Methodist Heritage Talks


An engraved image of John Jane preaching from the stocks.

No matter where you are in the world you can settle down in front of your computer, tablet or phone and enjoy one of our stimulating talks on subjects connected to Primitive Methodism via Zoom.

Our next talk will be in October 2025, so please keep a look out for details on this page.

Our most recent talk on 15th March marked #WomensHistoryMonth by exploring the lives of more inspiring women, many of whom could not be included in our exhibition for reasons of space. Women played an important role in Primitive Methodism, fighting for social justice and helping the movement to grow. Most, however, were denied their rightful places in Primitive Methodist history; once they were no longer needed they were pushed aside and their record in the written history is scant. Amy Wilkinson continues to return women to the narrative through this Heritage Talk, which accompanies her book Just Women, which is on sale at Englesea Brook.

All of our heritage talks are held on Zoom, starting at 11am UK time, and are free to join! (though donations are always welcome…) Zoom details for individual meetings are circulated with the publicity for each meeting.

We also have a YouTube Channel, to which we are posting previous heritage talks, appropriately edited, and to which you can subscribe.  The site went live in the Autumn of 2021 and is regularly updated with new videos, which you can see below, with the most recent first:

Just Women: the Forgotten Women of Primitive Methodism
The Methodist Tapestries Collection
The Hugh Bourne Film
Methodist Pottery And Potters
The Fate Of Fonts: The History, Symbolism And Future of Primitive Methodism’s Unique Baptismal Fonts
Elmfield College, York: A Personal Journey – York’s Primitive Methodist Training College
Winsford’s Inspector of Nuisances: the Development of a “Vile Town’s” Infrastructure, 1890-1930
Sir George Edwards: Farmworkers’ Leader, MP and Primitive Methodist
Root & Branch: How 5 Shillings, Faith and Belief Inspired the Beginning of Today’s Probation Service
Celebrating Black Methodists in Contemporary British Experience: Strategy, Success and Struggles
Social Service as a Prime Focus for Methodist Mission in Late Victorian and Edwardian Britain
Primitive Methodism in Upper Airedale
Primitive Methodism in Upper Airedale
“Understandest Thou What Thou Readest?” Reason and Romance in PM Law and Polity
Nature’s Pulpit: the Role of Outdoor Worship in Primitive Methodism
The Graveyard Slot: Methodist Burial Before 1880
10 Years Of The “My Primitive Methodists” Website
The Life and Work of Joseph Arch
An Introduction to Hugh Bourne and Primitive Methodism
Early Quaker Vision: Similarities and Differences Between the Quaker and Methodist Traditions
Survival of the Fittest: The “Extinction” of Female Preaching in the 19th Century
Dispelling the Myths: Church and Faith in the Great War
Women, Preachers, Methodists
Primitive Methodism in Nigeria
Legacies of Primtive Methodist Missionaries at Bioko Island
Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: Then and Now