Find a church

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

St Mary

Brook, Kent | TN25 5PF

The mixture of informal path over a little bridge into a churchyard full of trees and shrubs is the perfect introduction to the military looking Norman tower.

St Peter

Brooke, Rutland | LE15 8RE

This long, low church, with its rather dumpy 13th century tower, is an unlikely but harmonious mix of styles.

St Michael & All Angels

Brookenby, Lincolnshire | LN8 6ET

Brookenby church was created out of the former unmarried sergeants accommodation and consists of worship area, two meeting rooms, kitchen and library.

St Augustine

Brookland, Kent | TN29 9QR

St Augustine's is well known for its remarkable detached bell tower, its size and shape unlike any other in Britain.

St Peter

Brough of Birsay, Orkney Islands | KW17 2LX

Today, the Brough of Birsay is a small tidal island off the Orkney mainland. Between the 600s and 1200s AD, the area was settled by the Picts and Norse.

St Michael

Brough, Cumbria | CA17 4EJ

Come and walk up the aisle of our beautiful and peaceful church and learn about the lives of the inhabitants of Brough under Stainmore.

St Ninian

Brougham, Cumbria | CA10 2AD

A lovely church in a remote setting.

Our Lady of the Wayside

Broughderg, County Tyrone | BT79 8HW

Small modern church in a scenic location amid the Sperrin mountains.

St Mary

Broughton, Lincolnshire | DN20 0HY

A parish church with an Anglo Saxon tower.

We have supported this church

St Mary the Virgin

Broughton, Oxfordshire | OX15 5EF

St Mary's was built almost entirely in the early 14th century, at the same time as Sir John de Broughton was building the adjacent castle.

St Luke

Broughton Sulney, Nottinghamshire | LE14 3BD

St Luke’s is a small village church built of brown ironstone and has a heavily weathered appearance.

St Mary of the Angels

Brownshill, Gloucestershire | GL6 8SW

The chapel is idyllically sited overlooking the Toadmoor Valley, the site is made more poignant by the run of identically sized memorial crosses which mark the graves of Bertha and Katherine and a number of local Catholic priests, monks and laymen and women.