List of current places of worship in Wealden

The "Cathedral of the Downs", St Andrew's Church at Alfriston, is an unrestored 14th-century Anglican church.

There are more than 130 current places of worship in Wealden, the largest of six local government districts in the English county of East Sussex. The mostly rural district, with five small towns and dozens of villages, has a 1,200-year documented history of Christian worship—a Saxon leader founded a church at Rotherfield in 790—and by the 19th century nearly every settlement had at least one church, as formerly extensive parishes were split up. Protestant Nonconformism, always strong in Sussex, flourished in the area now covered by the district: many Baptist, Methodist and Congregational chapels were built, and most survive. New churches continued to be built throughout the 20th century as the population grew. The district also has 40 former places of worship: their buildings survive but are now used for other purposes.

English Heritage has awarded listed status to more than 60 current and former church buildings in Wealden. A building is defined as "listed" when it is placed on a statutory register of buildings of "special architectural or historic interest" in accordance with the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.[1] The Department for Culture, Media and Sport, a Government department, is responsible for this; English Heritage, a non-departmental public body, acts as an agency of the department to administer the process and advise the department on relevant issues.[2] There are three grades of listing status. Grade I, the highest, is defined as being of "exceptional interest"; Grade II* is used for "particularly important buildings of more than special interest"; and Grade II, the lowest, is used for buildings of "special interest".[3] As of February 2001, there were 47 Grade I-listed buildings, 106 with Grade II* status and 2,020 Grade II-listed buildings in Wealden.[4]

Location of Wealden and its places of worship

Wealden shown within East Sussex

Covering an area of 83,317 hectares (205,880 acres; 321.69 sq mi),[5] Wealden is the largest of the six local authority areas in East Sussex,[6] which has three small, highly urbanised coastal areas (the city of Brighton and Hove[note 1] and the boroughs of Eastbourne and Hastings) and a large rural hinterland covered by three districts. Wealden is at the centre of these: the district of Lewes lies to the west and Rother is to the east.[7][8]

Wealden's population at the time of the United Kingdom Census 2001 was 140,023.[5] Five small towns—Crowborough, Hailsham, Heathfield, Polegate and Uckfield—account for about half of these people,[6] and each has several places of worship catering for different denominations. The rest of the population is spread across dozens of villages and hamlets in the largely rural district.[6] Many of these settlements have at least one church—often an ancient building on a site where worship has taken place for over a thousand years. St Wilfrid, exiled to Sussex in the late 7th century, and his near-contemporary St Cuthman rapidly Christianised the county, and the 111 churches described in the Domesday Book of 1086 was a significant underestimate.[9]

Religious affiliation

According to the United Kingdom Census 2001, 140,023 people lived in Wealden district. Of these, 77.2% identified themselves as Christian, 0.37% were Muslim, 0.2% were Buddhist, 0.19% were Jewish, 0.08% were Hindu, 0.01% were Sikh, 0.7% followed another religion, 13.86% claimed no religious affiliation and 7.38% did not state their religion. The proportion of Christians was much higher than the 71.74% in England as a whole, and other religions not listed in the Census were also followed by more people than average. The proportion of people with no religious affiliation was lower than the national figure of 14.59%, and adherents of Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism and Sikhism were much less prevalent in the district than in England overall: in 2001, 3.1% of people in England were Muslim, 1.11% were Hindu, 0.67% were Sikh, 0.52% were Jewish and 0.28% were Buddhist.[10]

Administration

All Anglican churches in Wealden are part of the Diocese of Chichester, whose cathedral is at Chichester in West Sussex,[11] and most are in the Archdeaconry of Lewes and Hastings—one of three subdivisions which make up the next highest level of administration.[12] In turn, this archdeaconry is divided into eight deaneries.[12] The churches at Hooe and Ninfield are in the Rural Deanery of Battle and Bexhill.[13] Those at Bodle Street Green, Broad Oak, Cross-in-Hand, Hailsham, Hawkswood, Heathfield, Hellingly, Herstmonceux, Horam, Old Heathfield, Upper Dicker, Waldron, Warbleton and Wartling are part of the Rural Deanery of Dallington.[14] East Dean, Friston, Jevington, Pevensey, Pevensey Bay, Polegate, Stone Cross, Westham and Willingdon's churches are in the Eastbourne Rural Deanery.[15] The churches at Alciston, Alfriston, Arlington, Berwick, Chalvington, Folkington, Laughton, Litlington, Lullington, Ripe, Selmeston, West Dean and Wilmington are in the Rural Deanery of Lewes and Seaford.[16] Those at Blackham, Coleman's Hatch, Crowborough (three churches), Eridge Green, Five Ashes, Frant, Groombridge, Hartfield, Jarvis Brook, Mark Cross, Mayfield, Rotherfield, Tidebrook, Wadhurst and Withyham are in Rotherfield Rural Deanery.[17] Buxted's two churches and those at Chelwood Gate, Chiddingly, Danehill, East Hoathly, Fairwarp, Fletching, Framfield, Hadlow Down, High Hurstwood, Isfield, Little Horsted,[note 2] Maresfield, Nutley and Uckfield are part of the Rural Deanery of Uckfield.[18] Three churches in the north of the district—at Forest Row, Hammerwood and Holtye Common (now redundant)—are part of the Rural Deanery of East Grinstead in the Archdeaconry of Horsham.[19]

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton, whose cathedral is at Arundel,[20] administers Wealden's 11 Roman Catholic churches. Forest Row's church is in the Crawley Deanery; the churches at Hailsham, Pevensey Bay and Polegate are in Eastbourne Deanery; and the other seven—at Crowborough, Heathfield, Heron's Ghyll, Mayfield, Rotherfield, Uckfield and Wadhurst—are in Mayfield Deanery.[21]

Four United Reformed Churches in the district, at Crowborough, Lower Willingdon, Polegate and Uckfield, are part of the Central Sussex United Area.[22] This ecumenical partnership with the Methodist Church was developed by the United Reformed Church's Southern Synod in September 2007.[23]

Union Church in Heathfield[24] and the Herstmonceux Free Church[25] are part of the 34-church South-East Area[26] of the Congregational Federation, an association of 294 independent Congregational churches in Great Britain. The federation came into existence in 1972 when the Congregational Church in England and Wales merged with several other denominations to form the United Reformed Church. Certain congregations wanted to remain independent of this, and instead joined the Congregational Federation.[27]

