Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
22775
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
07/01/2000  
Date of Amendment
07/01/2000  
Name of Property
Capel Bethlehem including attached vestry block  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Swansea  
Community
Cockett  
Town
Swansea  
Locality
Fforest-fach  
Easting
262713  
Northing
196126  
Street Side
W  
Location
Set back from the A483 S of its junction with Carmarthen Road, and sited within a large burial ground.  

Description


Broad Class
Religious, Ritual and Funerary  
Period
 

History
The first chapel here was built in 1840, its mother chapel being at Mynyddbach. The present building was built in 1866, with an increased seating capacity of 650, by William Humphreys, the minister-architect who also designed Cwmbwrla Chapel and Horeb Chapel in Loughor. Humphreys was minister at Bethlehem from 1851 to 1868. The attached vestry was a later addition.  

Exterior
A classical style chapel of coursed rock-faced stone and rusticated dressings, and a replaced tile roof. The 3 bay gable end front has a central bay recessed beneath a glorification arch that breaks through the cornice of a pedimented gable. The openings in the central bay have ashlar dressings, moulded capitals and keystones. A pair of round-headed doorways has double panelled doors. Above this is a pair of round-headed windows with geometrical tracery and a sill band. A tablet under the glorification arch is in white marble on 2 moulded corbels and records the date of the building in engraved letters. The outer bays have tall round-headed windows with similar tracery and sill bands. Beneath the apex is a small vented oculus. The 3-window L side wall is roughcast and has a sill band and round-headed windows. The rear has a lower gabled pebble-dashed projection housing the deacon's room. The R side wall has similar openings to the L side. Attached at the rear is a low wing behind the later vestry and school room, which is T-shaped in plan and built of snecked rock-faced stone with tile roof. Its gable-end front has a central doorway within the shadow of a former gabled porch. A pair of round-headed windows are beneath the apex. Round-headed windows to the L and R are blocked, as are those of the side walls.  

Interior
The entrance vestibule has 2 round-headed windows with coloured glass, and a central dividing wall with an arched opening. The doorways, including doorways to the stairs R and L, have overlights and panelled doors. The main chapel has a moulded cornice and a boarded panel ceiling with a central large ceiling rose. A fine 4-sided raked gallery, lower at the rear end behind the pulpit, is carried on tapering cast iron columns with stylised leaf capitals. The ornate fretwork gallery front incorporates a frieze of S-shaped scrolls. Behind the pulpit is a moulded 4-centred arch over a recess housing the organ. The present organ was inserted in 1930. The pulpit, added mid C20, has blind round-arch panels and is flanked by steps with square moulded newels and turned balusters. The set fawr has a panelled dado, cast iron panels with scrolls and foliage. The walls are of scribed plaster. The main floor is ramped and the original seating is retained, with numbered pews and moulded pew ends with rounded tops.  

Reason for designation
Listed for its architectural interest as a large mid C19 chapel retaining fine interior detail including a 4-sided gallery characteristic of the area.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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