Standing peacefully under the Downs, on the pilgrims route to Canterbury, is this stocky flint-and-ragstone church with its stocky west tower…
The 850-year-old church of St Mary?s is hidden in a farmyard on marshland fringes to the south of the River Swale…
St Mary’s sits remote from Higham village in orchards on the edge of marshes running to the Thames…
This charming little flint church, close to the east bank of the Thames, can be reached by The Ridgeway Path from Wallingford Bridge, which leads on to Mongewell, another Trust church…
This Medieval-style flint and stone church is a Gothic Revival gem…
Spend some time in St Mary’s and you will be richly rewarded. Originally built by nuns, the church now consists of a 13th-century nave and chancel, while the transepts and flint tower are 19th-century additions…
This 12th century church, set prettily amongst trees, was probably built to serve Gains Castle, a Norman fortification now vanished…
St Mary’s was built in 1866, by Henry Conybeare for his brother who was the Rector of the church, and felt the previous church was cold…
Standing remote in rural surroundings and designed by J L Pearson in 1875, St Mary’s is a fine example of low budget inventiveness…
This peaceful church in a working farmyard has beautiful unspoilt Georgian furnishings and a wonderfully preserved Norman tower - one of the smallest complete church towers in England…