Open places of worship

Name Image Location Denomination/
Affiliation
Grade Notes Refs
Alciston Church Alciston
50°49′48″N 0°08′12″E / 50.8299°N 0.1368°E / 50.8299; 0.1368 (Alciston Church, Alciston)
Anglican I Much 12th-century work remains in this isolated church; it had links to Battle Abbey at that time. Remnants of a Saxon apse are also visible. The flint building has a wooden belfry and a late-19th-century timber-framed roof. Restoration was carried out in 1853. The chancel is mostly 13th-century. [28][29]
[30][31]
St Andrew's Church Alfriston
50°48′24″N 0°09′29″E / 50.8066°N 0.1580°E / 50.8066; 0.1580 (St Andrew's Church, Alfriston)
Anglican I This large cruciform church, known as the "Cathedral of the Downs", dates from about 1360 and has been only minimally altered: the spire was restored in 1905. The flintwork is extremely finely crafted. The lancet windows vary between two Gothic styles—Decorated and Perpendicular. Fittings include an Easter Sepulchre. [32][33]
[34][35]
[36]
St Pancras' Church Arlington
50°50′46″N 0°11′25″E / 50.8462°N 0.1902°E / 50.8462; 0.1902 (St Pancras' Church, Arlington)
Anglican I A chiefly Anglo-Saxon flint church with some Early English and Decorated Gothic additions, this building has a 15th-century king post roof and faint remnants of wall murals. By 1850, the building was so dilapidated that it closed for restoration until 1893. Roman brickwork and remains of an earlier wooden and wattle-and-daub church have also been found. [36][37]
[38][39]
[40]
Bells Yew Green Chapel Bells Yew Green
51°06′09″N 0°17′49″E / 51.1024°N 0.2969°E / 51.1024; 0.2969 (Bells Yew Green Chapel, Bells Yew Green)
Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion Situated very close to the Kent border, and associated with the former Emmanuel Chapel at Tunbridge Wells, this chapel is attached to a house. It was built by the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion Trust in 1879, and has a rendered exterior. [41][42]
[43][44]
St Michael and All Angels Church Berwick
50°49′26″N 0°09′18″E / 50.8239°N 0.1550°E / 50.8239; 0.1550 (St Michael and All Angels Church, Berwick)
Anglican I This 12th-century church (with a much older font) has a famous set of wall murals—not contemporary with the building, but painted during World War II by Bloomsbury Group associates such as Duncan Grant and Vanessa Bell at the invitation of the Bishop of Chichester. Victorian restoration was prompted by the ruinous state of the church in the early 19th century. [45][46]
[47][48]
[49]
Hope Strict Baptist Chapel Blackboys
50°56′56″N 0°09′22″E / 50.9490°N 0.1562°E / 50.9490; 0.1562 (Hope Strict Baptist Chapel, Blackboys)
Baptist Built in 1875, this red-brick Vernacular-style building is attached to a house. The walls are rendered. From its inception, it has catered for Gospel Standard Baptists. [50][51]
[52][53]
[54]
All Saints Church Blackham
51°08′29″N 0°08′26″E / 51.1414°N 0.1405°E / 51.1414; 0.1405 (All Saints Church, Blackham)
Anglican Architect Lacy W. Ridge designed this Gothic Revival church in 1902. The west end of the stone building has an octagonal belfry on the roof, appearing to balance on a buttress. All windows are lancets. [50][55]
St John the Evangelist's Church Bodle Street Green
50°54′15″N 0°20′48″E / 50.9041°N 0.3466°E / 50.9041; 0.3466 (St John the Evangelist's Church, Bodle Street Green)
Anglican A church was erected in this hamlet in 1855, but there may have been an earlier chapel of ease (to Warbleton parish church) in the 1830s. M.R. Hawkins' original church burnt down in 1923, and Walter Tower designed a flint and stone Perpendicular Gothic Revival replacement with a wooden belfry. [56][57]
Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel Bodle Street Green
50°54′37″N 0°20′38″E / 50.9102°N 0.3439°E / 50.9102; 0.3439 (Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel, Bodle Street Green)
Baptist An Independent Baptist congregation was founded here in 1835 by a Horsham-based preacher. The present chapel is aligned to the Gospel Standard movement and was built in 1864. It is timber-framed, partly weatherboarded and rendered, and has been extended several times. There is a gable above the entrance porch. [51][56]
[52][58]
[59][60]
St George's Church Broad Oak
50°58′34″N 0°16′57″E / 50.9762°N 0.2826°E / 50.9762; 0.2826 (St George's Church, Broad Oak)
Anglican This church, in the parish of Heathfield, dates from 1959. It is cruciform in shape and has wooden walls and a steeply pitched shingled roof with windows immediately below the eaves. The building also has a belfry. [61][62]
Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel Broad Oak
50°58′42″N 0°17′10″E / 50.9784°N 0.2860°E / 50.9784; 0.2860 (Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel, Broad Oak)
Baptist George Mockford, who founded this chapel, is buried near the porch of the red-brick Georgian-style building. There is a weatherboarded section to the rear, and the gable end has ornate bargeboards. Worshippers, who follow the Gospel Standard tradition, first met in 1843, but the chapel was built in 1859. [52][62]
[63][64]
[65][66]
St Margaret the Queen's Church Buxted
50°59′15″N 0°06′57″E / 50.9876°N 0.1158°E / 50.9876; 0.1158 (St Margaret the Queen's Church, Buxted)
Anglican I Unusually dedicated to Saint Margaret of Scotland, this 13th-century church has stood isolated in Buxted Park since the 1830s, when the privacy-seeking Lord of the Manor forced occupants of the surrounding houses to move 0.5 miles (0.80 km) east to a new village. Victorian restoration obscures some of the original work. [67][68]
[69][70]
[71][72]
St Mary the Virgin Church Buxted
50°59′29″N 0°08′08″E / 50.9913°N 0.1355°E / 50.9913; 0.1355 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Buxted)
Anglican II Arthur Douglas Wagner, long-time Vicar of Brighton, founded many churches there, but this was the only one he established outside the town. He owned a house in the village, and founded a convent in 1883. Edmund Scott and F.T. Cawthorn's Decorated Gothic Revival flint and stone church has a tower and a barrel-vaulted roof. [73][74]
[75]
Buxted Methodist Church Buxted
50°59′26″N 0°08′08″E / 50.9905°N 0.1356°E / 50.9905; 0.1356 (Buxted Methodist Church, Buxted)
Methodist In 1907, the local Wesleyan Methodist community built a chapel on Buxted High Street. A coach-house on adjacent land had previously served as a place of worship; it survived until 1988, when the chapel was extended. The name Buxted Methodist Church was adopted in 1932. [76][77]
[78]
St Bartholomew's Church Chalvington
50°51′49″N 0°09′26″E / 50.8636°N 0.1571°E / 50.8636; 0.1571 (St Bartholomew's Church, Chalvington)
Anglican I A simple two-cell (nave and chancel) flint and stone church of the 13th century serves the hamlet of Chalvington. One window may have the oldest stained glass in Sussex, and the east window (inserted in 1400) has stained glass from about that date. A small belfry on the roof has a broach spire supported on a weatherboarded turret. [79][80]
[81][82]
Danehill Chapel Chelwood Common
51°02′28″N 0°00′48″E / 51.0411°N 0.0134°E / 51.0411; 0.0134 (Danehill Chapel, Chelwood Common)
Evangelical A Particular Baptist chapel was recorded here as early as 1778, but the only religious building now is a small Evangelical chapel associated with a church at East Grinstead. [83][84]
Chelwood Gate Church Chelwood Gate
51°02′56″N 0°01′24″E / 51.0490°N 0.0234°E / 51.0490; 0.0234 (Chelwood Gate Church, Chelwood Gate)
Anglican This small church is part of the parish of All Saints Church, Danehill. It is next to the village hall in the hamlet of Chelwood Gate. [85][86]
Chiddingly Church Chiddingly
50°54′22″N 0°11′44″E / 50.9062°N 0.1956°E / 50.9062; 0.1956 (Chiddingly Church, Chiddingly)
Anglican I The Perpendicular Gothic Revival tower bears the oldest of three stone spires in Sussex. The church dates from the mid-13th century, although the chancel is a Victorian rebuild of 1864. The aisled nave has old memorial tablets set into the floor. A private memorial chapel occupies the south transept. [82][87]
[88][89]
[90]
Holy Trinity Church Colemans Hatch
51°05′08″N 0°04′09″E / 51.0855°N 0.0692°E / 51.0855; 0.0692 (Holy Trinity Church, Coleman's Hatch)
Anglican II Arthur Blomfield's Gothic Revival church, of local sandstone, has an apse, a tall tower with a steeple and some exterior half-timbering. The tracery in the lancet windows is reminiscent of the Decorated Gothic style. The building was finished in 1913. [91][92]
[93][94]
St Bartholomew's Church Cross-in-Hand
50°58′18″N 0°14′02″E / 50.9716°N 0.2339°E / 50.9716; 0.2339 (St Bartholomew's Church, Cross-in-Hand)
Anglican The parish church at Waldron was closed for restoration in 1862, so worshippers gathered at Cross-in-Hand instead, and a resident offered land at Peat Wood for a chapel of ease to be built. J.P. St Aubyn's Decorated Gothic local stone building seated 200 people and was consecrated on 24 August 1863. A transept and vestry were added in 1901. [62][95]
[96][97]
Cross-in-Hand Methodist Church Cross-in-Hand
50°58′23″N 0°13′06″E / 50.9730°N 0.2182°E / 50.9730; 0.2182 (Cross-in-Hand Methodist Church, Cross-in-Hand)
Methodist Glovers Chapel—a barn attached to a farmhouse—was replaced by this purpose-built chapel for the Methodist community in 1895. Trayton Durrant's red-brick Early English-style building had stabling for the horses of itinerant preachers. The 150-capacity church opened on 24 January 1896 and is now in the Eastbourne Circuit. [62][95]
[98][99]
[100]
All Saints Church Crowborough
51°03′19″N 0°09′54″E / 51.0554°N 0.1649°E / 51.0554; 0.1649 (All Saints Church, Crowborough)
Anglican II Sir Henry Fermor paid for a church "for the use and benefit of the very ignorant and heathenish people" of Crowborough. The 1744 church was rebuilt in Neo-Norman style (with some Classical and Italianate elements) by Richard Whitfield and John Thomas at the request of Lord Abergavenny. [95][101]
[102][103]
[104][105]
[106]
Poundfield Hall Crowborough
51°03′21″N 0°10′47″E / 51.0558°N 0.1797°E / 51.0558; 0.1797 (Poundfield Hall, Crowborough)
Churches of God Originally the Poundfield Meeting Room, this long-established Nonconformist place of worship was rebuilt in 2005 and now serves as a multipurpose community hall and Churches of God meeting place. The older building was registered for marriages in May 1952. [107][108]
[109][110]
Christ Church Crowborough
51°03′38″N 0°09′37″E / 51.0606°N 0.1604°E / 51.0606; 0.1604 (Christ Church, Crowborough)
