Find a church

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

All Saints

Fulwell, Tyne & Wear | SR6 0JD

All Saints was designed in the Early English style by John Dobson and was consecrated in October 1849.

St Mary

Talbenny, Pembrokeshire | SA62 3XE

An uplifting church in a stunning clifftop location.

St Mary

Blanchland, Northumberland | DH8 9ST

Blanchland got its name from the white habits worn by monks of the Premonstratensian order who founded Blanchland Abbey.

Blanchland Abbey

Blanchland, Northumberland | DH8 9SP

A casualty of Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries, the only remaining part of the 12th century Premonstratensian Blanchland Abbey is part of the abbey church which today serves the parish of Blanchland.

St Andrew

Roker, Tyne & Wear | SR6 9PT

Consecrated 1907, known as the Arts & Crafts Cathedral of the north.

We have supported this church

St Andrew

Greystoke, Cumbria | CA11 0TL

Greystoke is an area of ancient sacred wells, which attracted pilgrims from pagan times and in St Andrew's, the strange fact that the base of the chantry altar is never dry could be the reason for the earliest wooden built church on this site.

Newlands Church

Newlands, Cumbria | CA12 5TU

Newlands church, set in the midst of the lovely Newlands Valley, is a haven of peace and tranquillity, it can be traced back to the mid 16th century, although it was substantially refurbished in the 1840s.

We have supported this church

St Peter

Lamerton, Devon | PL19 8RN

We have supported this church

St Kentigern

Mungrisdale, Cumbria | CA11 0XR

St Kentigern, also called St Mungo, has been linked to Mungrisdale since about 550 AD and the present church, rebuilt in 1756, probably replaced one on the site of one of St Kentigern's original crosses.

St John the Baptist

Horrabridge, Devon | PL20 7RF

A particularly important church building of more than special interest architecturally, designed by George Fellowes-Prynne, and consecrated in 1893.

St Swithin

Launcells, Cornwall | EX23 9NQ

Famously described by Sir John Betjeman as the ‘least spoilt church in Cornwall’, the building dates back to the late 15th century, with fragments of an earlier 14th century church incorporated into the current structure.