(2007), Dissent and the Gothic Revival: papers from a study day at Union Chapel, Islington, London: The Chapels Society ISBN 9780954506117
The Angel and Daniel Johnston – Live at the Union Chapel is a 2008 film of Daniel Johnston's concert performance at the Union Chapel, Islington on 12 July 2007.
The Union Chapel Concert is a live album by Guy Evans and Peter Hammill, recorded in the Union Chapel in London, 3 November 1996, and released as a double CD in March 1997.
Brighton grew rapidly, from its original fishing village status to a fashionable town and seaside resort, from the second half of the 18th century, helped by royal patronage, local doctor Richard Russell's advocacy of sea-bathing and seawater-drinking as a cure for various ailments, and improved transport connections to London and other places.
Soviet Union | European Union | Union Army | rugby union | Union | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Chapel Hill, North Carolina | International Telecommunication Union | trade union | Union (American Civil War) | Union Pacific Railroad | England national rugby union team | American Civil Liberties Union | Wales national rugby union team | New Zealand national rugby union team | Ireland national rugby union team | Western Union | Chapel Hill | Scotland national rugby union team | International Astronomical Union | Georgia national rugby union team | Trade union | International Union for Conservation of Nature | Border Union Railway | France national rugby union team | United States national rugby union team | South Africa national rugby union team | Communist Party of the Soviet Union | Amateur Athletic Union | Union Carbide |
In 1905, visiting Brighton, he was moved by the preaching of James Philips, pastor of the Union Street Mission.
Thus the continued use of the older burial ground of their former location at "Union Chapel" was no longer needed; it coincides with a more general trend known the rise of the cemetery movement (for a general discussion of the topic of the cemetery movement see the book Lincoln at Gettysburg by historian Garry Wills)
The manifesto was published in the New Statesman and in The Guardian's "Comment is Free" section, then was launched formally on 25 May 2006 at the Union Chapel in Islington.