Evangelical Originally an Episcopal Free Church of England place of worship, this was funded by local benefactor Elizabeth de Lannoy in 1879. Building work finished in 1883. A rectory, lecture room and school building were built later. The Perpendicular Gothic Revival church has dormer windows in the roof, and is mainly of brick with some stonework. [111][112]
[113][114]
[115]
St Mary Mother of Christ's Church Crowborough
51°03′14″N 0°09′57″E / 51.0540°N 0.1659°E / 51.0540; 0.1659 (St Mary Mother of Christ's Church, Crowborough)
Roman Catholic A church was built for Crowborough's Roman Catholic population in 1911. The brick and stone building, with a partly timbered tower supporting a small spire, faces All Saints Church across a green. Additions in 1922 included an attached presbytery, and the church was parished in that year. [95][116]
[117][118]
[119][120]
United Church Crowborough
51°03′11″N 0°09′41″E / 51.0531°N 0.1614°E / 51.0531; 0.1614 (United Church, Crowborough)
United Reformed Church/Methodist This cost £2,000 to build in 1907: it was expensively endowed in memory of theologian Joseph Parker, and was originally called the Parker Memorial Congregational Church. The Queen Anne-style red-brick building, by Edward Knight, also has some external timberwork. Methodists joined the congregation after their church on Croft Road was closed. [95][121]
[107][122]
[123]
All Saints Church Danehill
51°01′47″N 0°00′06″W / 51.0297°N 0.0017°W / 51.0297; -0.0017 (All Saints Church, Danehill)
Anglican II S.F. Bodley and T. Garner's English Gothic architecture#Decorated Gothic stone church occupies a prominent, high position at the village crossroads. The large church, built in 1892 to replace a smaller brick and stone building of 1836 (by architect John Cowper) was parished in 1898: it took over parts of Fletching and Horsted Keynes parishes. [112][124]
[125][126]
[127]
Forest Hall Dodd's Bank, Nutley
51°01′20″N 0°03′57″E / 51.0221°N 0.0658°E / 51.0221; 0.0658 (Forest Hall, Dodd's Bank, Nutley)
Open Brethren Locally nicknamed "The Chapel in the Woods" and located in the parish of Maresfield near Nutley village, this Brethren gospel hall was established in 1897 and was licensed for certifying marriages ten years later. [128][129]
[130][131]
St Simon and St Jude's Church East Dean
50°45′29″N 0°12′24″E / 50.7580°N 0.2066°E / 50.7580; 0.2066 (St Simon and St Jude's Church, East Dean)
Anglican I The chancel, nave and thick-walled three-stage tower are mostly Norman with some Saxon material, although the church was extended in 1885 and 1961. The base of the tower formed part of the original nave: a rare arrangement. A porch was added in the 15th century, as was a king post roof, and the Jacobean pulpit dates from 1623. The churchyard has a Tapsel gate. [132][133]
[134][135]
East Hoathly Church East Hoathly
50°55′30″N 0°09′42″E / 50.9249°N 0.1616°E / 50.9249; 0.1616 (East Hoathly Church, East Hoathly)
Anglican II* The castellated tower and its stair-turret are 15th-century Perpendicular Gothic, but the rest of the church was rebuilt in 1856 in Early English style. The nave has aisles on both sides. The small piscina may survive from a Norman church on the site. [136][137]
[138][139]
[140]
Holy Trinity Church Eridge Green
51°05′56″N 0°13′24″E / 51.0989°N 0.2232°E / 51.0989; 0.2232 (Holy Trinity Church, Eridge Green)
Anglican II Nikolaus Pevsner compared this long, low church to a school building. Its central entrance has a belfry above and leads directly into the nave. The Perpendicular Gothic Revival building, funded by the Earl of Abergavenny, is stone-built and dates from 1852. A later Marquess funded restoration in 1950. [137][139]
[141][142]
Christ Church Fairwarp
51°01′18″N 0°05′20″E / 51.0217°N 0.0888°E / 51.0217; 0.0888 (Christ Church, Fairwarp)
Anglican II The Eckstein baronets paid for a significant enlargement of this church in 1930: the main addition was a tower with a curious two-stage staircase and lancet windows. The Early English-style local stone building was designed in 1881 by Rohde Hawkins and has a windowless apse at the east end. [143][144]
[145]
Five Ash Down Independent Chapel Five Ash Down
50°59′37″N 0°06′12″E / 50.9937°N 0.1033°E / 50.9937; 0.1033 (Five Ash Down Independent Chapel, Five Ash Down)
Baptist Inspired by a "fiery sermon" preached in Uckfield, Thomas Dicker founded an Independent chapel on his father's land in 1784. The Early English-style building was given a new three-bay blue-brick façade (with contrasting quoins) in the 1870s. There is a graveyard in front of the building. [83][146]
[147][148]
[149]
[150]
Church of the Good Shepherd Five Ashes
51°00′14″N 0°13′13″E / 51.0038°N 0.2204°E / 51.0038; 0.2204 (Church of the Good Shepherd, Five Ashes)
Anglican Considered a "remarkable survival", this wooden board-walled building was moved to the large village of Five Ashes, near Mayfield, in about 1920 after serving as a World War I Army building at Eastbourne. A belfry and porch were added after the building opened as a church. [151]
St Andrew's and St Mary the Virgin Church Fletching
50°59′34″N 0°02′06″E / 50.9929°N 0.0349°E / 50.9929; 0.0349 (St Andrew & St Mary the Virgin Church, Fletching)
Anglican I Fletching's parish church is of three eras: Norman architecture is represented by the tower, the body of the church (including its transepts) is 13th-century, and John Oldrid Scott carried out restoration—principally of the chancel—in 1880. Norman evidence can also be seen in the nave, where two unevenly placed windows are of that era. John Baker-Holroyd, 1st Earl of Sheffield built a mausoleum in the north transept; his friend Edward Gibbon is also buried in it. [152][153]
[154][155]
St Peter's Church Folkington
50°48′46″N 0°12′44″E / 50.8128°N 0.2121°E / 50.8128; 0.2121 (St Peter's Church, Folkington)
Anglican I This two-cell flint and stone church, without an arch between the chancel and nave, also has a timber-framed roof and a belfry with weatherboarded sides. The lancet windows are Perpendicular Gothic in style. Old box-pews survive inside, and Viscount Monckton has a memorial stone. [155][156]
[157][158]
[159]
Holy Trinity Church Forest Row
51°05′53″N 0°01′59″E / 51.0981°N 0.0330°E / 51.0981; 0.0330 (Holy Trinity Church, Forest Row)
Anglican II William Moseley's church is an Early English Gothic Revival building of stone and ashlar, with a narrow tower and a small spire. Herbert Green's extensions of 1877–78 included an aisle on the south side of the nave. The barn-like wooden roof is intricate. [160][161]
[162]
Forest Row Baptist Church Forest Row
51°05′43″N 0°02′27″E / 51.0952°N 0.0408°E / 51.0952; 0.0408 (Forest Row Baptist Church, Forest Row)
Baptist The present chapel, with a roughcast exterior and Gothic appearance, was built in 1841, but a building for Baptists is believed to have existed in Forest Row as early as 1811. The windows are lancets. [162][163]
Christian Community Church Forest Row
51°05′43″N 0°02′18″E / 51.0954°N 0.0383°E / 51.0954; 0.0383 (Christian Community Church, Forest Row)
The Christian Community This is part of a now worldwide Movement for Religious Renewal, founded in Switzerland in 1922. The present church in Forest Row was opened on 12 September 1993, succeeding rooms in a building in nearby Ashurst Wood. [164][165]
St Thomas a Becket's Church Framfield
50°57′45″N 0°07′39″E / 50.9626°N 0.1276°E / 50.9626; 0.1276 (St Thomas a Becket's Church, Framfield)
Anglican II The approach to this 13th-century church runs between well-preserved timber-framed medieval cottages. A fire in 1509 led to the church being rebuilt and extended, and the tower was remodelled in 1892 by B.E. Ferrey. A 1960s stained glass window depicts children at play. [155][166]
[167][168]
[169][170]
St Alban's Church Frant
51°05′54″N 0°16′12″E / 51.0982°N 0.2699°E / 51.0982; 0.2699 (St Alban's Church, Frant)
Anglican II Local architect John Montier designed a Perpendicular Gothic Revival church for Frant village in 1819. Work continued until 1822, and the chancel was extended in 1868. The 20th-century lychgate is hexagonalan unusual design. Iron columns support a wooden gallery. The prominent tower is castellated. Some 15th-century stained glass has been inserted. [162][171]
[172][173]
[174]
St Mary the Virgin Church Friston
50°45′45″N 0°11′56″E / 50.7625°N 0.1989°E / 50.7625; 0.1989 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Friston)
Anglican I Composer Frank Bridge is commemorated at this small, two-cell church, to which a single transept was added in 1892. The porch and king post roof are 15th-century; the chancel was renovated a century earlier. A Tapsel gate leads to the churchyard. Traces of Saxon material remain throughout. [174][175]
[176][177]
Gamelands Methodist Church Gamelands, Horam
50°55′00″N 0°14′31″E / 50.9167°N 0.2420°E / 50.9167; 0.2420 (Gamelands Methodist Church, Gamelands)
Methodist This red-brick chapel is on the road leading south from Horam. It was founded in 1900 by George Wheen, who had held services in his house for several years before that. The chapel is in the Eastbourne Methodist Circuit. [98][162]
[178]
Golden Cross Chapel Golden Cross
50°53′29″N 0°11′10″E / 50.8913°N 0.1861°E / 50.8913; 0.1861 (Golden Cross Chapel, Golden Cross)
Baptist Founded as Dunk's Chapel, this Vernacular red-brick chapel was built in 1813 to replace a nearby barn which had been used for Baptist meetings. It later became Little Dicker Chapel, but in 2004 the pastor had to change its name because "depraved" jokers repeatedly vandalised the nameboard to spell sexually suggestive words. [64][179]
[180][181]
[182][183]
[184]
St Thomas the Apostle's Church Groombridge
51°06′39″N 0°11′10″E / 51.1107°N 0.1861°E / 51.1107; 0.1861 (St Thomas the Apostle's Church, Groombridge)
Anglican II New Groombridgethe Sussex part of this Kent-border villageis served by Norman Shaw's Perpendicular Gothic Revival church of local sandstone. Charles Eamer Kempe designed the stained glass, and H.S. Goodhart-Rendel was responsible for some internal fittings. The roof has a tiled belfry. [185][186]
[187]
Church of St Pius V Groombridge
51°06′54″N 0°11′07″E / 51.1149°N 0.1854°E / 51.1149; 0.1854 (Church of St Pius V, Groombridge)
Society of St Pius X Built as a Methodist chapel in 1857, this Classical-influenced building was sold to the Traditionalist Catholic Society of St Pius X after it closed in about 1983. The windows and doorway in the three-bay façade are round-headed, and there are stuccoed quoins and a pediment. The chapel is mostly red-brick. [187][188]
St Mark's Church Hadlow Down
50°59′48″N 0°10′43″E / 50.9967°N 0.1787°E / 50.9967; 0.1787 (St Mark's Church, Hadlow Down)
