
St Laurence
Guestling, Sussex | TN35 4HS
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Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Guestling, Sussex | TN35 4HS
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Alnmouth, Northumberland | NE66 2RJ
A rural coastland village church in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, continuing a tradition of Christian witness in Alnmouth since the 7th century.
Glanton, Northumberland | NE66 4AN
St Andrew's church, situated on the west side of the village of Glanton, was built in 1783 and was originally a Presbyterian church and is now the only church in the village.
Creed, Cornwall | TR2 4SL
The patron saint of Creed is first recorded as St Crite in the 10th century and may well have been a Cornish saint and possibly the daughter of either King Mark of Cornwall or an Irish king.
Hastings, Sussex | TN34 1HL
A hidden gem of a Victorian Congregational church in the heart of the Trinity Triangle area of central Hastings.
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Playden, Sussex | TN31 7UJ
West of the River Rother, St Michaels spire is a landmark from across the Romney Marshes.
Hastings, Sussex | TN35 5BG
A Grade II listed Victorian, decorative gothic church full of history and fascinating surprises, set in attractive gardens containing the village cenotaph and within walking distance of Ore village shops.
Icklesham, Sussex | TN36 4BH
Beautiful Grade I listed church sitting just of the 1066 path in Icklesham, East Sussex.
Hastings, Sussex | TN34 3HT
Our late 14th century church is where DG Rossetti married Lizzie Siddall and where Inspector Foyle attends church in Foyle's War!
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Hastings, Sussex | TN34 3JB
The church was founded in 1020AD, ravaged by the French and rebuilt between 1417 and 1430.
Belfast, County Antrim | BT15 5HX
Designed by Samuel Close, the church is built in a Late Victorian Gothic Revival blend of decorated and perpendicular styles
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Hastingleigh, Kent | TN25 5HU
This beautifully simple building is in a valley about a mile from Hastingleigh village, there may have been a church here in the 6th century, but the present building is largely Norman and Early English.