What did John Wesley and Susanna Annesley black plaque do at Tabernacle Street?

Tabernacle Street

The Story

# The Foundery: Wesley's Most Sacred Ground Standing on Tabernacle Street, you're positioned at one of Methodism's most poignant crossroads—mere yards from where The Foundery once stood as John Wesley's beating heart from 1750 to 1778, a converted cannon foundry transformed into headquarters that would reshape religious life across Britain. This was more than an administrative office; it housed the first Methodist book room, making it the publishing nerve center where Wesley's prolific writings and theological vision were produced and distributed to fuel the movement's explosive growth. Yet the location carries even deeper emotional weight: it was here, within these walls, that Susanna Annesley Wesley—the formidable matriarch whose disciplined faith and intellectual rigor had shaped her son's entire spiritual framework—died on July 30th, 1742, just as her life's work through John was beginning to transform Christianity itself. For Wesley, losing his mother at The Foundery meant that his most important sanctuary would forever hold both the practical machinery of his mission and the ghost of the woman who had made it all possible, binding this address eternally to the very soul of Methodist conviction.

Location

Tabernacle Street

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