Anglican II William Moseley designed this parish church in 1836, but its present Perpendicular Gothic Revival appearance is attributable to George Fellowes Prynne's alterations of 1913. The tower rises straight from the west porch and is topped by a narrow spire. The nave has a Lady chapel with a version of the Madonna of the Magnificat. [187][189]
[190]
St Mary the Virgin Church Hailsham
50°51′47″N 0°15′37″E / 50.8631°N 0.2603°E / 50.8631; 0.2603 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Hailsham)
Anglican I A medieval appearance is belied by major rebuilding in 1870 and 1889, when the church was given its consistent Perpendicular Gothic style. The buttressed tower is built of alternating flint and stone blocks. Inside, a 13th-century capital was probably moved here from nearby Michelham Priory. [191][192]
[193]
Hailsham Baptist Church Hailsham
50°51′39″N 0°15′41″E / 50.8608°N 0.2615°E / 50.8608; 0.2615 (Hailsham Baptist Church, Hailsham)
Baptist Hailsham's Strict Baptist community, established in 1792, worshipped in a wooden building from 1795 until a permanent brick and stone structure was built in the 1820s or 1830s. The present chapel is a 1909 rebuilding of the latter; the original wooden galleries and pulpit were retained though. [83][187]
[194][195]
[196]
Hailsham Gospel Mission Hailsham
50°51′40″N 0°15′28″E / 50.8610°N 0.2577°E / 50.8610; 0.2577 (Hailsham Gospel Mission, Hailsham)
Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion The Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion owns this place of worship on Hailsham's Station Road. Regular Sunday services are held. [197][198]
[199]
Gordon Road Evangelical Church Hailsham
50°51′33″N 0°15′16″E / 50.8593°N 0.2544°E / 50.8593; 0.2544 (Gordon Road Evangelical Church, Hailsham)
Brethren This Brethren meeting hall is also known as Gordon Gospel Hall. [200][201]
Hailsham Free Church Hailsham
50°51′42″N 0°15′22″E / 50.8617°N 0.2561°E / 50.8617; 0.2561 (Hailsham Free Church, Hailsham)
Evangelical This church belongs to the Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches. It was built in a prominent position on South Street in 1905, with space for a hall underneath. The free-style Renaissance building is of red brick with some stonework. [187][202]
Kingdom Hall Hailsham
50°51′40″N 0°15′32″E / 50.8611°N 0.2588°E / 50.8611; 0.2588 (Kingdom Hall, Hailsham)
Jehovah's Witnesses This replaced an earlier Kingdom Hall on the town's Falcon Way, which closed in 1994. Its proposed demolition and replacement by flats in 2004 caused controversy. The new building was registered for marriages in April 1996, and is used by the Hailsham Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses. [203][204]
[205][206]
[207]
Hailsham Methodist Church Hailsham
50°51′55″N 0°15′25″E / 50.8653°N 0.2570°E / 50.8653; 0.2570 (Hailsham Methodist Church, Hailsham)
Methodist A late-20th-century porch is the main addition to the stuccoed Neoclassical chapel at the top of Hailsham High Street. There are three round-arched windows on the façade, each in a recess. The building dates from 1868 and is now part of Eastbourne Methodist Circuit. [98][187]
[208]
St Wilfrid's Church Hailsham
50°51′38″N 0°15′21″E / 50.8605°N 0.2557°E / 50.8605; 0.2557 (St Wilfrid's Church, Hailsham)
Roman Catholic Prolific local architect Henry Bingham Towner's first church replaced an earlier building of 1922 on the same site. The "pleasant little" yellow-brick building has a shingled roof and statues by Joseph Cribb. Work started in June 1954, the church opened in 1955 and additions were made in 1957 and 1966; the high-quality oak porch dates from the latter year. [187][209]
[210]
Corinthian Church Hailsham
50°51′55″N 0°15′20″E / 50.8654°N 0.2556°E / 50.8654; 0.2556 (Corinthian Church, Hailsham)
Spiritualist This Spiritualist church and healing centre was founded in a building called Primrose Hall in Hailsham in 1993. [211][212]
Halland Chapel Halland
50°55′48″N 0°08′14″E / 50.9300°N 0.1373°E / 50.9300; 0.1373 (Halland Chapel, Halland)
Baptist A local man called Mr Matthews founded and built this red-brick chapel (originally called Halland Independent Chapel) in 1892. The Baptist congregation had formed in 1882; they met in a cottage at first. [83][187]
[213][214]
St Stephen's Church Hammerwood
51°08′12″N 0°03′21″E / 51.1368°N 0.0559°E / 51.1368; 0.0559 (St Stephen's Church, Hammerwood)
Anglican II* Architect E.P. Loftus Brock was responsible for this church near Hartfield, which was funded by banker Oswald Smith. It was parished from its opening in 1880: territory came from East Grinstead and Hartfield parishes. Standing on a "fine site", the stone Early English-style church has a buttressed tower with a spire and Clayton and Bell stained glass. In November 2016 it was upgraded to Grade II* listed status. [187][215]
[216][217]
[218]
St Mary the Virgin Church Hartfield
51°06′06″N 0°06′43″E / 51.1017°N 0.1120°E / 51.1017; 0.1120 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Hartfield)
Anglican I The north wall is the oldest part of this church: it has Norman masonry and a 13th-century trefoil-headed lancet window, now blocked. An arcaded aisle was added to the 13th-century nave a century later; the buttressed tower, with a broach spire, is 15th-century. There is no chancel arch: it may have been removed during 16th-century rebuilding. The lychgate is built into a medieval cottage—a very rare form. [219][220]
[221][222]
Emmanuel Church Hawkswood, Hailsham
50°52′34″N 0°15′39″E / 50.8762°N 0.2608°E / 50.8762; 0.2608 (Emmanuel Church, Hawkswood)
Anglican The parish of this modern Anglican church, carved out of Hailsham parish in 2005, covers the northern suburbs of Hailsham and the hamlet of Magham Down. [223][224]
St Richard's Church Heathfield
50°58′00″N 0°15′26″E / 50.9667°N 0.2573°E / 50.9667; 0.2573 (St Richard's Church, Heathfield)
Anglican Granville Streatfeild designed this town-centre church in 1915. It is of red brick with lancet windows, the largest of which are Perpendicular Gothic in style. The building has a chancel, nave with aisles on each side and a thin chimney. Most building materials are local. Extensions were made in 1963. [61][62]
[225]
Welcome Evangelical Baptist Church Heathfield
50°57′54″N 0°15′27″E / 50.9650°N 0.2576°E / 50.9650; 0.2576 (Welcome Baptist Church, Heathfield)
Baptist Opened in 1886 as the Gilbert Memorial Chapel (commemorating the "Sussex Apostle" George Gilbert, who founded about 40 Baptist churches in East Sussex), this Independent Baptist chapel was given a new red-brick Renaissance-style façade in the 20th century. The original walls can still be seen behind this. [62][83]
[225][226]
[227]
[228]
Union Church Heathfield
50°58′16″N 0°15′02″E / 50.9712°N 0.2505°E / 50.9712; 0.2505 (Union Church, Heathfield)
Baptist/
Congregational Federation
Edward Knight's church, on a prominent corner site at the top of the High Street, dates from 1899–1900 and is an Early English Gothic Revival-style building of red brick with stone dressings. [62][226]
[24][225]
[229]
King's Church Heathfield
50°58′15″N 0°15′04″E / 50.9707°N 0.2510°E / 50.9707; 0.2510 (King's Church, Heathfield)
Evangelical This Evangelical church, based at the State Hall in the centre of Heathfield, is aligned with the Evangelical Alliance and the Newfrontiers movement. [62][230]
[231]
St Peter and St Paul's Church Hellingly
50°53′19″N 0°14′46″E / 50.8886°N 0.2462°E / 50.8886; 0.2462 (St Peter and St Paul's Church, Hellingly)
Anglican I The oldest parts are 12th-century, but the church stands on a pre-Christian burial mound. The tower has a Georgian appearance but is later than that era: it was rebuilt in 1836. A brass monument of a woman in a head-dress dates from the 1440s; it was found during Victorian restoration work. [232][233]
[234][235]
[236][237]
St John the Evangelist's Church Heron's Ghyll
51°01′23″N 0°06′41″E / 51.0231°N 0.1115°E / 51.0231; 0.1115 (St John's Church, Heron's Ghyll)
Roman Catholic II This remote church, an ashlar Gothic Revival building of 1896–97 by Frederick Walters, is heavily buttressed and has a central tower above the nave and chancel. The 14th Duchess of Norfolk lived at nearby Heron's Ghyll House, where Mass had been celebrated from 1866 (when Coventry Patmore owned it); her grandson paid for the church to be built. [238][239]
[240][241]
[242]
All Saints Church Herstmonceux
50°52′04″N 0°19′59″E / 50.8678°N 0.3331°E / 50.8678; 0.3331 (All Saints Church, Herstmonceux)
Anglican I The church stands near the castle but distant from the village. The tower and one wall are 12th-century, but an older church stood on the site. Monuments to the 8th and 9th Barons Dacre and Sir William Fiennes demonstrate a long connection with the aristocracy. [236][243]
[244][245]
Herstmonceux Free Church Herstmonceux
50°53′08″N 0°19′40″E / 50.8855°N 0.3279°E / 50.8855; 0.3279 (Herstmonceux Free Church, Herstmonceux)
Congregational Federation II Built as a Congregational chapel in 1811, this "pretty" (to Pevsner) Classical-style building stands at Chapel Cross, 1.4 miles (2.3 km) from Herstmonceux. It has grey and red brickwork, now painted over round-headed windows and an open pediment above a porch. Mid 19th-century additions included a Sunday school and wooden galleries. [25][240]
[246][247]
[248][249]
Herstmonceux Friends Meeting House Herstmonceux
50°53′26″N 0°19′12″E / 50.8905°N 0.3200°E / 50.8905; 0.3200 (Herstmonceux Friends Meeting House, Herstmonceux)
Quaker Although this building has a 19th-century appearance, its origins lie in a low rectangular chapel of 1734 which survives behind the gabled two-storey cottage-style brick façade of 1897–98. Inside, there is a 1734 date-stone above a blocked door. [240][247]
[250]
Holy Trinity Church High Hurstwood
51°01′06″N 0°07′47″E / 51.0184°N 0.1298°E / 51.0184; 0.1298 (Holy Trinity Church, High Hurstwood)
Anglican II Politician Francis Venables-Vernon-Harcourt's wife Lady Catherine paid for this remote church near her home at Buxted (Pevsner said its flower-ringed valley setting was "Arcadia indeed"). An unknown architect designed it in 1870–72, and a half-timbered tower was added in 1903. Some of the lancet windows have tracery. [240][251]
[252]
St Oswald's Church Hooe
50°51′27″N 0°23′22″E / 50.8576°N 0.3895°E / 50.8576; 0.3895 (St Oswald's Church, Hooe)
Anglican I Standing apart from its village—perhaps because the centre of population was forced away by the Black Death—this Perpendicular sandstone church was restored in the 15th century but retains 12th-century work in the chancel and its side chapel. The east window has ancient stained glass depicting the Coronation of the Virgin. [253][254]
