Find a church

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

St Matthew

Normanton, Leicestershire | LE15 8RP

Fairy tale church almost lost forever under the waves of Rutland Water.

St Michael

Stoney Stanton, Leicestershire | LE9 4TH

St Michael's is a village church which reflects the changes in church style which have occurred over the last 800 years, from the 11th century carving over the vestry entrance.

We have supported this church

St Mary

Whaplode, Lincolnshire | PE12 6TA

As at Long Sutton, the tower here almost stands aside from the main body of the church.

St Mary the Virgin

Edith Weston, Rutland | LE15 8EY

The long history of St Mary's opened a new chapter during the construction of Rutland Water when it became linked with the neighbouring church of St Matthew.

All Saints

Claverley, Shropshire | WV5 7DS

The church has pride of place in this historic hilltop village, making a photogenic composition with the black and white houses around it.

John Hughes Memorial Chapel

Pontrobert, Powys | SY22 6JA

John Hughes, the famous Methodist minister, preached and lived at the chapel until his death in 1854.

Cosby Methodist Church

Cosby, Leicestershire | LE9 1RN

Set in a picturesque village, a Methodist Church built in 1922 to replace a Primitive Methodist Chapel founded in 1886.

Friends Meeting House

Dolobran, Powys | SY22 6HU

Hidden among trees, and reached by track and footpath, this tiny meeting house is hard to find and reach.

St Michael and the Holy Angels

West Bromwich, West Midlands | B70 8AQ

This Grade II listed building is the oldest church in the centre of West Bromwich.

We have supported this church

Grey Abbey

Greyabbey, County Down | BT22 2NQ

Along with Inch Abbey, Greyabbey is the best example of Anglo-Norman Cistercian architecture in Ulster and was the daughter house of Holm Cultram in Cumbria.

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 Dwynwen

Llanddwyn Island, Anglesey | LL61 6SG

Llanddwyn Island (Ynys Llanddwyn) is a magical place.