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 very late, spare design, at the tail-end of the Gothic Revival. The baldacchino is a good feature of the... Read More
A modest dual-purpose school-chapel of the late nineteenth century by F. A. Walters. The main frontage is in a... Read More
Stone-built church in fourteenth century Gothic style, one of a number built in the Archdiocese from designs by Edmund... Read More
A convent chapel of unusual plan form and neo-Byzantine design, by W. C. Mangan. Replaced by a new church in... Read More
A cheaply-built church, using the Lanner system popular for small churches in the 1950s and 60s. Of no particular... Read More
Long-recognised has one of the finest churches of the late nineteenth century. The Gothic Revival design was prepared... Read More
An interwar brick church at the heart of a large council housing estate, built in a round-arched style by the... Read More
A carefully-detailed Perpendicular Gothic design by M. E. Hadfield & Son, built with the support of two wealthy... Read More
A modern church of cruciform plan, attractively fitted out. In 1929–30, a temporary church dedicated to the Sacred... Read More
A substantial and well-designed church by J. & B. Sinnott. While the tower and spire were never built as originally... Read More
An engaging church of 1904 by Pugin & Pugin, St Hugh of Lincoln is characteristic of the work of this prolific... Read More
A post-war church by the well-known architectural firm of Reynolds & Scott, adopting the Romanesque/Byzantine style... Read More