In 1807, an Act of Parliament sanctioned the erection of a new church. It was opposed by the three clergy of the existing parishes of Nottingham, but the land was acquired in the extra-parochial district of Standard Hill, over which none of the existing clergy had jurisdiction.[1]
Despite the failure of their opposition, the three clergy succeeded in clogging its usefulness by imposing conditions on it. It had no parish, and marriages could not be celebrated in it during its first years.
The principal backers of this new church were Thomas Hill, Edmund Wright, Richard Eaton and Benjamin Maddock.
Shortly afterwards an independent congregation started to meet in the church. They left in 1883 when they opened their own church, Park Hill Congregational Church on Derby Road.
Incumbents
1809 John Burnett Stuart
1841 John Charles Coleman
1848 Edward Bull (formerly Rector of Pentlow, Essex)
1877 John Brown[3] (formerly curate in charge of St James' Church, Boston)
The bell in the tower was cast in 1791 by Hedderley for a cotton mill in Broad Marsh.
Organ
The first organ was installed in 1815 by the builder Thomas Elliot. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register. Since the closure of the church, some of the pipes from the organ found their way into the new instrument at St. Cyprian's Church, Sneinton.
Frederick Edward Hollingshead 1901[11] - 1902[12] (formerly organist of Uttoxeter Parish Church, afterwards organist of St. Andrew's Church, Walcot, Bath then organist of St. Andrew's Church, Nottingham)
^"St James' New Vicar". Nottingham Journal. England. 4 February 1928. Retrieved 28 November 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^"Death of Mr Harrap Woodl". Market Harborough Advertiser and Midland Mail. England. 12 November 1926. Retrieved 27 November 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.