Here is a complete listing of the churches of England and Wales that have been assessed under the 'Taking Stock' project.
You can perform and advanced 'Church Search' using the form.
A small, picturesquely-composed Gothic church of the late 1860s built originally as the chapel of a Catholic Industrial... Read More
A modern Gothic church of the 1950s by Burles & Newton, architects of many churches in the Diocese of Brentwood.... Read More
Mansfield’s answer to the London Oratory. Built on land given by Bishop Bagshawe, an Oratorian, this is a bold and... Read More
An economical design of the 1980s which is given some interest by its hexagonal plan form and varied roof profiles. In... Read More
Mapledurham, home of the Catholic Blount family, was a notable recusant household. The house retains numerous features... Read More
A small post-war brick church, concrete-framed and conventional in plan but well-detailed and forming a unified... Read More
Of historical significance as one of the earliest centres of the nineteenth-century Catholic revival in Kent. The... Read More
A small and plain brick pre-war Gothic church, designed for later enlargement. The church opened in 1931, a need... Read More
A good design of 1886 by Edmund Kirby, notable for its rich sanctuary furnishings, donated by the Clifford family. The... Read More
A relatively modest red brick Gothic church of the 1870s, forming part of a complex of Catholic buildings. The church... Read More
A church largely rebuilt in the 1860s, but incorporating the volume of the nave, part of the west wall and the... Read More
A modern church and hall on a raised site. One of a series of churches in the diocese by John Rochford, who... Read More