Edmund Calamy the Younger, an ejected minister, gathered a congregation from 1672 at Curriers' Hall.
After his death in 1685, it moved to Jewin Street in 1692, and, expanding, under John Shower, had a purpose-built meeting-house constructed nearby in Old Jewry.
[1][2] In 1808 the meeting-house was rebuilt in Jewin Street, on a site almost opposite the one it had occupied between 1692 and 1701,[1] for Abraham Rees as minister.
The old brick meeting-house was knocked down, to make way for the "New Bank Buildings", designed by Sir John Soane.
The new Methodist tenants demolished the chapel in 1846, rebuilding it in a Gothic style in 1847.