Bishop Asbury Cottage | |
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General information | |
Type | Cottage |
Address | Newton Road, Great Barr, Sandwell, West Midlands, England |
Coordinates | 52°32′35″N 1°57′18″W / 52.543101°N 1.955008°WCoordinates: 52°32′35″N 1°57′18″W / 52.543101°N 1.955008°W |
Construction started | c. 1700 |
Owner | Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council |
Designations | Grade II listed |
Website | |
Sandwell MBC Microsite |
Bishop Asbury Cottage (grid reference SP 03150 93920) is a 17th-century cottage on Newton Road, Great Barr, England, known for being the boyhood home of Francis Asbury (1745 – 1816), one of the first two bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church (now The United Methodist Church) in the United States. It is now a museum in his memory.
The single-storey cottage, then in Staffordshire, was built c. 1700 from brick. It has an attic with dormer windows, tiled roof and rendered plinth.
Asbury was born in nearby Hamstead in 1745 and the family moved to the cottage the next year. Asbury worshipped as a Methodist at nearby Wednesbury. He had an apprenticeship as a blacksmith before becoming a full-time preacher, at the age of 21.
He left for America in 1771, never to return. His family remained at the cottage until the death of his mother Eliza in 1802. During that time, the cottage was used for religious worship.
By the 1950s, the cottage was owned by a brewery, but had no running water and only a cesspit toilet. It was occupied by a Mrs Randles and her daughter Mrs Searle, who often showed visiting American Methodists around the building. The brewery applied for permission to demolish it, but this was refused at the behest of local councillor Mrs Parfitt, a Methodist, once its history became apparent. In around 1955, the cottage was purchased by the local council, who then rehoused the occupants.
The building was part of a terraced pair, but in 1964 the adjacent, southern, cottage was demolished when Newton Road (designated the A4041) was widened. Local legend has it that it was the demolished cottage which was the Asburys', but documentary evidence in Sandwell Museum disproves this.