The stream of Sunday people used to separate down High Street, led by family threads, some to Bethesda others to St. Pauls.
Some time later they joined a stream again, swirling, rippling with the gossip of the day. Their duty done singing hymns, dropping pennies, offering prayers and sitting through sermons. Amen.
Prominent St. Pauls praised by Pevsner as Runcorn's most distinctive building, but Bethesda, older, iron railed, both cures for souls till their people left.
Now St. Pauls cures patients' bodies, while Bethesda harbours buses. Weekday people steam and gossip, potions purchased, journeys joined.
St. Pauls & Bethesda non-conformist chapels stood stood opposite one another. Both have since been demolished - St. Pauls by a medical centre, Bethesda by a bus station. Nicholas Pevsner wrote several architectural guides to Britain.