William Booth -Revival Hayle (1861)
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Address
Bay View Terrace
,
Hayle, Cornwall,
Directions
The New Connexion Methodist Church was on the corner of Bay View Terrace and Chapel Hills but it was demolished.
People Involved
William Booth
Site History
They had been invited to Hayle by a New Connexion minister and they held services in his chapel that was supposed to hold 600 people but many more crammed in each night. Catherine recalls how the people filled the chapel. ‘The first comers occupied the seats and then another row of people would stand in front of them. The aisles would be next filled, beginning at the pulpit stairs, till the whole place was literally gorged. Then the window sills would be besieged, and through the open windows another crowd outside would listen to the echoes of the songs and to such stray sentences as may reach their ears.’
It is strange that in their reports the Booths do not mention William Haslam who had left the town just seven months before the booths arrived. I am certain that Haslam ploughed the ground that the Booths planted. William spoke on Sunday morning and evening and at the evening meetings Monday to Thursday, and Catherine spoke on Sunday afternoon and Friday evening, with Saturday a rest day. From the first day the meetings were jammed. On the Sunday meetings everyone was very attentive but no one would come forward to the communion rail and it was the same on Monday night. It was obvious that many were convicted of their sin but despite repeated invitations everyone remained in their seats. Then suddenly a woman cried out and pushed her way through the crowds to the rail and she became the first of ‘a glorious harvest of souls.’
The meetings were so successful that the Booths extended their stay in
Catherine wrote, looking back on this time, ‘This unusual noise and confusion was somewhat foreign to our notions and practices. William believed strongly in everything being done ‘decently and in order.’ Indeed, I think he somewhat mistook the application of this direction.’ Catherine’s biographer writes about this time in Hayle, ‘Thirty years have elapsed and yet it is common to meet with the fruits of that revival in all quarters of the globe, and to receive letters from those who date their spiritual birth from these meetings.’