Temple Street Methodist Church (1846) is indeed a temple celebrating the growth of Wesleyan Methodism in Keighley in the former West Riding of Yorkshire.
There had been Methodists in the town for just over a hundred years by the time it was built. A journeyman shoemaker called John Wilkinson formed a small group to meet in his cottage for worship in 1742.
The tiny congregation rapidly grew to over a hundred, and John Wesley (1703-1791) made his first visit to the town in 1746. He returned in 1753, 1759 and 1772. On his last visit, in April 1774, he preached to “our old, upright, loving brethren at Keighley”.
The first purpose-built preaching house opened in 1754 and was enlarged in 1764 and 1777. It was superseded by the Eden Chapel in 1811, which became a Sunday School when the Temple Street chapel opened, designed to accommodate 1,600 people, in 1846.
At that time the façade looked out across an open space to North Street, the main road, but later its façade was hemmed in by the buildings of Russell Chambers.
This was not the only Methodist presence in Keighley. The Primitive Methodists began a mission in 1821 and eventually extended to three circuits, and the Wesleyan Protestant Methodists built their Gothic church with its 125-foot spire, the tallest in the town, in c1863. These were only the most prominent among a scattering of little chapels across the locality.
My friend John who grew up in Haworth in the 1960s remembers Temple Street for the Keighley Grammar School Founder’s Day services and the annual performances of Messiah which, in the local tradition, were in two parts, afternoon and evening, with community hymn-singing in between. The Messiah events involved choirs of up to three hundred. Sometimes extra chairs were needed to seat the congregation.
In a surprisingly short time at the end of the 1960s there followed a rapid decline, as the Christian population moved to the outlying suburbs and villages and an Asian population replaced them. The Methodist congregation formed an ecumenical partnership with the parish church of St Andrew and the chapel was sold to the Borough Council for an intended redevelopment plan that was promptly abandoned when Keighley was transferred to the City of Bradford Metropolitan District in 1974. In that year the Temple Street Chapel was listed Grade II.
The war-memorial stained-glass windows were transferred to the museum at nearby Cliffe Castle and the magnificent Foster & Andrews organ seems to have disappeared, as fine organs did and sometimes still do.
The oak war-memorial board also disappeared, but was reclaimed in remarkable circumstances in 2015: Temple Street | Men of Worth.
Temple Street was sold in 1978 and became the Shahjalal Mosque, and remains after all a place of worship.