Pulpit

  • Beautiful 14th Century Church

    Beautiful 14th Century Church

    14th century Grade I listed parish church built of flint and local stone located in a beautiful, historic market town on the edge of the South Downs National Park. The church retains many features of some importance including the font, the remarkable stone pulpit, stunning stained glass windows, a rare medieval iron screen, consecration crosses,…

  • 17th Century Chapel

    17th Century Chapel

    Non conformist 17th century chapel built on Norman and Elizabethan foundations in the centre of a beautiful and historic town. Features include a unique library dating back to 1760. The chapel is suitable for small scale filming, rehearsal, make up, and is a private, useful comfort station and/or logistics HQ, and professional catering is available.…

  • Grade I Listed Saxon Church

    Grade I Listed Saxon Church

    This church is of charming flint construction and stands on a slight rise above a river. Today with just a house or two for company it is hard to imagine that 700 years ago it was at the heart of a bustling port and crossing place of the river. As the river changed course and…

  • Charming Grade I Listed Medieval Church

    Charming Grade I Listed Medieval Church

    This Grade I listed medieval church is situated in a rural hamlet in the West Sussex countryside. It is a simple building dating to the 12th century, with a deep sweeping roof and a dainty bell cote. Most furnishings and fittings date to the mid-19th century and comprise a largely complete early ecclesiological seating scheme…

  • 12th Century Church With Norman Carvings

    12th Century Church With Norman Carvings

    The entrance to this 12th century flint church looks like something out of a medieval fantasy – three rows of Norman carvings arch over a thick wooden door set with ornamental hinge straps. Inside, creatures unlike anything found in nature peer down from the chancel arch. They are called ‘beakheads’ – boggle-eyed monsters with beaks,…

  • Early 19th Century Georgian Chapel

    Early 19th Century Georgian Chapel

    Built in 1812, the delightfully elegant design of this chapel reflects the importance the evangelical movement placed on sermons and scripture reading rather than communion. Unusually, it was not built as a parish church, but was privately funded and then run by trustees of the evangelical movement of the Church of England. Ministers were largely…