[255][256]
[257]
Christ Church Horam
50°55′54″N 0°14′41″E / 50.9316°N 0.2446°E / 50.9316; 0.2446 (Christ Church, Horam)
Anglican Percy Monkton's small church of 1890 was to have been replaced by an expansive new building less than 25 years later—but these plans were never followed through, and the red-brick Gothic-style building remains. It has a belfry and lancet windows, and there is evidence of later extensions. [240][258]
Horam Chapel Horam
50°56′07″N 0°14′39″E / 50.9353°N 0.2443°E / 50.9353; 0.2443 (Horam Chapel, Horam)
Evangelical This modern building stands in the centre of Horam village. It was registered for marriages in February 1996 in place of the former Gospel Hall in Maynard's Green, which had closed. [259][260]
[261]
St Margaret's Church Isfield
50°56′40″N 0°03′14″E / 50.9445°N 0.0539°E / 50.9445; 0.0539 (St Margaret's Church, Isfield)
Anglican I Many members of the Shurley family, including John Shurley (d. 1527), are buried in their own chapel which forms a transept at this church. One 13th-century lancet window survives in the nave, and some other features are Decorated Gothic. Work in 1893 included the addition of a belfry and spire to the mostly Norman tower. A good example of a hagioscope survives in the chancel. [262][263]
[264][265]
[266]
St Michael and All Angels Church Jarvis Brook
51°02′47″N 0°11′25″E / 51.0463°N 0.1904°E / 51.0463; 0.1904 (St Michael and All Angels Church, Jarvis Brook)
Anglican A school built in 1880 was used for worship until J.B. Tansley's stone and timbered chapel of ease to Crowborough parish church was completed in 1906 at a cost of £2,000. William Nevill, 1st Marquess of Abergavenny donated the land. The nave has lancet windows and no aisles, and there is a bellcote. [267][268]
[269]
St Richard's Church Jarvis Brook
51°02′30″N 0°10′17″E / 51.0418°N 0.1713°E / 51.0418; 0.1713 (St Richard's Church, Jarvis Brook)
Anglican Another church associated with All Saints in Crowborough, this brick building (originally called St Richard's Hall) was finished in 1957 and serves the Alderbrook area near Jarvis Brook. Extensions have been built since the church opened. [270][271]
Rehoboth Chapel Jarvis Brook
51°02′30″N 0°10′50″E / 51.0417°N 0.1806°E / 51.0417; 0.1806 (Rehoboth Chapel, Jarvis Brook)
Baptist This red- and blue-brick building dates from 1876. Its Gospel Standard Strict Baptist congregation, originally founded in 1852, maintains links with the Forest Fold chapel on the other side of Crowborough. Seceders from that chapel founded the Jarvis Brook cause in 1852; they met in a schoolroom at first. [52][267]
[272][273]
[274][275]
Kingdom Hall Jarvis Brook
51°02′54″N 0°11′11″E / 51.0484°N 0.1864°E / 51.0484; 0.1864 (Kingdom Hall, Jarvis Brook)
Jehovah's Witnesses The Crowborough Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses has met in a hall off Crowborough Hill since the 1980s. The building was registered for marriages in March 1992. [107][276]
[277][278]
Jarvis Brook Memorial Hall Jarvis Brook
51°02′54″N 0°11′12″E / 51.0484°N 0.1868°E / 51.0484; 0.1868 (Jarvis Brook Memorial Hall, Jarvis Brook)
Spiritualist This hall has been used as a Nonconformist place of worship for many years. Its present congregation is affiliated with the United Spiritualists movement. [107][279]
St Andrew's Church Jevington
50°47′32″N 0°12′50″E / 50.7921°N 0.2140°E / 50.7921; 0.2140 (St Andrew's Church, Jevington)
Anglican I The substantial tower of this ancient village's church is 10th-century, and other Saxon evidence is visible in two blocked windows, which reused Roman material. St Lewinna, a 7th-century martyr, was allegedly buried here; her remains were apparently stolen in 1058. The rest of the church is 13th-century and in the Early English style. A porch was built in 1873. [280][281]
[282][283]
All Saints Church Laughton
50°53′35″N 0°07′57″E / 50.8931°N 0.1325°E / 50.8931; 0.1325 (All Saints Church, Laughton)
Anglican I Mostly Perpendicular Gothic, with a 13th-century nave and a castellated tower, this church is most famous for its association with the Pelham baronetcy. Many family members are buried here, including two Prime Ministers: Henry Pelham and the 1st Duke of Newcastle. The chancel is 18th-century, and the porch is Victorian. [284][285]
[286][287]
St Michael the Archangel's Church Litlington
50°47′50″N 0°09′37″E / 50.7971°N 0.1603°E / 50.7971; 0.1603 (St Michael the Archangel's Church, Litlington)
Anglican I A simple building with nave, chancel and spire-topped weatherboarded bell-tower, Litlington's church is mostly 12th-century. Other ancient features include three sundials, a 13th-century piscina and sedile, an Easter sepulchre, a 15th-century bell and one very old stained glass window. Restoration in 1863 added a multicoloured tiled floor. [288][289]
[290][291]
St Michael and All Angels Church Little Horsted
50°56′43″N 0°05′31″E / 50.9453°N 0.0919°E / 50.9453; 0.0919 (St Michael and All Angels Church, Little Horsted)
Anglican II This hamlet near Uckfield is also called Horsted Parva. Its church, with a prominent ashlar Perpendicular Gothic Revival tower, was expensively restored in the Early English style by George Gilbert Scott in 1863. An arcade of four blocked windows (called "a remarkable motif" by Pevsner) in the chancel wall may be Saxon. [292][293]
[294][295]
[296]
Zoar Strict Baptist Chapel Lower Dicker
50°52′44″N 0°13′37″E / 50.8790°N 0.2270°E / 50.8790; 0.2270 (Zoar Strict Baptist Chapel, Lower Dicker)
Baptist Originally called The Dicker Chapel, this 400-capacity building dates from 1837. On a main road in a remote spot, it serves a wide area and had extensive stables for worshippers arriving on horseback. The Classical-style stuccoed brick chapel, enlarged and refronted in 1874, has a pediment, porch and pilasters. [64][247]
[52][297]
[298][299]
[300]
St Wilfrid's Church Lower Willingdon
50°48′39″N 0°14′28″E / 50.8107°N 0.2411°E / 50.8107; 0.2411 (St Wilfrid's Church, Lower Willingdon)
Anglican This Eastbourne suburb is served by this postwar church within the parish of Polegate's St John's Church (but independent from it since 2002). Worship is in the Conservative Evangelical tradition of the Church of England, and the church belongs to the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans. [301][302]
[303][304]
Trinity Church Lower Willingdon
50°48′29″N 0°14′49″E / 50.8081°N 0.2470°E / 50.8081; 0.2470 (Trinity Church, Lower Willingdon)
Baptist/Methodist/
United Reformed Church
Now used by three denominations, this red-brick church was built in 1894 for Methodists. Like many churches in the Eastbourne area, it suffered bomb damage in World War II and closed for several years for reconstruction. The windows are lancets, and there is exterior stonework. [98][305]
[306]
Downs Valley Apostolic Church Lower Willingdon
50°48′43″N 0°14′46″E / 50.8120°N 0.2460°E / 50.8120; 0.2460 (Downs Valley Apostolic Church, Lower Willingdon)
Pentecostalist This church serves the Pentecostalist and Apostolic communities in the Eastbourne area, and offers two services on Sundays. [301]
Church of the Good Shepherd Lullington
50°48′25″N 0°10′03″E / 50.8069°N 0.1676°E / 50.8069; 0.1676 (Church of the Good Shepherd, Lullington)
Anglican I "Not easily forgotten", according to Nikolaus Pevsner, this tiny building—merely part of the chancel of the original church—is often called the smallest church in England: it is 16 square feet (1.5 m2) and holds 20 people. The old foundations survive near the entrance. What remains is Early English in style, dating from the 13th/14th century. A wooden belfry was added in 1806. [307][308]
[309][310]
St Bartholomew's Church Maresfield
50°59′49″N 0°05′15″E / 50.9969°N 0.0875°E / 50.9969; 0.0875 (St Bartholomew's Church, Maresfield)
Anglican I The large Perpendicular-style tower is 15th-century, and Norman work is visible in a window and around the north door, but John Oldrid Scott's restoration of 1875–79 gave Maresfield's church its present appearance. He realigned the interior: the original chancel arch now leads to the north transept, and the east window now faces south. Interior fittings include an 18th-century pulpit. [311][312]
[313]
St Mark's Church Mark Cross
51°03′32″N 0°15′26″E / 51.0590°N 0.2571°E / 51.0590; 0.2571 (St Mark's Church, Mark Cross)
Anglican E.E. Cronk converted this former school (built in 1851) into a church in 1873. It was within the parish of Rotherfield until 1874, when it was given its own parish from parts of Wadhurst and Rotherfield. A very large east window was the main structural alteration to the stone and brick building. [183][314]
St Dunstan's Church Mayfield
51°01′15″N 0°15′38″E / 51.0207°N 0.2606°E / 51.0207; 0.2606 (St Dunstan's Church, Mayfield)
Anglican I Dunstan himself built a wooden church on the site in the 10th century. Its stone replacement burnt down in 1389 and was rebuilt in the Perpendicular style, although the stubby tower and its spire retain their 13th-century appearance. The church has a wooden chancel arch ceiling with prominent moulding. [315][316]
[317][318]
[319]
Mayfield Particular Baptist Chapel Mayfield
51°01′11″N 0°15′30″E / 51.0196°N 0.2583°E / 51.0196; 0.2583 (Mayfield Particular Baptist Chapel, Mayfield)
Baptist This 250-capacity building has a much smaller congregation than in its 19th-century heyday, but remains in use. It has stood on its village-centre corner site since 1873, but Baptist worship in the Mayfield area has a much longer history. [52][272]
[320]
[321][322]
[323][324]
Colkins Mill Church Mayfield
51°01′12″N 0°15′22″E / 51.0201°N 0.2561°E / 51.0201; 0.2561 (Colkins Mill Church, Mayfield)
Free Church This mid-19th-century Wesleyan Methodist chapel became a Congregational church in 1869. It closed in 1984, by which time it was a United Reformed church; but the lancet-windowed stucco and stone chapel was immediately bought by members of the Evangelical chapel at nearby Colkins Mill, who moved in and renamed it. [320][325]
[326]
St Thomas of Canterbury's Church Mayfield
51°01′11″N 0°15′13″E / 51.0198°N 0.2535°E / 51.0198; 0.2535 (St Thomas of Canterbury's Church, Mayfield)
Roman Catholic Henry Bingham Towner, a prolific designer of Roman Catholic churches in Sussex, replaced a 1932 building with this simple Gothic Revival flint and ashlar church in 1957. It is low and long, with a saddleback roof. Two modern stained glass windows have been inserted. [320][327]
[328][329]
[330]
St Mary the Virgin Church Ninfield
