A
Brief History of the Congregation and
Buildings

The congregation of
St Catherine’s Argyle came into existence in 1968 on the
union of St Catherine’s-in-Grange and Argyle Place
churches.
St
Catherine’s-in-Grange, the building currently used for
worship, was the older of the two churches opening in
1866 as Chalmers Memorial Free Church. There was,
however, a long debate stretching back to 1859 by which
time the Grange had become a favourite suburb of
Edinburgh.
The first minister
was Rev Dr Horatius Bonar, the famous hymn-writer.
The church was generally known as Grange Free and in
1900, on the union of the Free Church and the United
Presbyterian Church, it became Grange United Free
Church. On the historic union in 1929 it became St
Catherine’s-in-Grange Church of
Scotland.
Argyle Place Church
started its existence as a congregation of the United
Presbyterian Church and, throughout the unions of 1900
and 1929, it retained the name.
In 1967 the
minister of St Catherine’s-in-Grange, Rev Dr Thomas
Maxwell, then Convener of the Church of Scotland’s Church
and Nation Committee, died suddenly in the STV studios in
Glasgow leaving a vacancy. In October of that year,
the Kirk Session of Argyle Place resolved to approach St
Catherine’s with a view to union. Ultimately the
union took place in June 1968 and the Rev John Ross,
minister of Argyle Place, became the first minister of St
Catherine’s Argyle.
The Argyle Place
building was used as the place of worship and the former
St Catherine’s-in-Grange buildings were converted into
halls for community use. In March 1974 Mr Ross made
known his intention to retire at the end of
November.
In June 1974
catastrophe struck whilst the church was being
redecorated. Fire broke out completely destroying the
roof and ultimately the building had to be
destroyed. Meanwhile the congregation moved into
the halls of the former St
Catherine’s. Rev Victor Laidlaw, who
retired in 2008, came to this situation in July
1975. After long and protracted meetings and
discussions it was decided to return the former St
Catherine’s building back into a place of worship and
this was rededicated in 1979. The site of Argyle Place is
now a block of retirement
flats.
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