1 This building appears to have been converted from a pair of terraced redbrick houses. It appears to be in normal use as a nonconformist meeting house.
A Seventh Day Adventist Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Wells Street, Rugby.
1 Plain, red brick, buttressed, no tower, bellcote above door. Chapel of ease to St Andrew’s. In normal use.
The Church of St John, a chapel of ease which was built during the Imperial period. The church is situated in Cambridge Street, Rugby.
1 Red brick, stone dressings, no tower. In normal use.
A Methodist church that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated Cambridge Street, Rugby.
1 A mid 20th century brick structure with no tower. In normal use.
A United Reform Church which was built during the mid 20th century. It is situated on Hillmorton Road, Rugby.
1 A tall brick building with a slender spire. In normal use.
The Church of the English Martyrs which was built during the 20th century. It is situated on Hillmorton High Street.
1 Built 1823 and used until 1869 when the church in Market Street was completed. After that it was used as a day school for sixteen years until it became ...
The site of a chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It was later used as a school and then as a warehouse. The chapel was situated in Chapel Street, Rugby but no traces of the building are visible.
1 Dated 1905 by foundation stone inscription. Red brick with stone dressings. Tower with slender ?wooden spire. Adjacent is a church hall in similar style.
A nonconformist parish church which was built during the Imperial period. The church is situated 175m south west of the Town Hall, Rugby.
1 A small modern church of red brick.
2 Noted by Ordnance Survey
The Church of St Mary dates to the Imperial period. It is built of red brick. The church is situated in Langley.
1 Bishopton Church was demolished in 1836 (MWA6261) and a new church built on a different site.
2 Rebuilt from designs by Joseph Lattimore.
3 Nave and chancel in one. 1836 by ...
The site of the Church of St Peter which dates to the Imperial period. The church was located in Bishopton. The building has been demolished but the graveyard remains.
1 Built 1837. Chancel, nave and W embattled tower, all in red brick.
2 Humble interior.
3 Church now completely demolished. No surface traces visible.
The Parish Church of St. John which was situated 200north east of Epps Farm. It was built during the Imperial period.
1 Chancel, nave, S porch and S vestry. Built in the 14th century Gothic style in 1849, probably on the site of the old church (PRN 3524); no parts of ...
A chapel that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated north of Copston Lane, Copston Magna.
1 A chapel for dissenters.
2 Almost a mirror image of the C of E mortuary chapel (PRN 5478). Now used as a tool store.
A Nonconformist mortuary chapel which was built during the Imperial period. The building is still standing but is in use as a tool store. It is situated in the Clifton Road Cemetery, Rugby.
1 Built in 1822-3 by J Russell at a cost of 2,340. Red brick, Georgian, with a W tower. The chancel was built in 1897 (G B Vialls).
The Church of St. Paul, which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on St. Paul's Road, Stockingford.
1 Built by Bateman and Corser in 1879. Rock faced, with NW steeple and polygonal apse. A poor job architecturally, though it cost 4,000 pounds.
The New Church of St. Peter and St. Paul which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated New Road, Water Orton.
1 Built in 1789. Architect Joseph Bonomi. Rectangular with a tower at each angle. Red brick and stone dressing. Each face is identical, having an ...
The Church of St. James, which as built during the Imperial period in red brick with stone dressing. It is situated 800m north east of Packington Hall.
1 Dated 1867. Red brick with a tiled roof and a house adjoining at the N end. In use as a church.
A Baptist chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated in Church Road, Shilton.
1 Rendered red brick. Small graveyard. Still in use. A plaque above the door says Wesleyan 1844.
A Methodist chapel which was built during the Imperial period is situated on Chapel Lane, Barnacle.
1 Congregational Church marked.
2 The chapel has been demolished and the site is now overgrown and covered by rubble.
The site of a chapel that was in use during the Imperial period. The chapel is marked on a tithe award map of 1843. It was situated 300m north west of the church at Withybrook.
1 There is a chapel attached to the mansion which was opened for Roman Catholic worship for the first time in 1866 and two years later was formally constituted a ...
The site of a Roman Catholic chapel that was built during the Imperial period. It was associated with Newnham Paddox mansion but was later demolished. The chapel was situated in the area of Newnham Paddox.
1 Built 1876. Red brick with yellow brick dressings. Front has a central arched doorway flanked by two narrow arched windows andwith a rose window above. Disused.
A Methodist chapel that was built during the Imperial period. The chapel is no longer in use but it is situated on Daventry Road, Dunchurch.
1 There is a red brick modern church at the above location which was built in 1935.
2 The church is in use and is well-maintained.
A Methodist church that was built during the 1930s. It is still in use and is situated on Rugby Road, Dunchurch
1 Wesleyan Chapel built in 1862.
2 The chapel has recently been converted into a private house and modernised.
A Wesleyan Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is now in use as a private house. The chapel is situated in North Road, Clifton upon Dunsmore.
1 Of brick with a slate roof and a porch. United Reformed Church.
A Congregational Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated in Newton.
1 Built of brick with a tile roof. Early 20th century.
The Church of the Good Shepherd, a chapel that was built towards the end of the Imperial period. It is situated at the south end of Newton.