50°53′06″N 0°25′21″E / 50.8849°N 0.4226°E / 50.8849; 0.4226 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Ninfield)
Anglican I An ancient yew tree survives in the churchyard, but the Saxon church which stood alongside it has gone; the present building has 13th- and 17th-century work, but a major restoration (possibly by Arthur Blomfield) in the 1880s obscures it. The south porch is of brick, unusually, and dates from 1735. The clapboard belfry of 1897 holds a 14th-century bell. [331][332]
[333]
Ninfield Methodist Church Ninfield
50°53′09″N 0°25′27″E / 50.8858°N 0.4242°E / 50.8858; 0.4242 (Ninfield Methodist Church, Ninfield)
Methodist The foundation stone of this red-brick chapel in the centre of Ninfield identifies William Booth's wife Catherine as the founder. The building dates from 1871, but was registered under the name Christian Mission Hall between February 1872 and July 1933. [334][335]
[336]
St James the Less Church Nutley
51°01′56″N 0°03′18″E / 51.0323°N 0.0549°E / 51.0323; 0.0549 (St James the Less Church, Nutley)
Anglican Richard Cromwell Carpenter, who was responsible for many Gothic Revival churches, was commissioned to design Nutley's church in 1845. His steep-roofed stone building was extended in 1871 by the addition of an English Gothic architecture#Decorated Gothic-style north aisle. The west end has a small bellcote. [337][338]
All Saints Church Old Heathfield
50°57′36″N 0°16′30″E / 50.9599°N 0.2749°E / 50.9599; 0.2749 (All Saints Church, Old Heathfield)
Anglican II* Little has changed at this sandstone church since the 14th century. The tower, with a broach spire, is slightly older and is built of chalk with sandstone on the exterior. Restoration in the 1890s eliminated galleries which had been installed earlier in the century: a large capacity was no longer needed because the vast parish had become smaller as new churches had been built. Former vicar Robert Hunt, a founder of Jamestown, Virginia, is commemorated by a stained glass window. [62][236]
[339][340]
[341]
St Nicolas' Church Pevensey
50°49′11″N 0°20′12″E / 50.8196°N 0.3368°E / 50.8196; 0.3368 (St Nicolas' Church, Pevensey)
Anglican I This church has stood next to Pevensey Castle since the 12th century, but the only original material from that time is part of the chancel. The rest was rebuilt in the 13th century and—in the case of the porch and the tower's top stage—the Victorian era (by George Gilbert Scott, Jr.. The building is a good example of the Early English Gothic style. [342][343]
[344][345]
St Wilfrid's Church Pevensey Bay
50°48′42″N 0°21′03″E / 50.8117°N 0.3507°E / 50.8117; 0.3507 (St Wilfrid's Church, Pevensey Bay)
Anglican The original church—a red-brick and stone building of 1881—was demolished in 1971, three years after its replacement was built nearby. The low modern structure has an attached hall which is used for most of Pevensey Bay's social activities. [346][347]
Pevensey Bay Baptist Church Pevensey Bay
50°48′43″N 0°21′02″E / 50.8120°N 0.3505°E / 50.8120; 0.3505 (Pevensey Bay Baptist Church, Pevensey Bay)
Baptist Another modern replacement church, this building dates from 1982 and stands on the site of its 1906 predecessor. The congregation is now aligned to the Baptist Union of Great Britain, but has been associated with the Free Church for most of its existence. [301][346]
[348]
Holy Rood Church Pevensey Bay
50°48′37″N 0°20′41″E / 50.8103°N 0.3446°E / 50.8103; 0.3446 (Holy Rood Church, Pevensey Bay)
Roman Catholic Services began at this small church on 30 June 1963, and it was consecrated three years later. It is part of a joint parish with the Church of Christ the King in neighbouring Langney, a suburb of Eastbourne. Storm damage in 1990 cost £12,000 to repair. [301][346]
[349]
Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel Pick Hill, Horam
50°55′14″N 0°13′42″E / 50.9205°N 0.2282°E / 50.9205; 0.2282 (Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel, Pick Hill)
Baptist Also known as Pick Hill Chapel, this small, isolated building was opened in 1873 to replace an earlier chapel founded in about 1849 by Eli Page. It has been aligned with the Gospel Standard Baptist movement since 1864. The Vernacular-style structure has an entrance porch. [64][240]
[52][53]
[350]
St John's Church Polegate
50°49′11″N 0°14′37″E / 50.8196°N 0.2437°E / 50.8196; 0.2437 (St John's Church, Polegate)
Anglican Polegate's parish church was designed by R.K. Blessley and built in 1874–76. The Early English Gothic Revival-style building has a stone exterior but red brickwork inside, and a substantial timber roof. A tower topped by a broach spire sits at the northwest corner, and there is a transept on the north side. The lancet windows have tracery. [351][352]
St George's Church Polegate
50°49′08″N 0°14′34″E / 50.8188°N 0.2427°E / 50.8188; 0.2427 (St Gregory's Church, Polegate)
Roman Catholic The architect ("Mr Hughes") of this prominently sited church, built in 1938, is unknown; attribution to J. O'Hanlon Hughes is based on his work at nearby Seaford three years earlier. The gable-roofed flint and stone Gothic Revival church has a porch jutting beyond the west end of the nave. [353][354]
Cornerstone Seventh Day Adventist Church Polegate
50°49′27″N 0°14′33″E / 50.8243°N 0.2425°E / 50.8243; 0.2425 (Cornerstone Seventh Day Adventist Church, Polegate)
Seventh-day Adventist In 2000, this congregation moved into a former school on the Hailsham Road and established a church there. The building, originally a National School, dates from 1850; after its closure in 1967, it was used by the Mencap charity until 1991. [355]
Polegate Free Church Polegate
50°49′23″N 0°14′39″E / 50.8230°N 0.2441°E / 50.8230; 0.2441 (Polegate United Reformed Church, Polegate)
United Reformed Church This United Reformed church building was built for Congregationalists in 1904. It stands on Polegate High Street and has stone-dressed red brickwork and lancet windows. [301][351]
[356]
Heathfield Chapel Punnett's Town, Heathfield
50°57′45″N 0°17′51″E / 50.9624°N 0.2974°E / 50.9624; 0.2974 (Heathfield Chapel, Punnett's Town)
Evangelical II George Gilbert, the "Sussex Apostle" and a former soldier under General George Eliott, founded a chapel at a remote crossroads (later called Chapel Cross) in 1787. His revered preaching attracted so many people that the present larger chapel was built 22 years later. [62][76]
[83][247]
[357][358]
[359][360]
St John the Baptist's Church Ripe
50°52′07″N 0°09′00″E / 50.8685°N 0.1500°E / 50.8685; 0.1500 (St John the Baptist's Church, Ripe)
Anglican I The huge castellated tower at the west end—a 15th-century addition—dominates this church, which has a 13th-century nave and a slightly later chancel. It is associated with the Pelham baronets, whose buckle motif appears above the doorway. Medieval stained glass and a font dating from about 1400 also survive. [361][362]
[363]
St Denys' Church Rotherfield
51°02′46″N 0°13′06″E / 51.0460°N 0.2184°E / 51.0460; 0.2184 (St Denys' Church, Rotherfield)
Anglican I Berhtwald, a Saxon duke and Archbishop of Canterbury, travelled to France to visit the shrine of St Denys. He overcame the illness he sought to cure, and in 792 a church was founded in the saint's honour at Rotherfield. The present building has work from the 11th to the 15th centuries. Stained glass by Morris and Burne-Jones is considered exceptional. [364][365]
[366][367]
[368]
Providence Chapel Rotherfield
51°02′42″N 0°13′09″E / 51.0451°N 0.2192°E / 51.0451; 0.2192 (Providence Chapel, Rotherfield)
Baptist Baptist worship began in Rotherfield in 1823, but the congregation split in the 1850s and seceders founded Providence Chapel in 1858. After early difficulties, the cause prospered (whereas the original "Bethel Chapel" folded in the 1870s), and it has been part of the Gospel Standard movement since the 1890s. The red-brick, stone-quoined chapel has arched windows. [52][369]
[370][371]
[372][373]
St Peter, Prince of Apostles Church Rotherfield
51°02′31″N 0°12′59″E / 51.0419°N 0.2165°E / 51.0419; 0.2165 (St Peter Prince of Apostles Church, Rotherfield)
Roman Catholic Rotherfield's Roman Catholic church is administered from the church at nearby Wadhurst. The 120-capacity building was completed in December 1963 and was registered for marriages in April 1964. [368][374]
[375][376]
Selmeston Church Selmeston
50°50′33″N 0°08′35″E / 50.8425°N 0.1431°E / 50.8425; 0.1431 (Selmeston Church, Selmeston)
Anglican II Ewan Christian rebuilt this flint church in 1867; its present appearance is similar to how it looked when originally built in the medieval era. Surviving elements from the old church include a blocked doorway, piscina and Easter sepulchre. The churchyard may have been the site of pre-Christian worship. A 17th-century vicar is commemorated on a brass memorial as "Henry Rogers—a painefull Preacher in this church two & thirty yeeres" [sic]. [377][378]
[379]
St John the Evangelist's Church St Johns, Crowborough
51°03′57″N 0°08′41″E / 51.0657°N 0.1448°E / 51.0657; 0.1448 (St John the Evangelist's Church, St Johns, Crowborough)
Anglican Built as a chapel of ease to Withyham in 1839, W.L. Blaker's ashlar building was extended in 1870 by the addition of a chancel with an apse at the east end. Charles Eamer Kempe designed the stained glass in the lancet windows. Originally known as Crowborough Chapel and now within the Crowborough urban area, the church gave its name to the part of that town it is in. [380][381]
Forest Fold Strict Baptist Chapel St Johns, Crowborough
51°04′17″N 0°09′12″E / 51.0715°N 0.1533°E / 51.0715; 0.1533 (Forest Fold Strict Baptist Chapel, St Johns, Crowborough)
Baptist A dream inspired a local farmer to found this chapel in a barn in 1832, and its success prompted extensions, stables and a Sunday school to be built soon afterwards. Two daughter chapels (both now closed) were also founded elsewhere in the town. The chapel has also been known as Two Chimneys. Ebenezer Littleton, pastor for 52 years, was an important figure in Crowborough life. [64][188]
[382][383]
[384]
[385]
St Luke's Church Stone Cross
50°49′02″N 0°17′31″E / 50.8173°N 0.2920°E / 50.8173; 0.2920 (St Luke's Church, Stone Cross)
Anglican A.J. Hodgeman's 1924 church, a chapel of ease to Westham, closed in 1978 but opened again ten years later after extensive housebuilding boosted the potential congregation. It was parished in 1995. A Vernacular brick and tile-hung building has a hammerbeam roof and a prominent tower. [301][386]
[387]
The Rest Christian Centre Three Cups Corner
