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Friends of Friendless Churches
English and Welsh charity formed in 1957 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Friends of Friendless Churches (FoFC), also referred to as 'The Friends', is a registered charity formed in 1957, active in England and Wales,[1] which campaigns for and rescues redundant historic places of worship threatened by demolition, decay, or inappropriate conversion. As of July 2025, the charity cares for 71 redundant churches or chapels, 36 of which are in England, and 35 in Wales.[2]


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History
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The charity was formed in 1957 by Ivor Bulmer-Thomas, a writer, former MP and a high church Anglican.[3] He was the charity's honorary director until his death in 1993. The first executive committee included prominent politicians, artists, poets and architects, among them John Betjeman, John Piper, Roy Jenkins, T. S. Eliot, Harry Goodhart-Rendel and Rosalie Lady Mander. Initially the charity campaigned and obtained grants for the repair and restoration of churches within its remit.[clarification needed] The 1968 Pastoral Measure established the Redundant Churches Fund (now called Churches Conservation Trust). However, the Church Commissioners turned down a number of buildings that the executive committee considered worthy of preservation, including Old St Matthew's Church, Lightcliffe, and St Peter's Church, Wickham Bishops. The charity therefore decided in 1972 to change its constitution, allowing it to acquire threatened buildings either by freehold or by lease. The tower of the church at Lightcliffe was the first property to be vested with the charity.[4]
Bulmer-Thomas' first restoration project was St James's Church in Llangua, Monmouthshire. He led the project in 1954–55, with the repairs carried out by E A Roiser.[5] Bulmer-Thomas restored the church as a memorial for his late wife, Dilysiae Thomas, with a plaque dedicated to her placed at the church's entrance. After the restoration was complete he founded the FoFC in 1957 to "secure the preservation of churches and chapels, or of any part thereof, in the United Kingdom, whether belonging to or formerly used by the Church of England or by any other religious body … for public access and the benefit of the nation", marking St James's as a pivotal building in the history of church conservation and repair in England and Wales.[6] Continuing his legacy, the FoFC completed a substantial restoration of St James's Church in 2024–25, which included extensive repair of the wagon roofs, lime plastering, rendering and limewashing.[7]
In 2025, the FoFC acquired four historically significant sites from the Historic Chapels Trust, ensuring their long-term conservation and public access. The acquisitions were Farfield Friends Meeting House (West Yorkshire), Coanwood Friends Meeting House (Northumberland), Cote Baptist Chapel (Oxfordshire), and Biddlestone Roman Catholic Chapel (Northumberland). This follows a strategic move by the Historic Chapels Trust to find sustainable new custodians for its portfolio of buildings ahead of the charity closing its operations. The chapels form part of the biggest single-year acquisition programme in the FoFC's 68-year history.
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Operations
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The charity raises money from various sources. Since 1999, it has worked in partnership with Cadw and the Church in Wales to take redundant churches in Wales into its care.[8] In Wales, the charity receives funding for taking Anglican churches into its care.[9] Of this, 70% comes from the Welsh Government through Cadw, and 30% from the Church in Wales.[10]
In England, the charity does not receive regular public funding, but has obtained grants from bodies such as English Heritage.[11] Other funds are raised from donations, membership fees and legacies from members of the public.[12] Some churches have been supported by the formation of local groups of Friends.[13][14] The charity administers two trusts,[15] one of which, the Cottam Will Trust, was established by Rev S. E. Cottam for "the advancement of religion of objects of beauty to be placed in ancient Gothic churches either in England or Wales".[16]
All the churches owned by the charity are listed buildings, and most are former Anglican churches, either from the Church of England or the Church in Wales, although there are also private chapels, a Nonconformist chapel[17] and a Roman Catholic church.[18]
On the charity's 50th anniversary in 2007 it published a book titled Saving Churches, containing details of their history and accounts of their churches.[19] The charity describes itself as an architectural conservation organisation which aims to preserve beautiful places of worship as public monuments. The charity told The Guardian newspaper in 2019 that cared-for and cherished should not mean fossilised, and instead they want to offer their places of worship for public events such as concerts, knitting groups, seasonal lectures, art exhibitions, supper clubs and the occasional religious ceremony. "They intend to carry on working tirelessly to preserve what Shakespeare described as our magnificent 'sermons in stone' for generations to come", The Guardian stated.[20]
The Friends have argued against Church of England plans, published in 2021, that aimed to diminish the democracy of the church closure process, and reduce the transparency and accountability of the Church.[21]
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People
The charity's patronage was made vacant following the death of the Marquess of Anglesey[22] in 2013. The ecclesiastical patron is Rev Wyn Evans, former Bishop of St Davids, and the president is the Marquess of Salisbury.[23]
Rachel Morley has been the director of the charity since 2018,[24] and as of January 2025[update] there were five members of staff.
List of vested churches
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The list is in two sections, one for England and the other for Wales. This division reflects the former management of most of the English churches by the Church of England and of the Welsh churches by the Church in Wales, and the different funding arrangements in the two countries.
Key
England
Wales
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Formerly vested churches
St Peter's, Corpusty, Norfolk was owned from 1982, then transferred into the care of the Norfolk Churches Trust in 2009.[169]
Partnership with Ancient Monuments Society
From 1993 to 2021, the Friends worked in partnership with the Ancient Monuments Society, sharing an office and staff, operating a joint membership scheme, and publishing a joint newsletter, while retaining separate finances and governing bodies. The co-operation came about because the Friends' founder, Ivor Bulmer-Thomas, was also Secretary and later Chairman of the Ancient Monuments Society. The arrangement was amicably dissolved at the request of the Friends,[170] effective 27 September 2021.[171]
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Notes
A This is the date of first construction of the existing building.
References
External links
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