Find a church

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

St Mary

North Aston, Oxfordshire | OX25 6JA

We have supported this church

St Cwyfan

Llangwyfan, Anglesey | LL63 5YR

It may seem an odd and perilous place to build a church, but St Cwyfan's originally stood at the end of a peninsula between two bays, as shown on John Speed's map of Anglesey from 1636.

St Margaret

Swinton, Yorkshire | S64 8EG

The first place of worship in Swinton was a Norman chapel of ease to Wath church, dedicated to St Mary Magdalene.

All Saints

Sutton Bassett, Northamptonshire | LE16 8HP

A small stone church of Norman origins on the village green.

St Mary the Virgin

Fairford, Gloucestershire | GL7 4AF

Fairford's magnificent 'wool' church, rebuilt in the 1490s' and hardly altered since then, deserves a place in any roll call of fine Cotswold churches.

St Peulan

Llanbeulan, Anglesey | LL63 5UR

St Peulan is medieval in origin, and stands in isolation at the end of its raised, grassed, causeway, which turns off the road signposted to Dolbaen.

All Saints

Braybrooke, Northamptonshire | LE16 8LW

A Norman church largely rebuilt in the 14th century and has a Norman font with intertwined monsters, fish and seemingly incongruously a cross.

St Peter

Letwell, Yorkshire | S81 8DE

Although there has been a church on this site for over 600 years, the building has been altered several times and what you see today is essentially a 14th century tower with a Victorian nave and apse.

St Tysul

Llandysul, Ceredigion | SA44 4QS

A church building dedicated to local Saint Tysul, who was related to St David, and after whom the town Llandysul is named; Llan means 'church of' or 'sacred place'.

We have supported this church

Holy Cross

Ashton Keynes, Wiltshire | SN6 6QR

The Grade I church is a mixture of styles from Norman to Perpendicular.