50°57′27″N 0°19′35″E / 50.9574°N 0.3263°E / 50.9574; 0.3263 (The Rest Christian Centre, Three Cups Corner)
Baptist Mount Hermon Baptist Chapel was founded in 1865. Seceders from it founded a chapel nearby at Three Cups Corner in 1872. It hosted Independent Baptist worshippers and later Brethren; then following the closure and sale of the Mount Hermon chapel, its congregation moved in as well. [370][388]
[389]
St John the Baptist's Church Tidebrook
51°02′48″N 0°18′05″E / 51.0468°N 0.3014°E / 51.0468; 0.3014 (St John the Baptist's Church, Tidebrook)
Anglican II Thomas Rushforth's 1856 church in this isolated hamlet occupies a steeply sloping site, so it has a tall west end and an undercroft. The stone-built Early English-style building has a belfry on the chancel roof, which has substantial arch braces inside. [390][391]
[392][393]
Holy Cross Church Uckfield
50°58′24″N 0°05′42″E / 50.9734°N 0.0949°E / 50.9734; 0.0949 (Holy Cross Church, Uckfield)
Anglican II Little survives of the market town's ancient church of this dedication; William Moseley rebuilt it in 1839, retaining the dimensions of the old chancel and tower,and an extension was built in 1889. Memorials and interior fittings from the original building have been reset in the new building. [297][394]
[395][396]
[397]
St Saviour's Church Uckfield
50°58′00″N 0°06′07″E / 50.9666°N 0.1020°E / 50.9666; 0.1020 (St Saviour's Church, Uckfield)
Anglican The New Town area of Uckfield grew rapidly in the Victorian era, and in 1904 a chapel of ease was built to serve its residents. The corrugated iron structure, which had a small steeple, was removed in 1971 to make way for a building consisting of sheltered housing for 20 people and a small chapel for public worship. [297][397]
[398]
Foresters Strict Baptist Chapel Uckfield
50°57′57″N 0°06′00″E / 50.9657°N 0.0999°E / 50.9657; 0.0999 (Foresters Strict Baptist Chapel, Uckfield)
Baptist The 1789 Baptist church in Uckfield, originally Strict Baptist, had a General Baptist pastor by the early 20th century. Strict Baptist members of the congregation seceded in 1920 and founded a new chapel next to Foresters Hall in the south of the town. The Gospel Standard movement is followed. [52][370]
[399][400]
Grange Evangelical Church Uckfield
50°58′22″N 0°05′54″E / 50.9727°N 0.0984°E / 50.9727; 0.0984 (Grange Evangelical Church, Uckfield)
Brethren This Open Brethren congregation has its origins in the 1890s, when worship took place in Uckfield Assembly Rooms. In September 1902, the present building (originally named Grange Hall) was opened with help (and finance) from Lady Portman, who arranged for notable London preachers to visit. [397][401]
[402]
King's Centre Uckfield
50°58′16″N 0°05′50″E / 50.9710°N 0.0971°E / 50.9710; 0.0971 (King's Centre, Uckfield)
Evangelical Meetings of this Evangelical congregation take place at this building (also the church's main office) and at Uckfield's Civic Centre. The church belongs to the Evangelical Alliance and the Newfrontiers movement, and was founded in 1983. [397][403]
Uckfield Methodist Church Uckfield
50°58′01″N 0°05′59″E / 50.9669°N 0.0997°E / 50.9669; 0.0997 (Uckfield Methodist Church, Uckfield)
Methodist This church was founded by the Wesleyan Methodist community in 1897 to replace one in the Ridgewood area of Uckfield. The present brick structure replaced a wooden chapel. The congregation considered merging with the town's United Reformed Church, but this did not happen and the chapel was rebuilt and extended in the 1950s instead. [397][404]
[405]
Foresters Hall Uckfield
50°57′57″N 0°06′00″E / 50.9658°N 0.1000°E / 50.9658; 0.1000 (Foresters Hall, Uckfield)
Muslim/Quaker The local Muslim community and the Religious Society of Friends both use this hall, built in 1904, for worship and other activities. It stands next to the Foresters Strict Baptist Chapel and is also used by community groups. [397]
Church of Our Lady Immaculate & St Philip Neri Uckfield
50°57′53″N 0°05′48″E / 50.9647°N 0.0966°E / 50.9647; 0.0966 (Church of Our Lady Immaculate & St Philip Neri, Uckfield)
Roman Catholic Rev. Cyril Plummer, Uckfield's Roman Catholic parish priest, designed the town's "unusual" concrete-framed Cotswold stone church himself. Joseph Cribb made the altars and a statue of Mary; Aleksander Klecki's stained glass is abstract in style. The church, completed in 1958, replaced Frederick Walters' 1885 predecessor. [297][397]
[406][407]
[408]
Uckfield United Reformed Church Uckfield
50°58′04″N 0°05′48″E / 50.9677°N 0.0968°E / 50.9677; 0.0968 (Uckfield United Reformed Church, Uckfield)
United Reformed Church This Early English-style church on the main road to Eastbourne was built in 1885–86 for the Congregational community. It founded daughter churches (now closed) at Fletching, Framfield and Isfield, and became part of the United Reformed in 1972. Locally quarried stone is the main structural material. [297][397]
[409][410]
Holy Trinity Church Upper Dicker
50°52′01″N 0°12′12″E / 50.8670°N 0.2032°E / 50.8670; 0.2032 (Holy Trinity Church, Upper Dicker)
Anglican Arlington church served villagers in Upper Dicker until William Donthorne's Neo-Norman local flint and Caen stone chapel was completed in 1843. A parish was carved out of Arlington, Chiddingly and Hellingly's territory. The simple church has a nave, chancel and bellcote, and a font dated 1663. [297][411]
[412]
St Peter and St Paul's Church Wadhurst
51°03′46″N 0°20′24″E / 51.0627°N 0.3401°E / 51.0627; 0.3401 (St Peter & St Paul's Church, Wadhurst)
Anglican I This large church is mostly unchanged since the 15th century, when a porch was added to the Norman tower (with a shingled broach spire, aisled nave of the 13th century and the 14th-century chancel. Cast-iron memorial slabs line the church floor, and the font is 13th-century. [413][414]
[415][416]
Wadhurst Methodist Church Wadhurst
51°03′41″N 0°20′29″E / 51.0614°N 0.3415°E / 51.0614; 0.3415 (Wadhurst Methodist Church, Wadhurst)
Methodist Built in 1874 in the Renaissance Revival style, this chapel on the High Street has red and yellow brickwork with contrasting quoins and a three-bay arched and gabled façade. It succeeded a chapel of 1814 which housed a congregation founded in 1792. [297][413]
[417][418]
[419]
Church of the Sacred Heart Wadhurst
51°03′54″N 0°19′28″E / 51.0650°N 0.3244°E / 51.0650; 0.3244 (Church of the Sacred Heart, Wadhurst)
Roman Catholic Rosminian monks from Italy owned a large house in Wadhurst, which became the site of The Mount Novitiate House of Fathers of Charity. It had its own chapel, but in 1928 the monks founded a new church for public worship. It was built in a "curious" Italianate style by E. Bower Norris, and opened in March 1929. The nave windows project above the low roofline, forming gabled dormers. [297][413]
[420][421]
[422]
All Saints Church Waldron
50°57′06″N 0°12′14″E / 50.9517°N 0.2039°E / 50.9517; 0.2039 (All Saints Church, Waldron)
Anglican I R.C. Hussey's restoration work in 1859–62 added a south aisle to the nave, but otherwise the original 13th-century Early English Gothic appearance remains. The lancet windows are more Decorated Gothic in style. [62][423]
[424][425]
St Mary the Virgin Church Warbleton
50°56′27″N 0°17′19″E / 50.9408°N 0.2886°E / 50.9408; 0.2886 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Warbleton)
Anglican II The church stands on high ground in an ancient churchyard which has a memorial to Richard Woodman, one of the Sussex Martyrs of 1557, who lived locally. All three English Gothic styles are featured: Early English in the chancel, Decorated in the north aisle, and a Perpendicular tower, east window and arcade. An impressive 4.4-foot (1.3 m) memorial brass of William Prestwyck of Hastings dates from 1436. [426][427]
[428]
St Mary Magdalene's Church Wartling
50°51′30″N 0°21′15″E / 50.8582°N 0.3541°E / 50.8582; 0.3541 (St Mary Magdalene's Church, Wartling)
Anglican I The present building probably stands on the site of a pre-Domesday chapel. Fragments of 13th-century walls remain, but most of the structure is from the following 200 years. Porches were added in 1736 and the late 19th century. The weatherboarded belfry may be 14th-century. Inside there is a "stunning and unique" modern lectern in the shape of a heron. [429][430]
[431]
All Saints Church Westdean
50°46′36″N 0°09′42″E / 50.7768°N 0.1618°E / 50.7768; 0.1618 (All Saints Church, Westdean)
Anglican I The "monk's hood"-style broach spire on the two-stage tower is seen only in Sussex. A Saxon window remains, and the lower part of the tower is Norman. The chancel is 14th-century; a major restoration took place at that time. An ancient priest's house is built into the churchyard wall. Many old monuments have been preserved inside. [432][433]
[434]
St Mary's Church Westham
50°49′03″N 0°19′45″E / 50.8176°N 0.3291°E / 50.8176; 0.3291 (St Mary's Church, Westham)
Anglican I Often called the first post-Norman Conquest church built in England, this substantial stone building has been damaged by invaders on many occasions, despite its proximity to Pevensey Castle. The cruciform building has a Perpendicular Gothic Revival tower. The churchyard has a communal grave for plague victims. [435][436]
[437]
St Mary the Virgin Church Willingdon
50°47′59″N 0°15′15″E / 50.7998°N 0.2541°E / 50.7998; 0.2541 (St Mary the Virgin Church, Willingdon)
Anglican I Willingdon's church is Early English in style and has an almost completely detached corner tower—the only surviving part of the original (13th-century) church. The present appearance is mostly 14th-century, but the interior was restored after World War II after bomb damage. [438][439]
[440]
St Mary and St Peter's Church Wilmington
50°49′03″N 0°11′26″E / 50.8175°N 0.1906°E / 50.8175; 0.1906 (St Mary and St Peter's Church, Wilmington)
Anglican I A Norman abbey existed here, and when the church was built it shared a cloister with that building. The church was restored by Paley and Austin in 1883, but its ancient appearance has been preserved. The yew in the churchyard is 1,600 years old. [441][442]
[443]
St Michael and All Angels Church Withyham
51°06′00″N 0°07′56″E / 51.0999°N 0.1323°E / 51.0999; 0.1323 (St Michael and All Angels Church, Withyham)
Anglican I Few Sussex churches date from the 17th century, but Withyham's was completely rebuilt then after a lightning strike in 1663 destroyed the 14th-century structure. Some original material was reused. George Sackville-West, 5th Earl De La Warr was the rector in the mid-19th century, and he painted the Last Judgment mural. The Sackvilles have their own substantial chapel on the north side. [444][445]
[446][447]
[448]

