Bicester Congregational Church traditionally traced its foundation to the year when the Act of Uniformity came into force in 1662. A secret conventicle was established and John Troughton, a fellow ejected from St John's College, Oxford, was licensed as a Presbyterian preacher and his house as a meeting place in 1672, following the Declaration of Indulgence. He died in 1681 and one of his associates, Henry Cornish, became the first pastor of the congregation in 1690. His successor, John Troughton the younger, was responsible for building the chapel in Water Lane, later known as Chapel Street. It was licensed in 1728 and was in the hands of trustees. The congregation described itself as 'the Congregation or Society of Protestant Dissenters from the Church of England commonly called Presbyterians'. It benefited from a standing working union between Presbyterians and Independents and became a centre of importance for Nonconformists in a wide surrounding area. A Sunday school was established and held in the vestry of the church in 1794. The chapel was enlarged and licensed for the solemnisation of marriages in 1839. It was restored again and a schoolroom built in 1873. In 1940, the church joined the Congregational Union of England and Wales, while in 1972 the Congregationalists and English Presbyterians joined together and formed the United Reform Church. The congregation was then known as the Bicester United Reform Church; it closed in June 1978.
The records were given as gift in August 2005 (accession 5426), except one item (NC3/R1/2) which was deposited in February 2006 (accession 5504). They were received in a disorganised order; loose papers and correspondence were scattered among volumes or in envelopes with no given relation between each other. Appropriate series were recreated and loose papers were arranged in these series in thematic and chronological order.
References
Hollis, A H, 'Some aspects of the history of nonconformity in Bicester, Oxon' (facsimile, 1956).
Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England, Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting-Houses (London, 1986), p. 171.
Mary D. Lobel (ed.), The Victoria History of the Counties of England: a history of Oxfordshire vol. 6 (London, 1959), pp. 48-51.
Catalogued by Charline Dekens, May 2007.