Find a church

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

St Peter

Blaxhall, Suffolk | IP12 2DH

St Peter’s is a modest rural church within the Suffolk Sandlings Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and bounded by a SSSI.

We have supported this church

St Mary the Virgin

Bleasby, Nottinghamshire | NG14 7GB

The church has an idyllic setting within a quintessential English country churchyard.

St Mary the Virgin

Bleasby, Nottinghamshire | NG14 7GB

The church has an idyllic setting within a quintessential English country churchyard.

St Mary Magdalene

Bleddfa, Powys | LD7 1PA

Bleddfa means 'the abode of wolves', and wolves were still to be found in Radnor Forest until Tudor times.

St Andrew

Blickling, Norfolk | NR11 6NG

St Andrew's is a vibrant and much visited rural church situated next to the National Trust property Blickling Hall.

We have supported this church

St Mary of the Purification

Blidworth, Nottinghamshire | NG21 0QX

Only the west tower from the medieval 15th century church survives, the rest was built in 1739 by Rhodes of Barlborough and 1839 by Colvin.

St Peter & St Paul

Blockley, Gloucestershire | GL56 9ES

Full of human interest and interwoven with the people of this place for more than a thousand years, the church has survived good times and bad, and in the process has been altered, extended, and embellished.

St George

Bloomsbury, Greater London | WC1A 2SA

St George's Bloomsbury, the work of Nicholas Hawksmoor, is one of the finest Baroque churches in London and indeed has been described as ‘one of the capital’s most wonderful buildings’.

St Mary

Bloxham, Oxfordshire | OX15 4PY

Bloxham is in a small valley in the ironstone country of North Oxfordshire, on its southern side is the church of St Mary, outstanding even in an area of such splendid churches.

St Mary

Bloxholm, Lincolnshire | LN4 3QF

We have supported this church

St Mary the Virgin

Blundeston, Suffolk | NR32 5AX

There has been a church in Blundeston village, which Charles Dickens used as the scene for the opening chapters of David Copperfield since St Fursey first preached Christianity in these parts in the 7th century.