The St Charles’ Church was built in 1816 as part of the Parish Plan.[4] This stone church was financed by the colonial government, and from 1817 the Church Missionary Society paid for a minister, a position taken up by Rev. William A. B. Johnson, nicknamed the “Apostle of Regent”.[4] He was so successful in his evangelism that soon his congregation exceeded the 500 person capacity of the church, and a gallery was added so that another 200 worshippers could be catered for.[4] However after Johnson's death in 1823, the size of the congregation became much smaller.[4]
2017 mudslide
On the morning of August 14, 2017, a large landslide killed at least 500 people after a night of heavy rains, with the death toll expected to rise.[5] The flooding occurred in the Regent Hill area of Mount Sugar Loaf, killing an estimated 500 people (some died by the landslide immediately in the middle of the night), but hundreds of others are still missing.[6] The suburb is at the brink of the Atlantic Ocean; thus, bodies floated in the shallows and drifted north towards neighboring Conakry, Guinea.[7]
References
^"National Electoral Commission"(PDF). 29 June 2013. p. 7. Archived from the original on 6 October 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2023.