![](https://www.nationalchurchestrust.org/sites/default/files/styles/media_component_image_small/public/2023-09/PembrokeshireNEWPORTStMary%28christopherhiltonCC-BY-SA2.0%291.jpg?h=a32b3037&itok=7mt7jZ1Y)
St Mary
Newport, Pembrokeshire | SA42 0PH
A church visited three times by John Wesley
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Newport, Pembrokeshire | SA42 0PH
A church visited three times by John Wesley
Padfield, Derbyshire | SK13 1EL
A peaceful place for busy lives. Padfield Congregational Chapel in the centre of Padfield village is a much loved community focal point.
Kensington, Merseyside | L7 2RJ
Christ Church Kensington Liverpool is 151 years old, the church is on the national heritage list for England and is considered worthy of preservation.
Forest Row, Sussex | RH18 5AF
A lovely church on the edge of Ashdown Forest in the centre of the village.
Anston, Yorkshire | S25 5TD
Dating from Norman times, our church will give you a sense of the history of the area whose name derives from ‘Anastan’ a solitary stone and is known to have had prehistoric settlements in the area.
East Markham, Nottinghamshire | NG22 0SA
East Markham';s grand Perpendicular church has a fittingly imposing site on a ridge overlooking the Trent valley to the east.
Stone-next-Dartford, Kent | DA9 9BE
We have supported this church
Woolfardisworthy, Devon | EX39 5TY
The church was formerly a chapelry of the parish of Hartland and was one of the properties given to support Hartland Abbey at the time of Richard I.
Guyhirn, Cambridgeshire | PE13 4ED
A Puritan church.
Ordsall, Greater Manchester | M5 3LQ
St Clements’s built in 1877/8 by Austin and Paley is a major landmark in the centre of a housing estate in Ordsall, Salford.
We have supported this church
Tilty, Essex | CM6 2JN
St Mary's looks like two, or even three, churches magicked together, with its rather grand chancel and an exceptional east window that is often cited as an example of Decorated window tracery at its finest.
Trefriw, Clwyd | LL27 0UJ
It’s said that a church was founded here c1230 by Llywelyn Fawr, Prince of Wales, to avoid the walk to the church at Llanrhychwyn.