Matches 151 to 200 of 225 » See Gallery » Slide Show
#
| Thumb |
Description |
Linked to |
151 |
| St Mary Magdalene Church, Billericay, Essex The chapel was probably built in the 14th century and rebuilt or extended in the 15th century, when the present tower was built.
High Street & Chapel Street, Billericay
|
|
152 |
| St Mary Magdalene Church, East Ham, Greater London St Mary Magdalene's Church's nave, chancel and apse date to the first half of the 12th century and the tower probably to the early 13th century but partly rebuilt in the 16th century - it is claimed to be the oldest parish church still in weekly use in Greater London
High Street South & Norman Road, East Ham
|
|
153 |
| St Mary Magdalene Church, Peckham, Greater London The first church building on this site was consecrated on 7th May 1841. In the blitz during WWII, the church was destroyed by a bomb on 21st September 1940 with the loss of five lives. The building was replaced in the 1960s.
St. Mary's Road, Peckham
|
|
154 |
| St Mary the Virgin Church, Great Dunmow, Essex The building is predominantly 13th century.
Church Street, Great Dunmow
|
|
155 |
| St Mary the Virgin Church, Ilford, Greater London Built in 1830.
426 High Road, Ilford
|
|
156 |
| St Mary the Virgin Church, Little Ilford, Greater London St Mary's Church, mainly 12th century, had its chancel rebuilt and a south porch and family chapel to the Lethieullier family added in 1724. It remained a parish church until 1938, at which point it became a chapel of ease to St Michael's Church, Romford Road.
Church Road & St. Winefride's Avenue, Little Ilford
|
|
157 |
| St Mary the Virgin Church, Matching, Essex The Church of St Mary was probably built on an old Saxon site. The tower was added in the 15th century; plain, square and embattled and surmounted by a low tiled spire and weather clock. It retains its original 13th century doorway. Six bells are in the tower, restored in 1990. It is inscribed "God Save the Queen". The second and third bells were originally cast about 1500 by William Culverden of Houndsditch, and inscribed "Sancte Thoma ora pro nobis" and "Sancta Anna ora pro nobis"; the fourth is inscribed "God Save the King. 1615" and the fifth "God Save the King. 1640". A sixth bell was added in 1887 to celebrate the Jubilee of Queen Victoria. The clock on the church tower was removed from the old church at Epping when the church was pulled down, and set up in St Mary the Virgin.
On the road running from Downhall Road to Harlow Road, Matching
|
|
158 |
| St Mary the Virgin Church, Sheering, Essex Church Lane, Sheering
|
|
159 |
| St Mary the Virgin, Wanstead, Greater London, England, United Kingdom Overton Drive & Langley Drive, Wanstead, London Borough of Redbridge, Greater London, England
Built between 1787 and 1790.
|
|
160 |
| St Mary's Church, Buttsbury, Essex The earliest part of the church is 12th Century.
Buttsbury Road & Ingatestone Road, Buttsbury
|
|
161 |
| St Mary's Church, Magdalen Laver, Essex The Parish Church of Saint Mary's Magdalen was built in the 12th century and consists of nave, chancel, west tower, and a south porch. The walls are made of flint rubble and Roman brick and the tower from timber.
|
|
162 |
| St Mary's Church, Marylebone, Greater London St Mary's, Bryanston Square, was built in 1824.
York Street & Wyndham Place, Marylebone
|
|
163 |
| St Mary's Church, Tuddenham, Suffolk The church comprises a chancel, nave, south aisle and tower and dates mainly from the 14th century. The church is built of stone, flint and rubble and it underwent a thorough renovation in 1876 when the roof was replaced. New pews and a new organ were installed at the same time.
High Street & Cavenham Road, Tuddenham
|
|
164 |
| St Mary's Churchyard
|
|
165 |
| St Mary's, Barnard Castle, Durham Founded in 1130, it sits at the heart of Barnard Castle.
Newgate & A67, Barnard Castle
|
|
166 |
| St Mary's, Woodford, Greater London The medieval church was substantially rebuilt in brick in the Gothic style in 1816.
High Road, Walthamstow
|
|
167 |
| St Marylebone Parish Church, London, Greater London, England The foundation stone was laid on 5 July 1813. Later it was decided to enlarge the building and call it the Parish Church; the present tower was erected, the front widened, and the present Corinthian columns built.
