St Peter
Clyffe Pypard, Wiltshire | SN4 7PY
This Grade I church is mainly Perpendicular.
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Clyffe Pypard, Wiltshire | SN4 7PY
This Grade I church is mainly Perpendicular.
Compton, Surrey | GU3 1DQ
Landscape, art and remembrance are beautifully blended together in the Grade I listed Watts Chapel.
Stinchcombe, Gloucestershire | GL11 6BE
Visit St Cyr's on the edge of the Cotswold Escarpment, nestled below Stinchcombe Hill, a beautiful church with stunning stained glass windows, recently reordered to be more accessible.
We have supported this church
Llangarron, Herefordshire | HR9 6NJ
This beautiful Church is Grade I Listed and has a fine collection of items and monuments dating from the 14th to the 19th centuries.
We have supported this church
Mildenhall, Wiltshire | SN8 2LU
John Betjeman described this as 'the best church in Wilts'.
Dauntsey, Wiltshire | SN15 4HT
Situated by the River Avon, the Grade I church has Norman foundations and was enlarged in the 14th century.
Nenthead, Cumbria | CA9 3PQ
The highest parish church in England, set in a beautiful, wild churchyard at the top of the hill.
Llandderfel, Gwynedd | LL23 7HW
Dedicated to a saint with connections to King Arthur and a popular pilgrimage site during the Middle Ages, St Derfel's is famous for its 'fasting woman' and its medieval relic that has a connection to a grisly execution.
We have supported this church
Seaton Delaval, Northumberland | NE26 4QR
A heritage gem tucked away in Northumberland.
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
Chilworth, Surrey | GU4 8QR
A living Roman Catholic Benedictine monastery near Guildford in Surrey which welcomes the public to join the monks in daily Mass, Divine Office and prayer (often in Gregorian Chant) 365 days a year.
Hawkshead, Cumbria | LA22 0PQ
A church has stood on this site, a small hill above Hawkshead, for over 800 years with the present church being built around 1490 (parts of the tower are older) and little changed since the late 16th century.