St Osmund
Tarlton, Gloucestershire
Chapel of Ease from Domesday times with links to Salisbury Cathedral and Tom Denny windows.
Norman church with steeple, nave, chancel, north aisle, south vestry.
Rodmarton, Gloucestershire
A priest is recorded in 1086 but there could have been an older Saxon church on the same site.
The church is built of rubble and rough ashlar and has chancel, nave, north aisle, vestry, south tower with spire and south porch. The roofs are stone tiled. There are stained glass windows, memorials to past local people, three bells, two cast in 1626 and the other in 1716. There are wooden pews to seat 200 people. and an oak pulpit, brass lectern and stone font. An Allen organ is regularly used.
The church stands in the churchyard behind a number of table tombs.
Tarlton, Gloucestershire
Chapel of Ease from Domesday times with links to Salisbury Cathedral and Tom Denny windows.
Crudwell, Wiltshire
The Grade I church is mainly 12th and 13th century.
Oaksey, Wiltshire
This Grade I church is mainly Perpendicular.