The Archdiocese of Westminster was founded on 29 September 1850. It covers the Greater London boroughs north of the Thames and west of Waltham Forest and Newham, as well as the districts of Staines and Sunbury-on-Thames, and the county of Hertfordshire.The cathedral is in Victoria, London, and is dedicated to the Precious Blood. 216 churches were visited for Taking Stock (2013).
A very large and fine Gothic church, one of the first in England to be built by the revived Dominican Order. Its... Read More
A large suburban church, built in the early 1960s, the plan conventionally longitudinal but the details entirely of... Read More
A modern church of 1987 with integral hall. The church is roughly square on plan and laid out on the diagonal, with a... Read More
A small modern church, serving the school to which it is attached and the western part of the new town.Hemel... Read More
A mid-nineteenth-century Gothic Revival church by Gilbert Blount, considerably enlarged and reorientated in the 1920s... Read More
A simple early twentieth-century structure, built as an Anglican church hall and converted to use as a Catholic church... Read More
A small stone and flint church of the 1850s, designed by Henry Clutton for Fr (later Cardinal Archbishop) Herbert... Read More
A large suburban church, built in the early 1960s. The plan is conventionally longitudinal, but the design is entirely... Read More
A large post-war church built just before the Second Vatican Council. In the opinion of The Buildings of England this... Read More
A large Italian Romanesque design with a prominent dome, built for the Passionists. The interior is richly decorated... Read More
A suburban brick church of 1960 in a sober, round-arched style. It consists chiefly of a long, uninterrupted nave and... Read More
A design of the 1970s, replacing the predecessor church of 1901, which survives alongside as the parish hall. The... Read More