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 good example of an early nineteenth-century chapel, built shortly before Catholic Emancipation and displaying... Read More
A good example of the post-war churches of Thomas Crawford, with a strong west front and attractive brickwork. The... Read More
A modest example post-war church by the prolific Thomas Crawford, built next to the 1930 presbytery. The... Read More
A prefabricated polygonal structure of the 1970s, with laminated timber frame. The seating came from Pugin &... Read More
St Gabriel’s church is representative of Henry Bingham Towner’s work, not without architectural merit but not... Read More
A Gothic-style church built in the early years after Catholic Emancipation, with a chancel of 1846 by A.W. Pugin. The... Read More
Attractive group of church, former school and presbytery that fits well into the Victorian street scene; the buildings... Read More
A 1950s building in an Italian Romanesque style, mostly built by voluntary labour. The original roof concealed behind... Read More
The last of F. X. Velarde’s churches to be built in his lifetime, and said to have been his personal favourite. In... Read More
A church conceived on an ambitious scale, intended as the Cathedral church of the Diocese of Shrewsbury. Although... Read More
St Joseph’s was designed by Edmund Kirby in 1899-1900 and is amongst the best examples of his large red brick urban... Read More
St Werburgh’s is the oldest church built for Catholic worship in Wirral. It is an important building within the town,... Read More