Find a church

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

St Ann

Manchester, Greater Manchester | M2 7LF

Dedicated to the mother of the Virgin Mary but paying tribute to its patron, Lady Ann Bland, St Ann's was first consecrated in 1712.

We have supported this church

Sacred Trinity

Salford, Greater Manchester | M3 5DW

Originally a Jacobean church, the oldest in Salford and the only one of its name in the country.

We have supported this church

All Saints

Annesley, Nottinghamshire | NG15 0AJ

Credit: David Hallam Jones CC-BY-SA2.0

We have supported this church

Aylesford Priory

Aylesford, Kent | ME20 7BX

Aylesford Priory or 'The Friars' is the home to a small community of Carmelite Friars, who first came here in 1242.

St Mary the Virgin

Rufford, Lancashire | L40 1TA

A ‘hidden gem’ church, Grade II listed, with links to adjacent Rufford Old Hall (National Trust).

St Bartholomew

Great Stukeley, Cambridgeshire | PE28 4AL

In August 2020 St Bartholomew's will celebrate 800 years of worship in this building with many of the original features still present.

Holy Trinity

Coxheath, Kent | ME17 4PN

Grade II listed church, previously a workhouse chapel.

We have supported this church

Manchester Cathedral

Manchester, Greater Manchester | M3 1SX

Built in 1215, with much rebuilding and refurbishment since, the church became a cathedral in 1847.

St Nicholas

Sandhurst, Kent | TN18 5NS

Built on high ground outside the current village centre with views south across the Rother valley, and north and west across the Weald, with the unusual five sweep Sandhurst windmill on the horizon.

We have supported this church

St James the Great

Ewhurst Green, Sussex | TN32 5TD

A late 12th and early 14th century stone built church with an unusual bullet shaped spire, set in the High Weald AONB on the Kent and Sussex border path.

We have supported this church

St Augustine

Pendlebury, Greater Manchester | M27 8XU

This magnificent 19th century building, designed by George Frederick Bodley, is hugely significant in the northwest and is known locally as the 'Miners Cathedral'.

St Dunstan

Cranbrook, Kent | TN17 3HA

The old market town of Cranbrook shares with Tenterden the claim to be the capital of the Kentish Weald.