It was the United Reformed church serving the town of Weybridge in the English county of Surrey, until 2022.
The merged congregation has adopted the name St Andrew's United Reformed Church Walton and Weybridge.
The Decorated Gothic Revival church at Queen's Road, Weybridge , a cruciform building with a tall spire, was designed in 1864 by John Tarring and opened the following year.
Congregational services had commenced in the town in 1860 at the initiative of resident Benjamin Scott; the rapidly rising number of worshippers outgrew the rooms in which meetings were held, and Scott himself bought the land on which the church now stands and helped to finance its construction.
He also travelled to other parts of Surrey to preach,[2] and in 1855 he conducted services for several weeks in a hired cottage in Weybridge.
[4] "Much interest was excited" in this work, and a local resident allowed the billiard-room of his house to be converted into a meeting room which could be used for Congregational services on evenings during the week.
[8] François Baron, a convert to Congregationalism who had been active in Sunday school work and lecturing for about 20 years, had moved to Weybridge in 1863 and together with Scott was involved in the founding of the new church.
[9] Scott bought land on Queens Road,[10][note 1] and the foundation stone was laid on 4 July 1864[8] by John Remington Mills.
[15] The same arrangement was made for the chapel at Byfleet between its opening in 1902 and the appointment of a minister covering both churches two years later.
[10][17] Weybridge United Reformed Church was built in the Decorated Gothic Revival ("14th-century") style.
[18][19][20] The main material is rubble masonry dressed with ashlar; the roof, which has a steep pitch, is laid with tiles.
Benjamin Scott is commemorated by a brass plaque, and François Baron's memorial is next to the main entrance.