See also

Notes

  1. Brighton and Hove became a separate unitary authority in 1997, but is still part of the ceremonial county of East Sussex.
  2. The village is also known as Horsted Parva.

References

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  123. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 45287; Name: United Church (Methodist and United Reformed); Address: Croft Road, Crowborough; Denomination: United Reformed Church and Methodists). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
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  163. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 11797; Name: Baptist Church; Address: Forest Row; Denomination: Baptists). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  164. "The Christian Community Church". Forest Row Community Website. 3 June 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  165. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 69870; Name: Christian Community Centre; Address: Ground Floor, The Barn, Woods Hill Lane, Ashurst Wood; Denomination: Christian Community). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
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  178. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 38481; Name: Methodist Church; Address: Gamelands, Coggers Cross, Hellingly; Denomination: Methodist Church). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
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  202. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 42676; Name: Hailsham Free Church; Address: Western Road, Hailsham; Denomination: Independents). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
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  326. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 78559; Name: Colkins Mill Church; Address: Station Road, Mayfield; Denomination: Christians not otherwise designated). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
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  328. "English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): St Thomas of Canterbury, Mayfield" (PDF). English Heritage. 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
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  330. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 66372; Name: Church of St Thomas of Canterbury; Address: Station Road, Mayfield; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  331. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary, Church Lane, Ninfield, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1182294)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
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  341. Historic England. "The Parish Church of All Saints, Old Heathfield Village, Heathfield, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade II*) (1194397)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  342. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Nicolas, Church Lane, Pevensey, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1353406)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  343. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 581.
  344. Coppin 2001, p. 70.
  345. Wilkins 2000, pp. 49–50.
  346. 1 2 3 Wilkins 2000, pp. 51–52.
  347. Elleray 2004, p. 44.
  348. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 76090; Name: Pevensey Bay Baptist Church; Address: Eastbourne Road, Pevensey Bay; Denomination: Free Church). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  349. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 71077; Name: Holy Rood Church; Address: Castle Drive, Pevensey Bay; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  350. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 62410; Name: Ebenezer Chapel; Address: Pick Hill, Horam, Chiddingly; Denomination: Strict Baptists). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  351. 1 2 Elleray 2004, p. 45.
  352. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 584–585.
  353. "English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): St George, Polegate" (PDF). English Heritage. 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  354. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 58747; Name: St George's Church; Address: Eastbourne Road, Polegate; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  355. Longstaff-Tyrrell 2004, p. 122.
  356. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 40732; Name: United Reformed Church; Address: High Street, Polegate; Denomination: United Reformed Church). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  357. Historic England. "Heathfield Independent Chapel, Cade Street, Heathfield, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade II) (1043246)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  358. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 531.
  359. Gillet & Russell 1991, p. 47.
  360. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 1; Name: Heathfield Chapel; Address: Near Cade Street, Heathfield; Denomination: Independents). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  361. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Bartholomew, Chalvington with Ripe, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1286911)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  362. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 588.
  363. Coppin 2001, p. 52.
  364. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Denys, Church Street, Rotherfield, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1193874)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  365. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 591–592.
  366. Coppin 2001, p. 132.
  367. Taylor 1999, pp. 198–199.
  368. 1 2 Various Authors 1979, p. 71.
  369. Elleray 2004, p. 46.
  370. 1 2 3 Homan 1997, p. 280.
  371. Various Authors 1979, p. 72.
  372. Chambers 1954, p. 103.
  373. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 8355; Name: Providence Chapel; Address: South Street, Rotherfield; Denomination: Particular Baptists). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  374. "Rotherfield, East Sussex". Diocese of Arundel and Brighton website. DABNet. 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  375. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 69534; Name: St Peter Prince of the Apostles; Address: South Street, Rotherfield; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  376. The London Gazette: no. 43317. p. 4027. 8 May 1964. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  377. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary, Selmeston, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade II) (1043094)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  378. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 604–605.
  379. Coppin 2001, p. 53.
  380. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 639.
  381. Payne 1985, p. 96–97.
  382. Elleray 2004, pp. 18, 56.
  383. s.n. 1933, pp. 50–51.
  384. Payne 1985, pp. 91–92.
  385. Chambers 1954, pp. 97–101.
  386. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 610.
  387. Allen, John (9 February 2009). "Stone Cross – St Luke". Sussex Parish Churches website. Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org). Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  388. "Churches and Chapels in Warbleton Parish". Warbleton Parish Council. 7 August 2009. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  389. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 56171; Name: The Rest Gospel Hall; Address: Three Cups, Warbleton; Denomination: Christians not otherwise designated). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  390. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St John the Baptist, Tidebrook, Tidebrook, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade II) (1350328)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  391. Elleray 2004, p. 52.
  392. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 613–614.
  393. Savidge & Mason 1988, pp. 130–131.
  394. Historic England. "The Parish Church of the Holy Cross, Church Street, Uckfield, Wealden, East Sussexgrade=II (1028118)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  395. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 614–615.
  396. Wright & Harker 1993, p. 5.
  397. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Places of Worship". Uckfield Official Guide. Local Authority Publishing. 2010. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  398. Wright & Harker 1993, p. 38–39.
  399. Chambers 1954, p. 95.
  400. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 68244; Name: Small Forester's Hall; Address: Harcourt Road, Uckfield; Denomination: Strict Baptists). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  401. "Church with aristocratic roots is 100". Sussex Express. Johnston Publishing Ltd. 12 September 2002. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  402. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 38781; Name: Grange Hall; Address: Hempstead Road, Uckfield; Denomination: Open Brethren). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  403. "About Us: History". King's Church Uckfield. 2010. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  404. "Synopsis of Hindsight Volume 4". Uckfield and District Preservation Society Ltd. 1998. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  405. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 53866; Name: Methodist Church; Address: Framfield Road, Uckfield; Denomination: Methodist Church). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  406. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 615.
  407. "English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): Our Lady Immaculate & St Philip Neri, Uckfield" (PDF). English Heritage. 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  408. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 61403; Name: Church of Our Lady Immaculate and St Philip Neri; Address: High Street, Newtown, Uckfield; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  409. Thorogood 1994, pp. 71–76.
  410. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 17441; Name: United Reformed Church; Address: Uckfield; Denomination: United Reformed Church). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  411. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 616.
  412. Smith 2003, pp. 17–19.
  413. 1 2 3 "Wadhurst Churches and Chapels". The Wadhurst and Ticehurst Website (including Stonegate and Flimwell). Greenman Enterprise. 2010. Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
  414. Coppin 2001, p. 92.
  415. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 616–617.
  416. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Peter and St Paul, Church Street, Wadhurst, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1028097)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  417. Stell 2002, p. 356.
  418. Savidge & Mason 1988, p. 132.
  419. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 22038; Name: Wadhurst Methodist Church; Address: Wadhurst; Denomination: Methodist Church). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  420. "English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): The Sacred Heart, Wadhurst" (PDF). English Heritage. 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  421. Savidge & Mason 1988, pp. 128–129.
  422. Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 51609; Name: Church of the Sacred Heart; Address: Mayfield Lane, Wadhurst; Denomination: Roman Catholics). Retrieved 28 September 2012. (Archived version of list)
  423. Coppin 2001, p. 94.
  424. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 619.
  425. Historic England. "The Parish Church of All Saints, Waldron Village, Heathfield and Waldron, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1284195)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  426. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary, Warbleton Village, Warbleton, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade II) (1353416)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  427. Coppin 2001, p. 103.
  428. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 619–620.
  429. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary Magdalene, Wartling Village, Wartling, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1353420)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  430. Coppin 2001, p. 72.
  431. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 621.
  432. Historic England. "The Parish Church of All Saints, Westdean Village, Cuckmere Valley, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1184445)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  433. Coppin 2001, p. 61.
  434. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 621–622.
  435. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary, High Street, Westham, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1353431)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  436. Coppin 2001, p. 69.
  437. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 625–626.
  438. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin, Church Street, Willingdon and Jevington, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1184822)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  439. Coppin 2001, p. 63.
  440. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 629.
  441. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Mary and St Peter, The Street, Wilmington, Long Man, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1028509)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  442. Coppin 2001, p. 65.
  443. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 630.
  444. Historic England. "The Parish Church of St Michael, Withyham, Wealden, East Sussex  (Grade I) (1180384)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  445. Taylor 1999, p. 243.
  446. Elleray 2004, p. 56.
  447. Coppin 2001, p. 135.
  448. Nairn & Pevsner 1965, pp. 637–639.

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