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 plain, hall-type church of 1962, later enlarged.The church was built in 1962 to the design of J .M. Raymond. It... Read More
A simple Gothic-style church of 1825, the oldest Catholic church in the area, predating Emancipation. It is situated... Read More
A small timber building built to serve local mining communities in the 1930s, of no special architectural interest but... Read More
This is not one of F.A.Walters’ best churches and, perhaps owing to lack of funds, may not have been finished in the... Read More
A small Early English Gothic Revival church built to serve the largely Irish population of the cotton mill town of... Read More
Helmshore House, an Italianate villa of the 1860s, was converted in the 1950s for use as a school and chapel, and later... Read More
All Saints is a building of exceptional architectural and historic importance as an early nineteenth century Catholic... Read More
A distinguished work by an architect of national renown. Basil Champneys had a large and varied practice and is best... Read More
A circular design of the late 1960s, reflecting the changes engendered by the Second Vatican Council and more... Read More
A large church built for the post-war New Town and for workers in the nearby aerospace industry. The building was... Read More
A modest structure of the early 1960s, intended as the hall to a future parish church, but which has remained a chapel... Read More
A simple Congregational chapel of the 1860s, converted to Catholic use in the 1950s.There was a Mass Centre in... Read More