Find a church

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

St Botolph

Chapel Brampton, Northamptonshire | NN6 8BN

We have supported this church

St Botolph

Church Brampton, Northamptonshire | NN6 8AT

St Botolph's welcomes you and we are open daily for private prayer and admiration of its beauty.

Gloucester Cathedral

Gloucester, Gloucestershire | GL1 2LX

Gloucester Cathedral has been a place of Christian worship continuously for over 1,300 years: our vision is to seek to be 'in tune with heaven and in touch with daily life'.

St Andrew

Old, Northamptonshire | NN6 9QZ

We have supported this church

St Mary

Huggate, Yorkshire | YO42 1YE

A Grade I Listed medieval building and unique for the Yorkshire High Wolds, it has an imposing spire which can be seen for miles around.

St Leonard

Cleator, Cumbria | CA23 3DD

We have supported this church

All Saints

Wragby, Lincolnshire | LN8 5RA

The first noticeable feature about All Saints is its position in the town, you see that this church does not face east.

St Brynach

Llanfrynach, Glamorgan | LD3 7AZ

Medieval wall paintings and tomb carvings in a church which has completely escaped modernisation.

St Michael & St James

Church Stowe, Northamptonshire | NN7 4SG

St Michael’s church is in the parish of Stowe Nine Churches, originally simply Stowe meaning ‘Christian Holy Place’.

We have supported this church

St Mary

Ennerdale Bridge, Cumbria | CA23 3AR

Located within the Lake District National Park, first stop on the popular Coast to Coast walk, St Mary’s is beside the River Ehen, close to the two pubs and a tearoom and shop; the old churchyard has associations with William Wordsworth.

Wragby Methodist Church

Wragby, Lincolnshire | LN8 5PL

Wragby Methodist Church celebrated its centenary in 1994, but is the third chapel on this site.

St John the Divine

Southrey, Lincolnshire | LN3 5TA

This small village church was built as a temporary structure in 1898 by the villagers and the local carpenter Richard Turner, standing on a concrete base with stones from Bardney Abbey in its foundations.