Find a church

Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.

St Leonard

Hythe, Kent | CT21 5DN

St Leonard’s is a beautiful church in a beautiful place, standing high and proud above the town of Hythe, looking towards the coast of France, which can be easily seen on a clear day.

St John the Evangelist

Ickham, Kent | CT3 1QW

With a handsome broach spire and walls of flint, stone and brick, St John's is set in a large and attractive churchyard.

All Saints & St Nicholas

Icklesham, Sussex | TN36 4BH

Beautiful Grade I listed church sitting just of the 1066 path in Icklesham, East Sussex.

St Mary Magdalene

Ickleton, Cambridgeshire | CB10 1SL

The exterior of St Mary's is a pleasing, rather homely mixture of roofs and walls clustered around a central tower and spire.

St Mary the Virgin

Ide Hill, Kent | TN14 6JW

Situated in one of the highest points in Kent, our Victorian Grade II* listed church is renowned for its beautiful stained glass windows.

All Saints

Idmiston, Wiltshire | SP4 0AU

Fearsome gargoyles and medieval carvings.

St James

Idridgehay, | DE56 2SJ

St James is situated in the heart of the picturesque village of Idridgehay in Derbyshire.

St Hubert

Idsworth, Hampshire | PO8 0BA

A beautiful Grade I, Saxon-Norman church with important medieval wall paintings, set in the very attractive, natural landscape of the South Downs.

St Mary the Virgin

Iffley, Oxfordshire | OX4 4EJ

The church is one of the most spectacular Romanesque parish churches in England, its timeless rural setting does nothing to prepare you for the shock of the west front of the church and the riot of 12th century carving both outside and inside the building.

St Nicholas

Iford, Sussex | BN7 3EN

Built in 1090 Iford church is a precious survival from just after the Norman Conquest.

Holy Trinity

Ilfracombe, Devon | EX34 8EE

Holy Trinity has been a centre of worship, refuge and comfort for over a thousand years.

St Peter

Ilfracombe, Devon | EX34 9JU

St Peter’s was first conceived at the end of the 19th century as a means of accommodating the growing resident population and the influx of visitors.