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.
An interwar Arts and Crafts Gothic brick church by A. S. G. Butler, the main interest of which lies in the furnishings... Read More
Belmont was established as the Central Novitiate for the English Benedictines, a function which it fulfilled from 1859... Read More
A modern design and build structure of traditional basilican character, not of special architectural interest but with... Read More
A fine neoclassical design by Charles Day, its design loosely based on the Athenian Treasury at Delphi, built for the... Read More
Built for the Passionist Fathers in 1889 at the expense of Dionysus and Catherine Broderick, who also gave their house... Read More
A modest church of the early twentieth century, one of many built in the diocese under the patronage of Miss Frances... Read More
A good example of a rural church by Frederick Walters, clearly built at some cost. Mass was celebrated in... Read More
A modest church built in 1935 to serve a colliery village. The originally weatherboarded exterior was replaced with... Read More
A post-war church of no particular architectural distinction, but with a light and pleasant interior.The first mass... Read More
A small stone and flint church of the 1850s, designed by Henry Clutton for Fr (later Cardinal Archbishop) Herbert... Read More
Post-war church of pre-war design. Attractive, albeit conventional in its planning, form and architectural... Read More
A large suburban church, built in the early 1960s. The plan is conventionally longitudinal, but the design is entirely... Read More