All Saints
Lobley Hill, Tyne & Wear
A place of inspiring worship, prayer and teaching.
St Mary's has been at the heart of the community for many centuries and is an important historic treasure of Tyneside.
Whickham, Tyne & Wear
The first mention of a place called Whickham is back in 1183 in a property survey for the bishop of Durham called the Boldon Book. By 1220 Whickham had a vicar and a church, with its own churchyard. In the centuries since, the church of St Mary's has been the spiritual centre of the village and very much at the centre of community life. St Mary's bears traces of many different periods of church architecture. It has a lofty Norman nave, a 12th century chancel and a porch and tower dating back to the 14th century containing bells which are still rung regularly. The tower also houses a fine baptismal font made of local Frosterley marble. After a disastrous fire in 1841, when the church was almost completely destroyed, restoration work included building a second aisle and removing the galleries. The church's beautiful communion kneelers were made in 1998 by the church needlework group. The churchyard contains many interesting gravestones and memorials including one from 1626 to children who died of the plague and one to a lady who reached the age of 102 in 1769! There are also memorials to Victorian rowing hero Harry Clasper and to William Shield, a celebrated musician of his day. He composed the tune we all know as Auld Lang Syne, but first heard in his opera 'Rosina' in 1783.
Lobley Hill, Tyne & Wear
A place of inspiring worship, prayer and teaching.
Benwell, Tyne & Wear
The church opened in 1833 and was built to a design by the northeast's most eminent architect John Dobson.
Winlaton, Tyne & Wear
Interesting Georgian church to a design by Ignatius Bench in 1823 and reordered to ecclesiastical principles in 1894.