
St Non Chapel
St Davids, Pembrokeshire | SA62 6BN
Reputed birthplace of Wales’s patron saint in uplifting location.
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
St Davids, Pembrokeshire | SA62 6BN
Reputed birthplace of Wales’s patron saint in uplifting location.
Pentney, Norfolk | PE32 1GH
The church is Saxon/Norman in origin with a very interesting history and as we see it today is a very long low structure combing the nave and the chancel with no side aisles.
Thorpe Salvin, Yorkshire | S80 3JP
The nave of the church dates from 1130 when Roger de Busli of Tickhill was Lord of the Manor, the village takes its name from Ralph Salvain, a knight who lived here in 1284.
Askham, Nottinghamshire | NG22 0RU
A Grade II listed church described by Pevsner as having the ‘usual west tower with eight pinnacles’.
Windmill Hill, Cheshire | WA7 6QE
Family friendly and lively church.
Ramsgate, Kent | CT11 0QT
Queen Victoria worshipped in the church as a child when on holiday, the east window is a memorial to her and the clock was installed to commemorate her Diamond Jubilee.
We have supported this church
St Davids, Pembrokeshire | SA62 6RD
A sacred place of pilgrimage and worship set on a spectacular Pembrokeshire peninsula jutting out into the Atlantic upon the site of an earlier 6th century monastery built by St David, the patron saint of Wales.
Fulwood, Yorkshire | S10 4GL
The chapel is a very attractive but simple building built in 1728.
Ramsgate, Kent | CT11 8QY
A glorious late Georgian church built in 1827, an outstanding feature being its octagonal stone Lantern which served as a navigational aid for shipping in the Channel.
Broadstairs, Kent | CT10 2TR
The church was recorded as being on the site since 1128.
Peel Hall, Greater Manchester | M22 5HB
A very peaceful, minimalist building with clever use of glazing in the roof to produce beautiful light on a fine day.
Wales, Yorkshire | S26 5LQ
This lovely church, has been a place where worship has been offered to God for over 1000 years, with the original Norman church constructed during the reign of Henry I (d 1135).