Find a church

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

St Andrew

Beesby, Lincolnshire | LN13 0JG

A small but much loved church built in brick and stone and containing a delightful stone carving of a man with toothache!

St George

Brinsop, Herefordshire | HR4 7AU

Brinsop's 14th century church, at the end of a cul de sac lane, is famous for its ancient depictions of St George, one in stone the other in glass.

All Saints

Great Steeping, Lincolnshire | PE23 5PU

Great Steeping is home to two churches named All Saints and this one, built in 1891 of red brick, is the youngest.

St Peter

Willersey, Gloucestershire | WR12 7PN

This beautiful, ancient parish church in Cotswold stone is remarkable for being cruciform and serves the idyllic villages of Willersey and Saintbury.

We have supported this church

St Peter

Lowick, Northamptonshire | NN14 3BH

A splendid perpendicular church which was largely built by the Greene family of nearby Drayton, this was a remarkable achievement given that England was subject to the Wars of the Roses during a large part of this period.

St Bridget

Brigham, Cumbria | CA13 0TA

We have supported this church

Monksthorpe Chapel

Monksthorpe, Lincolnshire | PE23 5PP

Built in a time of dissent and persecution, this unique secluded chapel was designed to look like a farmyard barn in order to avoid being discovered.

St Mary the Blessed Virgin

Warmington, Northamptonshire | PE8 6TE

The interior of the church is 13th century at its best, with a wooden roof in imitation of stone vaulting and one of the best collections of Green Men in England.

St Helen

Theddlethorpe, Lincolnshire | LN12 1NS

The greatest treasure in this church is the stone reredos in the east wall of the north aisle.

St Mary Magdalene

Eardisley, Herefordshire | HR3 6NL

Home to what many consider to be the finest Norman font in England, this impressive parish church is an excellent example of a medieval hall.

We have supported this church

St Cwyfan

Llangwyfan, Anglesey | LL63 5YR

It may seem an odd and perilous place to build a church, but St Cwyfan's originally stood at the end of a peninsula between two bays, as shown on John Speed's map of Anglesey from 1636.