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 modest church of the 1960s. The exterior with its three large north windows is not without architectural interest.... Read More
Built in stages from 1899, this is a very large, imposing church as befits its abbey status (the first in Greater... Read More
A substantial, mid-Victorian Gothic Revival ragstone church, built originally for Methodist use and acquired for use... Read More
A modest and conservative stone-built church of the 1920s.Mass at Earby was celebrated from Broughton in 1901. In... Read More
A modest but thoughtfully designed modern church with some interesting fittings by a local sculptor. It was designed as... Read More
A utilitarian design of the late 1960s.Before the building of the present church Mass... Read More
A post-war design replacing an early twentieth century church which had been remodelled in early Christian style by Fr... Read More
A modern combined church and hall, replacing two earlier churches on different sites. Of some architectural interest... Read More
A very modest and cheaply built church of the inter-war period.The church was built in 1923 to serve the... Read More
Simple stone lancet Gothic church, single cell with contemporary attached presbytery behind. An early (possibly the... Read More
An individual, if a little austere, neo-Romanesque church by Frederick Walters, composed to give a sense of mass and... Read More
A large portal-frame church of the 1950s by John Newton, with some jazzy detailing.The first parish church was a dual... Read More