1 By Henry Clutton, 1861-5. A noble building, even now that it is deprived of the square spire on its slender SW tower. Brick, Early English, short, with a clerestory, ...
The Roman Catholic Church of St Peter was built during the Imperial period, it was completed in 1864 but in 1883 everything except the tower, burnt down. It was then rebuilt in red brick and it stands on Dormer Place.
1 Opened 1828.
2 Leamington Youth Mission, George Street. Built in 1826 as the Catholic Chapel. Three bays, stuccoed, with attached unfluted Ionic columns and pediment.
3 Described.
4 Marked as a ‘Mission ...
St Peter's, a Roman Catholic Chapel, built in the Imperial period. It is situated in George Street..
1 Chancel, nave, N vestry and SW tower. Rebuilt in 1876 with walls of grey rag-faced rubble and yellow freestone dressings. A number of ancient, mostly early 14th century stones ...
The Church of St Mary which was built during the Imperial period. Some of the building material within the walls of the church is 14th century stone that has been reused. The church is located in Atherstone on Stour.
1 VCH entry.
2 Nave of three bays with chancel extension at rear. Gabled end of ashlar facing the street.
4 A Presbyterian society was in existence by 1691, which became increasingly ...
A Non Conformist Unitarian Chapel built in the Imperial period, with later additions and alterations. It is to the east of Westgate Close, Warwick.
4 Seceders from the Presbyterian society built a chapel here in 1758. It was enlarged in 1798 and further enlarged to the front and heightened in 1826 to the designs ...
Brook Street Congregational Church, Warwick, was a Nonconformist chapel built in the Imperial period. It was closed for worship in 1981, and has been converted to offices.
1 St Peter’s Church of 1909.
2 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
3 Church in advanced state of disrepair, temporarily held at bay with external shoring, internal ties etc. Radical re-ordering may be ...
The Church of St. Peter which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated at Galley Common, 100m south of Galley Gap.
1 Apsidal chancel, nave and W tower with stone spire. Built 1842 of brown brick in the C13 style.
2 Built in 1841-2 and designed by T L Walker, cost £2,629. ...
Holy Trinity Church which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Church Way, Attleborough.
1 The former mission church of St Luke, which has now been converted. It was built by public subscription in the late 19th century; the license of the church ...
The former mission church of St Luke, which has now been converted.
1 Alcester Poor Law Union was formed on 31st May 1836. The Alcester Union workhouse was built in 1837 at site to the east of Alcester on the south side ...
The Alcester Union workhouse was built in 1837 at site to the east of Alcester on the south side of Kinwarton Road. It followed the popular cruciform or "square" layout. A small infirmary block was added at the east of the site, and was extended southwards in 1879. The former workhouse later became Alcester Hospital, and the later infirmary block is still in use. The main buildings, now known as Oversley House, were converted to residential use in 1984.
1 Chancel with N organ chamber and vestry, nave, N aisle and SW tower serving as a porch. Entirely rebuilt in 1875. Of lias stone with sandstone dressings. C17 shield ...
The Church of St Andrew which was built during the Imperial period and replaced an earlier church. It is situated in Temple Grafton.
1 1871-2 by J Cotton. Lias. Turret with spire at the E end of the N side of the nave. Open timber porch. The architectural style is c1300.
The parish church of All Saints, built in the Imperial period, completed in 1872. The church is situated south of Manor Farm, Luddington.
1 Dorsington Church, in the centre of the village, was built in 1745, and is in normal use. It stands adjacent to Moat house (WA1812), a large moated farmhouse.
2 ...
The Church of St Peter was built in during the Imperial period. It is situated in the the centre of Dorsington.
1 Chancel, nave and bell-turret. Built in 1863, of brick, in the Perpendicular style.
2 Photograph.
The Church of St Mary the Virgin, built in the Imperial period in the perpendicular style. It is situated on Church Lane, No Man's Heath.
1 The first edition 6″ map shows St Andrew’s Church.
The Parish Church of St. Andrews which is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The church dates back to at least the Imperial period.
1 The chapel at Dassett Northend is in regular use. It was converted from a Victorian Chapel of Ease into a chapel to supplement the church at Burton. ...
Northend Chapel, built in the Imperial period, originally as a chapel of ease. It is situated 100m south east of the church at Northend.
1 Built of stone in late 13th century style. Chancel, N chapel, nave, N aisle, S porch, and W tower. The W tower was rebuilt in 1771 ...
The Church of St Laurence which was built during the Imperial period. It replaced a Medieval church that had existed on the same site. The church is located on Church Lane, Lighthorne.
1 A Wesleyan Chapel dated 1898. Red brick with a slate roof. The building is not in use but is well maintained. There was an earlier Methodist chapel in a ...
A Wesleyan Chapel which was built during the Imperial period is situated on Main Street, Willoughby.
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 Apsidal chancel, nave with bell-turret, N porch and S vestry.
3 1857-58 by Edward Haycock. Lias ashlar with limestone dressings and tile roof. Three-bay nave, apsidal chancel, W bellcote and ...
The Church of St. James which was built in 1857. It is situated in Weethley
1 1854-6 by James Murray. Aisles, clerestorey, and tower added c1868 by Bodley and Garner. Quite a large church. S porch tower with broach-spire. Also transepts. The style Decorated.
2 Demolished ...
The site of the Church of All Saints which was built during the Imperial period. It was demolished during nineteenth century. It was located on Vicarage Field, Emscote, Warwick.
1 Stone construction. Erected 1814, enlarged in 1839 and restored in 1879.
2 Visited in 1982.
A Methodist Chapel, built in the Imperial period and located at Oxhill, 200m north of the Anglican Church.
1 Brick and tile, gabled N front of three bays with two tiers of round-arched windows and date 1828 on a stone above the entrance; adjacent properties have been demolished. ...
A nonconformist chapel built in brick with a tile roof. It was built in the Imperial period and is situated on High Street, Polesworth.
1 Nave and apse and S transept. The church is an extension of the cemetery chapel built by the corporation in 1824-5, which became the S transept of the church.
2 ...
The Church of St Paul was built during the Imperial period, between 1848 and 1850. It is the extension of a cemetery chapel dating to the 1820s. It is situated on Friars Street, Warwick.
1 Rebuilt on a new site in 1866; consists of a chancel, with a N vestry and organ chamber, nave, N and S aisles, S porch and a W tower ...
The Parish Church of St Peter dates to the second half of the Imperial period. It replaced a Medieval church which was located to the south. The church is situated in Radway.