St Edward the Confessor
Mottingham, Greater London | SE9 4AQ
A welcoming, modern Gothic church, with high ceilings and windows that create a light, spacious feeling.
We have supported this church
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Mottingham, Greater London | SE9 4AQ
A welcoming, modern Gothic church, with high ceilings and windows that create a light, spacious feeling.
We have supported this church
Llangollen, Denbighshire | LL20 8HU
St Collen’s belongs to a group of three churches in the Mission Area of Valle Crucis, and situated in the heart of the beautiful town, Llangollen.
We have supported this church
Llantysilio, Denbighshire | LL20 8BT
Be transported back 500 years or so, St Tysilio's is set in a conservation area overlooking the River Dee, at the end of the Pontysyllte Aqueduct world heritage trail.
Wimbledon, Greater London | SW19 4NP
‘After 83 years Donhead finally has its own Chapel and, as a Jesuit School, is now complete’ GC McGrath, Headmaster.
Much Cowarne, Herefordshire | HR7 4JQ
The church of St Mary the Virgin is mainly 13th and 14th century on Anglo Saxon foundations, with Victorian restoration after a devastating fire in 1840.
Holywell, Flintshire | CH8 7GH
A medieval religious centre that’s still a place of pilgrimage.
Beckenham, Greater London | SE20 7LX
Holy Trinity was built in the Gothic style from Kentish rag with white stone dressings and was consecrated in 1878.
Wimbledon, Greater London | SW19 3QH
Up to 1957 Wimbledon Congregational Church met in the hall known as the Memorial Hall which is now rented by Building Blocks Nursery.
Llangollen, Clwyd | LL20 8DD
Valle Crucis was truly Welsh from the moment it was founded in 1201 by Prince Madog ap Gruffydd and the ‘white monks’ of the Cistercian order.
Munsley, Herefordshire | HR8 2SQ
Beautiful Norman church in glorious countryside, the churchyard contains a yew tree which is one of the biggest and oldest in Herefordshire.
Moreton Jefferies, Herefordshire | HR1 3QY
A church without a name.
Heysham, Lancashire | LA3 2RN
The church as we see it now dates from the Saxon period but the original church was probably Celtic, right beside the sea with views across Morecambe Bay to the mountains of Cumbria and containing many important artifacts including the world famous Hog Back Stone, a Viking grave stone.