1 Former Friends’ Meeting House built 1702-3. Meetings ceased in 1851 and a few years later it was sold and converted to a cottage with the addition of a wing ...
A Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House, built in the Post Medieval period. It ceased being a place of worship in 1851, and was later converted to a house. It was located in the area of The Green at Radway.
1 Methodist Chapel, dated 1831. Red brick with stone plinth. Sunday School room added after 1900.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located to the east of Bottom Street, Northend.
1 Brick Methodist chapel with dressed stone quoins. Built 1888.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located on Queen Street, Cubbington.
1 Quaker meeting house with earliest evidence from Saville recording a meeting house in 1677. The Quarter Sessions record a meeting house in 1701. A deed of 1727 ...
Early 18th century Friends (Quakers) meeting house with graveyard. Located 40m southeast of the High Street in Alcester.
1 Marked as an ‘Independent Chapel’ on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886
2 Marked as a ‘Congregational Church’ on the Ordnance Survey map of 1924
A nonconformist chapel is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and on the Ordnance Survey map of 1924 as a 'Congregational Church'. It is situated in Binton.
1 Wesleyan. Brick and slate. Opened 1836, porch later.
2 Photograph in the above reference.
3 Historic Building Record Card.
A nonconformist chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Coleshill Road, Atherstone.
1 Unlike the other Methodist chapel in Long Compton (PRN 2372) this chapel is still in normal use. It was consecrated in 1807. Stone-built with tiled roof.
2 Noted in RCHME ...
A Methodist Chapel dating from the Imperial Period. It is situated 100m north of the Primary School.
1 The ‘Independent Chapel’ was the first home of Nonconformity in Leamington. Named the ‘Union Chapel’, it was opened in 1816 and considerably altered and rebuilt in 1835. In 1836 ...
The site of Union Chapel, a nonconformist chapel built in the Imperial period. It was located in Clemens Street, Leamington Spa.
1 Built in 1821 at a cost of £1,200. Red brick with low pitched slate roof with hipped ends and wide projecting eaves. Two storeys. Square on plan but with ...
A two storey vicarage which was built during the Imperial period of red brick. It is situated 150m north of the church, Cubbington.
1 1876-7 by J Cundall, in the ‘Geometrical Gothic style’. Still a place of worship; the interior has been drastically altered but the exterior is much as built.
Trinity Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period and located on the Radford Road. It is still a place of worship.
1 In 1850 there was a Friends Meeting House in Brailes, said to have been erected in the time of their founder, George Fox.
2 The original building was constructed c1684. ...
The site of a chapel which was built during the Post Medieval period. A new chapel was built on the same site during the Imperial period and continued in use until the 1930s. The chapel was situated 100m south of the school at Lower Brailes.
1 Built 1864. ‘In the plain Grecian style of architecture’, seating 500, architect Mr Timms. Closed in 1966, the site being redeveloped as a modern office block.
3 Marked on the ...
The site of a United Free Methodist Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It was located in Warwick Street, Leamington.