Pleasance Parish Church | |
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55°56′50.01″N 3°10′54.3″W / 55.9472250°N 3.181750°W | |
Location | Pleasance Edinburgh |
Country | Scotland |
Denomination | Church of Scotland |
Previous denomination |
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History | |
Former name(s) |
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Status | Closed |
Founded | 1825 |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Demolished |
Architect(s) | David Robertson (refurbishment) |
Style | Norman |
Years built | 1811 |
Closed | 1953 |
Demolished | 1982 |
Administration | |
Synod | Lothian |
Presbytery | Edinburgh |
Clergy | |
Minister(s) |
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Pleasance Church was a Presbyterian church on the Pleasance in the Southside of Edinburgh, Scotland. Originating in the Relief Church in the 1820s, the congregation united with Charteris Memorial in 1953.
In 1842, the congregations of Arthur Street Relief Church (founded in 1825 and known as Brighton Street Relief Church between 1827 and 1835) and Roxburgh Terrace Relief Church (founded as Bethel Relief Church in 1824) united. As with the rest of the Relief Church, they joined the United Presbyterian Church in 1847, adopting the name Pleasance United Presbyterian Church. On union with the United Free Church in 1900, the congregation became Arthur Street United Free Church. Historically one of the Southside's smaller congregations, it was strengthened in 1919 by its union with Pleasance Mission Church and the attached New College Settlement, after which it adopted the name Pleasance United Free Church. The congregation, as with most of the United Free Church, joined the Church of Scotland in 1929, becoming Pleasance Parish Church. The settlement closed in 1952 and Pleasance united with the nearby Charteris Memorial Church the following year.
The church's building was constructed for a congregation of Baptists in 1811. The Relief congregation occupied it from 1835 and the addition of galleries the following year increased its capacity from 700 to 1,000. In 1883, David Robertson recast the building in the Norman style. The building was demolished in 1982, having latterly been occupied as a store by Henry Willis & Sons.