St Michael
Martin, Lincolnshire | LN9 5JZ
Standing forlorn, with only a farm for company, St Michaels is a precious little building.
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Martin, Lincolnshire | LN9 5JZ
Standing forlorn, with only a farm for company, St Michaels is a precious little building.
Silsden, Yorkshire | BD20 0PB
In 1712 the church was built as a chapel of ease in a farmer’s barn.
Northorpe, Lincolnshire | DN21 4AA
Standing on a mound in the centre of the village our church is an unknown gem, here are intriguing masons marks, a 1498 incised slab, a 1595 brass and a medieval altar stone.
Leeds, Yorkshire | LS7 1LW
George Gilbert Scott, perhaps the greatest ecclesiastical architect of the time, designed All Souls on a grand scale, having in mind the nave of one of the great Yorkshire abbeys.
We have supported this church
Leeds, Yorkshire | LS2 9AF
St Mark is the last to survive of the three ‘Million’ or Church Commissioner’s churches built in Leeds.
Revesby, Lincolnshire | PE22 7NA
The present church was built in the Decorated style in 1891 on the site of a previous Georgian church built in 1733 by Revesby Abbey estate owner Joseph Banks, the great grandfather of naturalist Sir Joseph Banks.
Normanby by Spital, Lincolnshire | LN8 2HF
Light and airy village church.
Blyborough, Lincolnshire | DN21 4HE
This delightful church is dedicated to St Alkmund, a prince of the Royal house of the Kingdom of Northumbria, born in about 770.
Halton, Lancashire | LA2 6LR
St Wilfrid's is a beautiful historic church on the river Lune, it is well known for its unique Viking cross which stands in the churchyard and has Pagan and Christian carving.
Stickney, Lincolnshire | PE22 8AY
St Luke’s most outstanding features are the beautiful stained glass windows and the memorial to Mary Jane Lovell, who went to Palestine in 1892 and founded the Lovell Society for the Blind.
Friesthorpe, Lincolnshire | LN3 5AL
Memorial, stained glass window and stone cross, in memory of five sons from this hamlet, who all died in The Great War.
Wilksby, Lincolnshire | PE22 7PB
There has been a building on the site since 1230, when Simon de Tynton was presented by William de Lisures to be the first Rector.