The Diocese of Nottingham was founded in 1850, and encompasses the counties of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Rutland. It is a suffragan diocese in Province of Westminster, and is subject to the Archdiocese of Westminster. The cathedral is in Nottingham and is dedicated to St Barnabas. 139 churches were visited for Taking Stock (2011).
A 1960s church of striking design, one of the best of many built in the diocese from designs by Reynolds &... Read More
A modest red brick church of 1930, made noteworthy by a dramatic reordering of 1995, with curved sanctuary dais,... Read More
A post-Second World War church built to serve a new housing estate, with a powerfully composed west tower. The church... Read More
A handsome stucco-faced classical building with a prominent portico front to the busy Ashby Road. The spacious columned... Read More
A stone-fronted chapel of 1833 in late Perpendicular style by the Lincolnshire builder and antiquary E.J. Willson, who... Read More
A charming, modest Gothic chapel built in the 1870s for Irish agricultural workers.The church was built in 1877 to... Read More
This modest building is one of a number of dual purpose school-chapels built by C.G. Wray in the 1880s. It has been... Read More
A modest and very late Gothic Revival church, built immediately before the Second World War. It incorporates two holy... Read More
Mansfield’s answer to the London Oratory. Built on land given by Bishop Bagshawe, an Oratorian, this is a bold and... Read More
An economical design of the 1980s which is given some interest by its hexagonal plan form and varied roof profiles.In... Read More
A small and plain brick pre-war Gothic church, designed for later enlargement.The church opened in 1931, a need... Read More
A relatively modest red brick Gothic church of the 1870s, forming part of a complex of Catholic buildings. The church... Read More