, The Knutsford festival was revived by Rev. Robert Clowes in 1864, and gained Royal approval in 1887 with the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales.
History - The Manse
Although the first resident Minister was appointed in 1864 it was not until some twenty four years later that an actual residence, or Manse, was provided by the Chapel.
History - A Good Soldier and a Fine Character
By John Mills
Whilst touring the First World War battlefields of the Ypres Salient in Belgium this summer I visited the graves of Frederick Keens and William Clayton, two soldiers named on our war memorial who were killed in the fighting near Ypres in 1915.
History - The World Wars
The North wall of the church carries a War memorial (Roll of Honour) presented by Mr E. H. Rooks, Sunday School Superintendent.
History - Special Events
The Knutsford Methodists could be proud of their record during the first fifty years of the new Chapel, and, at the Jubilee held on 14th June, 1914, this was warmly and thankfully acknowledged in the celebrations. The Rev. W. H. H. Kelshaw, who was born in Knutsford but was a Minister in London, preached at 11.00 a.m. and 6.30 p.m.
History - Circuit Membership
Before the chapel was built the growing body of Knutsford Methodists had established an association with the Northwich Circuit, and this association continued for a further eleven years after the opening. Then, in 1807, by which time the Chapel had become a notable entity in its own right, the affiliation transferred to the Macclesfield Circuit.
History - The building to the present day
The style of the Chapel is Early English Gothic, built to a rectangular floor plan, 63 ft. by 37 ft. (19.4m x 11.4m). In the original-arrangement (still evident in the gallery at the west end), one aisle on each side divided the seating into three blocks of open pews, with inclined backs and book-rests.
Englesea Brook Chapel Museum
Mow Cop, just over the border in Staffordshire, got its place in history as the site where the Primitive Methodist movement started. The two founders of the movement - Hugh Bourne (1772-1852) and William Clowes (1780-1851) - described the residents of the area as a bunch of godless people as you could not walk the area without physical or verbal assault.


