Find a church

Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.

St Joseph

Hayle, Cornwall | TR27 4DF

We have supported this church

St Elwyn

Hayle, Cornwall | TR27 4JT

St Elwyn is located next to the estuary of Hayle near to three miles of golden sand and it has an imposing presence above the town.

We have supported this church

Leedstown United Methodist Church

Leedstown, Cornwall | TR27 6BD

Built in 1862 the church has been sympathetically enhanced by each generation adding stained glass, the 1899 organ, ad 1923 electricity.

We have supported this church

St Anne

Ancroft, Northumberland | TD15 2TE

Ancroft Church is dedicated to St Anne, the mother of Mary so the granny of Jesus. Follow the trail quiz and climb to the top of the tower to see the sea.

St Uny

Lelant, Cornwall | TR26 3DZ

There is no record of first consecration but there is documentary evidence that in 1170 Thomas Beckett confirmed income to the Priory of Tywardreath.

We have supported this church

St Mary

Lanark, Strathclyde | ML11 7JS

Originally built between 1856 and 1859 by the Monteith family of Carstairs, in 1907 it was all but destroyed by fire, and was rebuilt between 1908 and 1910.

We have supported this church

St Nicholas

Lanark, Strathclyde | ML11 9DZ

St Nicholas is a historic church which proudly stands at the very centre of the ancient Market Burgh of Lanark.

Swinton Kirk

Swinton, Scottish Borders | TD11 3JJ

A small country kirk with a long history in rural Scottish Borders country.

St Cuthbert

Norham, Northumberland | TD15 2LF

Lying within a few yards of the famous River Tweed, a very substantial church, rich in history and an architectural gem.

We have supported this church

St Keverne

St Keverne, Cornwall | TR12 6NE

This is one of Cornwall’s largest and architecturally most intriguing churches, retaining an open feel partly because the pews were removed altogether at one time and when replaced in the 1970s wide alleyways were left, as they would have been in medieval times, to allow for processions to pass easily.

Craigie Symington Church

Symington, Strathclyde | KA1 5QP

Set in a conservation village the church, built in 1160, remains one of the finest examples of a Norman church still in use in Scotland.