Gurdwara Sahib Woolwich
Historical

Gurdwara Sahib Woolwich

The Gurdwara Sahib Woolwich is a Sikh gurdwara in central Woolwich in the Royal Borough of Greenwich, South East London. It was built in 1814–16 as a Methodist church and converted into a Sikh place of worship in the late 1970s. The main hall is Grade II-listed; the former Soldier's Institute and Sunday School next door, now in use as a langar hall, is not.

Architecture

## The buildings The Woolwich Sahib Gurdwara consists of two buildings: the former Wesleyan church hall of 1816, now a gurdwara, and the former Soldier's Institute and Sunday School of 1890, now in use as a langar. The site is partly surrounded by a brick wall with fences, some of which are decorated with Sikh symbols. On the south-west corner of the premises a tall, ornamented flagpole has been placed with a Nishan Sahib, the Sikh triangular flag. ## = The main building = The main church hall was finished in 1816 and is a Grade II-listed building since 1973 (English Heritage Building ID: 200246). The architect is not known, although it is likely to have been designed by the Rev. William Jenkins, who is responsible for at least eleven Methodist chapels in the early 1800s, all clearly inspired by Wesley's Chapel of 1778 in City Road. The Woolwich chapel was an enlarged version of the Wesleyan chapel in Rochester, Kent, a Jenkins design. It measures 16 by 22 m (52x71 ft). The Wellington Street façade has five bays and two floors with nine round-headed windows. The centrally placed main entrance is accentuated by a prostyle portico. The three central bays project slightly and are crowned by a pediment. On the parapet below the pediment a stone plaque with the inscription The Methodist Chapel, 1816 is now covered up by a wooden sign with the text ਗੁਰਦੁਆਰਾ ਸਾਹਿਬ ਵੂਲਿਚ - Gurdwara Sahib Woolwich. The west and east walls are plain brick with ten windows each. At the north end of the building is a small apse and the former vestry. The plainness of the interior of this type of Methodist chapel with its flat ceiling has been described as barn-like. In the main seating on the ground floor rows of pews faced the pulpit. Additional seating areas were created on the galleries situated around a large oval opening through which the pulpit could be seen. Unusual in a Methodist church of this type is the presence of burial vaults underneath, "in case another Death should happen in the Preacher's family". The two main floors of the building are currently used as Darbar Sahib Halls, the lower and upper prayer hall, containing the Guru Granth Sahib, the holy scriptures. The main alterations for Sikh worship have been the removal of the pews and the insertion of a fixed floor where the galleries had been. ## = The annex building = The annex building was built in 1889–90 after a design by local architect Walter Whincop. It is described in Volume 44 of the Survey of London as "the last of a locally distinctive type to survive in Woolwich". Unlike the adjacent church hall it is not a listed building. The main façade on Calderwood Street, now painted white, consists of three bays and three storeys (including the basement). It is flanked by two single-storey porches. The western entrance was for the children attending Sunday school, the eastern entrance was for the soldiers. The original west doors were replaced by ornamental doors of wood and bronze made in Rajasthan. In the basement were baths and a café for the military men, on the ground floor their reading room and a meeting room, on the top floor was the Sunday school. The building's main use currently is that of a langar hall (a communal refectory serving vegetarian food) with a kitchen. On the top floor are meeting rooms, a library, Granthi quarters and offices. The basement is used for various functions and serves as a Saturday school for pupils 5–18 years old, the Guru Nanak Khalsa School Greenwich.