St Paul
Whitley Bay, Tyne & Wear
The church was built in 1864, paid for by the fourth Duke of Northumberland and designed by Anthony Salvin renowned architect of the romantic period.
Some call it the Cathedral at the coast, a beacon to local people with its high spire and spectacular architecture.
Cullercoats, Tyne & Wear
The only functional Grade l listed building in North Tyneside. A local and regional icon and a jewel in our heritage by the renowned architect John Loughborough Pearson (architect also of Truro and Brisbane Cathedrals). A Victorian church (dedicated in 1884) in the Gothic style with magnificent stone vaulting and stunning stained glass by Charles Eamer Kempe and Leon Evetts. A world renowned organ by TC Lewis in its original state. Visitors record that this church is a place where they can experience the deep pool of silence in a very busy and noisy world and where its peacefulness and beauty draws them closer to God. This is part of the North Tyneside Coastal Heritage Route. Tynemouth Priory nearby is a national monument and a place of early Christian heritage and witness. The decorated and carved font cover in St George's reflects our links with the northern saints; Paulinus, Oswald, Aidan and Cuthbert.
Whitley Bay, Tyne & Wear
The church was built in 1864, paid for by the fourth Duke of Northumberland and designed by Anthony Salvin renowned architect of the romantic period.
North Shields, Tyne & Wear
Originally attached to the medieval community of Tynemouth Priory, the first parish church of Tynemouth stood within the walls of Tynemouth Castle.
North Shields, Tyne & Wear
Standing out from the rest of the buildings in the square, St Columba's is the rather grand permanent home to several Presbyterian and Congregational meetings, the first founded near the river in 1662 by early Nonconformist Dissenters.