A house occupied by Samuel Martimer (Mortimer) was certified for Independent meetings in 1792 and his group may have been the forerunners of this chapel. There was certainly a small congregation meeting in a room at the White Hart Inn (now the Toll Gate) in 1800 and by 1810 Mr T. Stratton was working to establish a non-conformist chapel. This had been built, due to his efforts, by 1813 for Evangelical ministers at a cost of £220. From 1816 it was known as the Independent Chapel. The chapel was enlarged in 1846, at a cost of £330, and from then onwards the ground floor was used for a Day School and a Sunday School and the upper floor for church meetings. From 1859 it was known as the Congregational Church and the Beaven family of tanners, the largest local employers, were staunch members. In 1878 the church took over the running of the South Wraxall chapel, which was then served by the Holt minister.