place

Unitarian Meeting House, Ipswich

English church stubsGrade I listed churches in IpswichSuffolk building and structure stubsUnitarian chapels in England
Unitarian Meeting House North
Unitarian Meeting House North

For the church building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright see Unitarian Meeting House (Madison, Wisconsin) Unitarian Meeting House is a Grade I listed place of worship in Ipswich, Suffolk. It is a member of the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches, the umbrella organisation for British Unitarians. The present building was opened by John Fairfax in 1700. Much of the original interior remains intact.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Unitarian Meeting House, Ipswich (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Unitarian Meeting House, Ipswich
Friars Street,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Unitarian Meeting House, IpswichContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.05564 ° E 1.15186 °
placeShow on map

Address

The Unitarian Meeting House

Friars Street
IP1 1PS , Stoke
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
unitarianipswich.com

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q7887197)
linkOpenStreetMap (105069177)

Unitarian Meeting House North
Unitarian Meeting House North
Share experience

Nearby Places

Falcon Inn, Ipswich

The Falcon Inn is a public house located at the junction of Queen Street and Falcon Street in Ipswich Suffolk. Located at 1 Falcon street it was owned by the Falcon Brewery located next door at 5 Falcon Street. References to the Falcon go back to August 1728 when the Ipswich Journal announced a shooting competition at "the sign of the Falcon" in St Nicholas Parish, Ipswich. During the eighteenth century, John Curtis has been identified as running the pub, moving there from the Cock and Pye, Ipswich in 1743. He died the next year and John Osborn took over. From at least 1816 it was owned by a succession of three people called Robert Bowman. By 1855 by Alfred Bowman was in charge, and he sold the business by auction in that year. By 1865 it was owned by Bridges and Cuthbert, who established a company that also acquired the Cross Keys Brewery, Culver St, Colchester, but went bankrupt in 1868. It passed into the hands of the Norfolk & Suffolk Brewery Co Ltd in 1886, which was then renamed the Colchester Brewing Company the next year, at which time the Falcon Brewery was closed. The pub then started selling Ind Coope products and was run by the pubs group Punch. In 2010 the Falcon Inn became known as "Bowmans Bar and Lounge". However, this closed due to bankruptcy in 2017. The pub reopened in 2018, once again as the Falcon. The pub had an attached music hall where the Ipswich Industrial Co-operative Society was founded on 3 March 1868.