The Lighted Communion Windows form a back cloth in the present Chapel to the Communion Area. Their history has been chequered and interesting. A Church was established in Immingham to serve the men of the Merchant Navy in the first World War, and through the generosity of the Fishing Vessel Owners of Grimsby these three stained glass windows were placed in that Church to the memory of those who were lost at sea through enemy action. At the close of hostilities the Church was demolished and the windows offered to the Parish Church Immingham. The offer was declined because they had not the size of window that would take the glass in its present form. For a time they disappeared from the scene and were not found until a Miss Icemonga who was Commandant in the W.R.N.S. took a holiday in France. At Dunkirk in the Mission to Seamen she recognised the windows and urged that as they had been intended as a memorial to Grimsby fishermen and seamen they should be returned to their rightful place in the vicinity of this port.
The Port Fishery Committee offered them to Capt. Smedley the Port Missioner and so they were brought back to the town at the expense of the original donors. The unveiling was performed by Lt. Commander Grant on the 22nd December 1922. At the Bethel Mission they formed three panels of a single window. When they were brought to this Chapel there was not the window space to use them as before and so they were arranged in their present position with lighting behind them. It is certain that the lighting has shown them to advantage and picked out the details that were not easily seen before. The panel on the left depicts a trawler, the one on the right a merchant vessel and the great cross window in the centre, the spirit of God in the form of a guardian angel watching over the fishing fleet. A plate beneath the centre window records the unveiling and lists the names of those who were responsible for this generous gift to the town.
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