Menu Close

Church Recording

Our churches contain a vast wealth of Memorials, Metalwork, Stonework, Woodwork, Textiles, Paintings, Books, Organs, Clocks and many other artefacts. Our group’s principal aim is to produce comprehensive records of this part of our national heritage, and by so doing promote its recognition and preservation.

Church Recorders work as a team at a local church or place of worship. In pairs, they research and document memorials, metalwork, stonework, woodwork, textiles, paintings, libraries, windows and other items.
It takes about three years to complete a Church Record and present the volume to the church or place of worship.

NADFAS/ Arts Society records are widely acknowledged by insurers and the police, as well as by the church authorities, as a huge help in recovering or restoring damaged or stolen items. These records are lodged not only with the individual church itself, but also with the diocese, at Church House, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Monuments Record Office, where they are an important resource for researchers and cultural historians.

 

St Augustine, East Hendred

The Church of England parish church of Saint Augustine of Canterbury dates from late in the 12th century. The church has a Perpendicular Gothic square west tower, built in about 1450, …

St James the Great Church, West Hanney

The village had a parish church by the time of the Domesday Book in 1086. The earliest part of the present Church of England parish church of Saint James the Great is the nave, built about 1150. The north tower was added later in the 12th century and the south …

St Nicholas, East Challow

The Church of England parish church of St Nicolas was a-12th century Norman building, but the font and some masonry of the nave are now almost the only original features that survive …