
Central Hall, Clarence Street published courtesy of Local Studies, Swindon Central Library.
Rev John Whitehead Spargo was born in 1875, the eldest son of Samuel Spargo, a joiner, and his wife Maria Ann. He married Isabella Maud Walford in 1904 and the couple had three children, one of whom died in infancy. At the time of the 1911 census Pastor Spargo was working as a Wesleyan Methodist Missioner in Reading. By 1917 he had moved to a post at the Central Mission Hall in Clarence Street, Swindon.
Pastor Spargo’s name appears frequently in the Radnor Street Cemetery burial registers during his seven year ministry in Swindon. In 1919 he conducted the funeral of Frederick Cosway 14, Frederick Rawlinson 14 and Stanley Palmer 13, three boys killed in an explosion at the Chiseldon Military Camp.
A Popular Pastor
Mr Spargo Leaves Swindon Brotherhood
After seven years’ work in Swindon as missioner to the Central Mission, Pastor Spargo has left to take up his duties in a new sphere of work at Finsbury Park, London. He gave his farewell address at the Brotherhood on Sunday.
Speaking to a large audience, Pastor Spargo said he was sorry that his long connection with the Swindon Brotherhood was coming to an end. He was grateful to have had the opportunity of being connected with the various societies and organisations identified with the Swindon Brotherhood. If there had ever been a cry for help and need in Swindon, the Brotherhood always heard and responded to that cry.
The Pastor took as the subject of his address, “God’s Fellow Workers.” He remarked that as members of the Brotherhood it was their high privilege to labour for Jesus Christ and to promote the principles laid down by Him. It was a mistake to think that everlasting happiness meant contentment and rest, for there could be no happiness without work.
In his opinion, lasting happiness would be having a vocation, and understand work in the right spirit. All the great men of the past had been people with great tasks, and the glorious heroes of the faith had been men and women with something to do.
But before the Brotherhood as a movement could get to work, the individual member must himself work, and before they could bring repentant sinners to Jesus Christ they themselves must first come repentant to God. He (the speaker) believed that Christ came into the world to pardon sin, but that belief was not one iota of good to him or to any-one else unless he possessed a practical experience of that belief.
Brotherhood’s Work
Continuing, Pastor Spargo said that he did not believe the world of to-day was in the state which God meant it to be, for He could not be satisfied with a world in which there was so much sin abounding. There was, then, a glorious work before the Brotherhood, although it might not be a romantic work. But every man in the Brotherhood could help to make Swindon a better town with the help of God, for if God made a man, then surely He could use him, although he might possess but one single talent. The speaker concluded by saying that if they of the Brotherhood could but appreciate the height, the depth, the strength and the glory of God, then they could make this world a place in which it would be more difficult to do evil, and more easy to follow the right.
Pastor Spargo was then presented with a cheque for £5 on behalf of the Brotherhood Committee by Mr Cotsell, and with a further £5 which had been given by private subscription as tokens of the great esteem in which the missioner was held by all members of the Brotherhood.
In presenting the gifts, Mr. Cotsell said that Pastor Spargo’s presence created an atmosphere, and he always felt that something was missing when the pastor was not on the platform. He expressed his heartfelt gratitude to the retiring missioner for all the work which he had done for the Swindon Brotherhood.
There was a crowded congregation at the evening meeting at the Mission, when Pastor Spargo delivered his farewell address on “God’s way of working” to a company numbering over a thousand.
North Wilts Herald, Friday, August 22, 1924.

Although Rev Spargo left Swindon in 1924, he retained his connection with the congregation at the Central Mission Hall, particularly with the Tydeman family and in 1935 he returned to conduct the funeral of Sarah Tydeman.
Rev John Whitehead Spargo died in 1960 in Ware, Hertfordshire.