Marylebone Road between Nottingham Place & Marylebone High Street, Marylebone
|
|
168 |
| St Matthew's Church, Bayswater, Greater London It was completed in 1882, replacing an earlier church dating from 1818.
Chapel Side & Moscow Road, Bayswater
|
|
169 |
| St Matthias Old Church, Poplar, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, Greater London, England St Matthias Old Church is the modern name given to the Poplar Chapel built by the East India Company in 1654, in Poplar in the East End of London. St Matthias is a brick building enhanced with stone quoins at the corners, combining Classical and Gothic elements.
Located along Woodstock Terrace between Poplar High Street & East India Dock Road, Poplar
|
|
170 |
| St Michael's and All Angels Church, Galleywood, Essex The building is in a 14th century style of architecture.
Off of Margaretting Road, Galleywood
|
|
171 |
| St Michael's Church, Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire St Michael's Church as seen today was largely built in the early fifteenth century in the style called Perpendicular. It was altered and restored in both the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. The upper part of the tower and the spire date from the early 1800’s. The oldest item in the Church is the font (the square stone bowl in which water is put for baptisms) which dates from the mid twelfth century.
Church Street & High Street, Bishop's Stortford
|
|
172 |
| St Nicholas' Church, Colchester, Essex The church, here at least by the 12th century, contained Roman walls in its foundation. The church was rebuilt in the 14th century, again in the 1870s, and finally razed in 1954, making way for a large Co-op store. Four bells from St. Nicholas have been installed at Basilden.
Cowdray Crescent & High Street, Colchester
|
|
173 |
| St Paul's Anglican Church, Almonte The stone church, described as English Parish Gothic, was consecrated on June 29, 1864.
Brougham Street & Clyde Street, Almonte
|
|
174 |
| St Peter ad Vincula Church, Coggeshall, Essex St Peter ad Vincula in Coggeshall, Essex, is one of a group of oversized churches built following the success of the early wool-trade in the East Anglia area. The building now standing was completed in the first quarter of the 15th Century, and sits on a site where both Saxon and Norman churches stood previously.
Church Green between Colne Road & Vane Lane, Coggeshall
|
|
175 |
| St Peter Mancroft Parish Church, Norwich, Norfolk The present building was built in the 15th century, almost entirely faced with limestone brought from many miles away by land and sea since there is no local free-stone in Norfolk.
Millenium Plain & Hay Hill, Norwich
|
|
176 |
| St Peter's Church, Belsize Park, Greater London St Peter's Church is a Victorian church built in the gothic style with a clock tower. It was consecrated in 1859, and stands in its own garden.
Belsize Avenue at Belsize Square, Belsize Park
|
|
177 |
| St Peter's Church, South Weald, Essex The present church dates from about 1150, although the South Door with its chevron ornamentation is the sole remaining Norman feature.
Weald Road & Wigley Bush Lane, South Weald
|
|
178 |
| St Stephens Church, Bow, Greater London Constructed in 1858, the church was destroyed by Second World War bombing and the ruins demolished.
St Stephens Road & Tredegar Road
|
|
179 |
| St. Andrew's Church, Holborn, Greater London The medieval St Andrew's survived the 1666 Great Fire of London, but in a bad state of repair was rebuilt by Christopher Wren in the 1700s. During WWII, the church was bombed and gutted, leaving only the exterior walls and tower. Instead of demolition, it was decided after a long delay that it would be restored "stone for stone and brick for brick" to Wren's original designs.
St. Andrew Street & New Fetter Lane, Holborn
|
|
180 |
| St. Andrew's Church, Hornchurch, Greater London A church has stood on this site for over 800 years, each generation in turn having cared for it and added to or subtracted from it, altering the Church to suit needs of the time.
Upminster Road, Hornchurch
|
|
181 |
| St. Andrew's Church, Romford, Greater London The Church of St. Andrew was built in 1862.
St. Andrew's Road & London Road, Romford
|
|
182 |
| St. Andrew's Church, Sandon, Essex Built in the 12th century, with additions and changes over the centuries.
Woodhill Road & Hall Lane, Sandon
|
|
183 |
| St. Bartholomew's Church, Horley, Surrey Parts of the church date from the 14th century and heavily restored in 1881-2, with the south aisle, west porch and organ chamber and vestry added in 1900. It now consists of an aisled nave, chancel, south east organ chamber and vestry, north west tower with shingled spire, and north and west porches.
