
St Luke
Weaste, Greater Manchester | M6 5YD
Prominent because of its position and its slender, continental style spire, St Luke's stands on a small green hill and is known locally as the church on the hill.
Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Weaste, Greater Manchester | M6 5YD
Prominent because of its position and its slender, continental style spire, St Luke's stands on a small green hill and is known locally as the church on the hill.
Long Marston, Warwickshire | CV37 8RN
St James the Great has a 14th century Decorated Gothic nave and chancel, but was rebuilt in the 19th century.
Hope, Greater Manchester | M6 8EJ
We have supported this church
Skenfrith, Monmouthshire | NP7 8UB
Skenfrith’s two most notable buildings are its castle and its church, both dating from the 13th century.
We have supported this church
Cwmyoy, Monmouthshire | NP7 7NS
You can catch glimpses of Cwmyoy's 13th century church from the road as it winds up the Vale of Ewyas, and even from afar the leaning tower is very apparent.
Breedon on the Hill, Leicestershire | DE73 8AJ
St Mary & St Hardulph is a remarkable church not least for its setting, dominating the local landscape and towering above the surrounding countryside.
Tywyn, Gwynedd | LL36 9BS
"As remarkable a church as any in Wales" said Pevsner in his Buildings of Wales: Gwynedd.
Hindley Green, Greater Manchester | WN2 4SA
St John's is a beautiful red brick church consecrated in 1899 and containing many stained glass windows and a fine pipe organ built by Thomas Pendlebury of Leigh.
Hindley, Greater Manchester | WN2 2SE
We have supported this church
Manchester, Greater Manchester | M2 6LN
In 1794, the Roman Catholic Church sought to tackle Manchester's deepest troubled area on a site crowded in by intensive poor quality housing on land which had so recently been open meadow and grazing pasture.
Salford, Lancashire | M3 5LL
It is a classic Gothic building from the mid 1800s, with a lot of stained glass, a lovely east window, and a very special War Chapel.
Wardlow, Derbyshire | SK17 8RP
The Good Shepherd owes its existence to Revd Samuel Andrew, vicar of nearby Tideswell in the late 19th century.