Churches

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.

Rainworth – St George (chapel-of-ease)

A portal framed structure of 1960, not of special architectural or historic importance.A Mass centre was established... Read More

Ramsbottom – St Joseph

A simply detailed but well handled church of 1880 in early Gothic style designed by a little-known Manchester architect... Read More

Ramsey – Sacred Heart of Jesus

A small church of 1863-5, the design apparently supplied by E.W. Pugin, but architecturally very modest and... Read More

Ramsgate – St Augustine

One of the most important buildings of the nineteenth-century Gothic Revival in England, designed and paid for by the... Read More

Ramsgate – St Ethelbert and St Gertrude

A substantial early twentieth-century church designed by Peter Paul Pugin, youngest son of A. W. N. Pugin. As... Read More

Raunds – St Thomas More

A simple late-nineteenth century Nonconformist brick chapel, acquired for Catholic use in 1967. A building of some... Read More

Rawmarsh – St Joseph

Designed as a dual-purpose church and hall, but used from early on exclusively as a church, this modest post-war... Read More

Rawtenstall – St James the Less

A small Early English Gothic Revival church by Charles F. Hansom, with contemporary presbytery and burial ground. The... Read More

Rayleigh – Our Lady of Ransom

A church of the 1930s, completed in sympathetic manner in the 1960s. Externally this is a conventional Italian... Read More

Reading – English Martyrs

Church designed by the Preston-based architect, Wilfrid C. Mangan, who worked extensively in Portsmouth diocese. He was... Read More

Reading – Sacred Heart

Church, originally Anglican, of 1872-5 in an exuberant, High Victorian thirteenth-century style. It is an ambitious,... Read More

Reading – St James

An early work by A. W. N. Pugin, the hugely influential promoter of the Gothic Revival and a recent (1835) convert to... Read More

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