Find a church

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

Armagh Cathedral

Armagh, County Armagh | BT61 7DY

As the seat of both Catholic and Anglican Archbishops, Amargh is still the Ecclesiastical Capital of Ireland, the Anglican medieval church has been sympathetically restored over centuries and celebrates its connection with St Patrick.

St Aidan

Salters Grange, County Armagh | BT61 8EX

Consecrated 1776 on land gifted by Sir Capel Molyneux and financced by Archbishop Richard Robinson.

Holy Trinity

Hurstpierpoint, Sussex | BN6 9TY

We have supported this church

St Christopher

Winfrith Newburgh, Dorset | DT2 8JW

We have supported this church

Upwey St Laurence

Upwey, Dorset | DT3 5QE

St Laurence church is a 13th century historical village church set in a deep valley close to the Wishing Well fountain spring.

We have supported this church

St Mary

Sidlesham, Sussex | PO20 7RH

Imagine a time when this coastal parish and nearby Pagham Harbour (now a wetland nature reserve) was busy with maritime trade and it is easy to see why this should have been the largest church in the area.

St Mary

Yapton, Sussex | BN18 0EE

Yapton's charming and distinctive church has changed surprisingly little since it was completed around 1220.

Cathedral of the Isles

Isle of Cumbrae, Strathclyde | KA28 0HE

Consecrated in 1876 as the Cathedral of the Isles, this is the smallest in Britain and an architectural gem.

St Mary the Virgin

Sutton Valence, Kent | ME17 3AW

There has been a settlement in Sutton Valence since at least Roman times, and a church is recorded in the Domesday Book.

We have supported this church

St Andrew & St Cuthman

Steyning, Sussex | BN44 3YQ

Steyning is now some five miles inland, but it was once busy with seagoing vessels, which moored in an inlet known as St Cuthman's Port.

St Swithun

Sandford, Devon | EX17 4ND

St Swithun is 500 years old in 2023 and sits in the centre of an ancient Saxon hill top village with some intriguing and beautiful ancient bench ends carved at the end of the 16th century.

St Mary Magdalene

Lyminster, Sussex | BN17 7QJ

King Alfred is recorded as having bequeathed Lyminster to his nephew in 901, it was the site of a Benedictine nunnery, and the flint church we see today has Saxon origins as the present walls go back to about 1040.