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.

Wigan – St Patrick

A red brick Gothic church, built for the incoming Irish community, with elaborate later furnishings.The mission was... Read More

Wigton – St Cuthbert

One of the oldest Catholic churches still in use in Cumbria. Described by Pevsner as ‘a remarkably substantial... Read More

Willenhall – St Mary

A small Edwardian red brick Early English Gothic design, and a modest example of the work of a well-known firm of... Read More

Willesden – Our Lady of Willesden

A large hall church in modern Romanesque style by Wilfrid Mangan and built in 1930.  The church houses London’s... Read More

Willesden Green – St Mary Magdalen

A modernist church of the 1930s, whose external appearance has been considerably altered in recent years by the... Read More

Willington – Our Lady and St Thomas

A large Gothic Revival church of the Edwardian years in a style of c.1300. It is quite conservative in spirit for its... Read More

Wilmslow – Sacred Heart and St Teresa

An early twentieth century Decorated Gothic design by a member of the Gillow family, architects and furniture designers... Read More

Wimbledon – The Sacred Heart

An exceptionally large and handsome Jesuit church in the Gothic style, standing on a conspicuous site in a conservation... Read More

Wimbledon (south) – St Winefride

An interesting design of 1905 by the well-known Catholic architect F. A. Walters. Like Walters’ church of the Sacred... Read More

Wimbledon Common – Our Lady and St Peter

A large post-Vatican II church of hexagonal plan, with glass by Whitefriars. In 1962 a large interwar house at 11... Read More

Wimbledon Park – Christ the King

A thoughtful interwar church designed by a member of the Scott dynasty of architects, with an unassuming exterior but a... Read More

Wimborne – St Catherine

A charming, toy-like church of 1933, looking stylistically more like a building of one hundred years earlier. The... Read More

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