St Doged
LLanddoged, Clwyd | LL26 0AX
St Doged’s has taken on a new role as a Pilgrim Church.
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
LLanddoged, Clwyd | LL26 0AX
St Doged’s has taken on a new role as a Pilgrim Church.
Upper Hardres, Kent | CT4 6EN
A beautiful rural church set in the heart of the beautiful Kent Downs five miles south of Canterbury.
Penton Mewsey, Hampshire | SP11 0RD
We have supported this church
Capel y Ffin, Powys | NP7 7NP
Set in the hidden valley of the Honddu river, with the Black Mountains to the west and the great ridge carrying Offa's Dyke to the east, Capel y Ffin melds art and landscape seamlessly.
Tidenham, Gloucestershire | NP16 7JQ
This is a beautiful 11th/13th century building overlooking the River Severn with excellent stained glass windows, a wonderful roof beam structure and a number of listed monuments in the churchyard.
Bromham, Wiltshire | SN15 2EU
This Grade I church is cruciform, mainly 13th and 14th century, with a spire originally constructed in 1510.
Andover, Hampshire | SP10 1DP
St Mary’s is a beautiful 19th century Victorian Gothic building, the third church on this site in Andover where God has been worshipped for over a thousand years.
Etchilhampton, Wiltshire | SN10 3JL
The nave is 14th century but much Victorianised.
Balcombe, Sussex | RH17 6PX
There has been a church on this site since 1090 and St Mary's once hosted (the then Princess) Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, as a bridesmaid in 1931.
Llanrwst, Clwyd | LL26 0ER
Seion Methodist Chapel was built in 1895 by architects Booth, Chadwick and Porter of Colwyn Bay, in the vernacular style.
Bootle, Cumbria | LA19 6TH
This ancient but much altered building houses some lovely stained glass windows, see especially the depiction of the Adoration of the Shepherds in the chancel.
We have supported this church
Corsham, Wiltshire | SN13 0BY
St Bartholomew’s in Corsham is a beautiful Grade I listed building with a rich heritage and architecture dating from its Saxon origins through development by the Normans and in the 12th, 15th and 19th centuries.
We have supported this church