Church Road & Church View Close, Horley
|
|
184 |
| St. Benedict's Church, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire St Bene't's Anglo-Saxon tower was "most probably" built between AD 1000–1050, although the present bell-openings were added in 1586.
Benedict Street & Free School Lane, Cambridge
|
|
185 |
| St. Croix County Asylum & County Home, Star Prairie Township, Wisconsin The St. Croix County Asylum was built in 1897 as a home and a farm. By 1958 it was beginning to shut down, with parcels of land being sold and some buildings torn down. The main building was demolished in 1984.
185th Avenue, East of Brigetta Drive, Star Prairie Township
|
|
186 |
| St. James' Church, Walthamstow, Greater London Walthamstow’s first St James’s church was erected in 1842. A replacement was built in 1902 and demolished sixty years later. The site is now occupied by a health clinic.
St. James Mews & St. James Street, Walthamstow
|
|
187 |
| St. John the Baptist Church, Hoxton, Greater London The church was completed in 1826.
Pitfield Street & New N Road, Hoxton
|
|
188 |
| St. John's Church, Loughton, Essex St. John's Church was built in 1846.
|
|
189 |
| St. Luke's Hospital and Home, Utica, New York Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Proctor financed the construction of the St. Luke’s Home and Hospital on Whitesboro St., which started in 1869.
Whitesboro Street & Harper Street, Utica
|
|
190 |
| St. Luke's Hospital, New Bedford, Massachusetts The hospital was founded in 1884.
|
|
191 |
| St. Margaret's Church, Rochester, Kent The earliest, and only medieval, part of the building is the tower which was either constructed or restored in 1465. The medieval church consisted of a nave and two chancels to the south of the nave, of this nothing remains. In 1823 rebuilding started with the nave completed the following year, the original chancel, tower and side chapels being retained. With the exception of the tower the medieval buildings were demolished a few years later and by 1840 the basic fabric of the present building was complete.
St. Margaret's Street & Roebuck Road, Rochester
|
|
192 |
| St. Martin in the Fields Church, Westminster, Greater London There has been a church on the site since the medieval period. The present building was constructed in a Neoclassical design by James Gibbs in 1722–1726.
Duncannon Street & Trafalgar Square, Westminster
|
|
193 |
| St. Martins Church, Little Waltham, Essex Brook Hill & Back Lane, Little Waltham
|
|
194 |
| St. Mary's Church, London Borough of Ealing, Greater London After years of neglect and deterioration, the medieval church was pulled down in the late 1720s and a plain and simple Georgian building erected, opening in 1740, which stands here today.
St Mary's Road & Church Place, Ealing
|
|
195 |
| St. Mary's Church, Ramsden Crays, Essex The 15th-century church of St Mary's has been converted to a private house. The entire church, excluding the bell tower and the broach spine was entirely rebuilt in 1871. Few elements of the original 15th-century church do remain.
Church Lane, Ramsden Crays
|
|
196 |
| St. Mary's Church, Walthamstow, Greater London, England Church Lane, Walthamstow, Greater London, England
St Mary’s is the ancient parish church of Walthamstow and its oldest building, with foundations dating to the 12th century.
|
|
197 |
| St. Mary's Parish Church, Prittlewell, Essex In the 11th century, the Norman nave was built, which greatly enlarged the building, and the chancel of the new church was built over the foundations of the 7th century Saxon chapel.
Victoria Avenue & St Mary's Road, Prittlewell
|
|
198 |
| St. Michael the Archangel Church, Cobourg The corner-stone of the present St. Michael's Church was laid on June 9, 1895 and completed church was dedicated on February 23, 1896.
Division Street & University Avenue West, Cobourg
|
|
199 |
| St. Nicholas Church, Rochester, Kent The church of St Nicholas was completed in 1423. By 1620 the church, in poor condition, was partly demolished, rebuilt, and reconsecrated in 1624. In the 1970s, the church no longer in use, became the headquarters of the Diocesan Board of Education.
College Yard & High Street, Rochester
|
|
200 |
| St. Nicholas' Church, Tolleshunt D'Arcy, Essex The church is mainly late 14th century, and early 15th century, restored in the 19th century.
Church Road, Tolleshunt D'Arcy
|
|
|
|