class="wikitable sortable"
|+ {{sronly|Current places of worship}} |
align="center" |Name
! align="center" class="unsortable"|Image
! align="center" |Location
! align="center" |Denomination/ Affiliation
! align="center" |Grade
! align="center" class="unsortable"|Notes
! align="center" class="unsortable"|Refs |
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St Bartholomew's Church (More images)
|100px
|Albourne {{Coord|50.9310 |
0.2132|name=St Bartholomew's Church, Albourne}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|The dedication to Bartholomew was first mentioned in 1442. George Gilbert Scott retained parts of the original 12th-century structure when he rebuilt the church in 1853. Ancient fittings include a medieval piscina and font. The church stands on an isolated lane outside the village.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol6/pt3/pp130-131|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 6 Part 3 – Bramber Rape (North-Eastern Part) including Crawley New Town. Albourne: Church|editor-last=Hudson|editor-first=T. P. |year=1987|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=130–131|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354779|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St Bartholomew, Church Lane, Albourne, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=16 April 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|title=Albourne|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2113|access-date=16 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011091358/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2113|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}] |
Brethren's Gospel Hall (More images)
|100px
|Albourne {{Coord|50.9327 |
0.2013|name=Brethren's Gospel Hall, Albourne}}
|Plymouth Brethren Christian Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Planning permission was granted in January 2009 for the construction of a large Gospel Hall catering for Exclusive Brethren from across Sussex on the site of a former plant nursery. It replaces a former place of worship in Patcham, and was registered for marriages in April 2012.
|[{{cite web|url=http://62.189.207.187/pap_msdclive/framepage.asp?dc2=&appnumber=08/03337/FUL|title=Planning Application 08/03337/FUL|date=15 January 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|access-date=7 June 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425062730/http://62.189.207.187/pap_msdclive/framepage.asp?dc2=&appnumber=08%2F03337%2FFUL|archive-date=25 April 2012|url-status=dead}}][{{cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/media/South_Agenda_13_05_2010.pdf|title=Mid Sussex District Council South Area Planning Committee (13th May 2010)|date=13 May 2010|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|access-date=7 June 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120404061258/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/media/South_Agenda_13_05_2010.pdf|archive-date=4 April 2012|url-status=dead}}]
[{{London Gazette|issue=60165|date=7 June 2012|page=10901}}][{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|p=9.}}] |
St Peter's Church (More images)
|100px
|Ardingly {{Coord|51.0521 |
0.0899|name=St Peter's Church, Ardingly}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|William de Warenne almost certainly founded the church in the late 11th century. The wool trade made the village wealthy in the 14th century, and a replacement was built in about 1350 in the then-popular Decorated Gothic style. Some masonry and a stone capital were preserved when the Norman-era north wall was demolished in 1887.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp127-132|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Ardingly|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=127–132|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1286656|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St Peter, Church Lane, Ardingly, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=16 April 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|title=Ardingly|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2114|access-date=16 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011110840/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2114|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}][{{Harvnb|Simpson|2008|p=8.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Simpson|2008|p=12.}}] |
St Dunstan's Church (More images)
|100px
|Ashurst Wood {{Coord|51.1110|0.0265|name=St Dunstan's Church, Ashurst Wood}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Built in 1859, possibly by William Habershon, this Early English-style church of brick with stone dressings was originally a Congregational church; it was registered for marriages under this identity in February 1862. In 1979 it became the new St Dunstan's Anglican church when its predecessor closed. The spire on the small tower is faced with slate.
|[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=2.}}][{{London Gazette|issue=22605|date=7 March 1862|page=1301}}] |
St Mary's Church (More images)
|100px
|Balcombe {{Coord|51.0627 |
0.1363|name=St Mary's Church, Balcombe}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|This small church is of stone (mainly ashlar) and was reconfigured during 19th-century rebuilding work. The ancient nave and chancel are now the south aisle and its side chapel respectively. These date from around 1300. An ancient tower with a small octagonal spire stands at the west end.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp132-136|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Balcombe|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=132–136|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354797|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St Mary, London Road, Balcombe, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=16 April 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|title=Balcombe|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2123|access-date=16 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011110811/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2123|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}] |
St Mary Magdalene's Church (More images)
|100px
|Bolney {{Coord|50.9898 |
0.2035|name=St Mary Magdalene's Church, Bolney}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|Over the centuries, many additions have been made to the 12th-century nave and chancel: a tower in 1538, a porch in 1718, an aisle in 1853 and an adjacent vestry in the 20th century. The lychgate is of Sussex oak and marble.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp136-140|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Bolney|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=136–140|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1193369|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St Mary Magdalene, The Street, Bolney, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=16 April 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|title=Bolney|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2124|access-date=16 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011110623/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2124|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}][{{Harvnb|Wales|1999|p=31.}}] |
Bolney Village Chapel (More images)
|100px
|Bolney {{Coord|50.9973 |
0.2013|name=Bolney Village Chapel}}
|Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This building was an independent mission hall when it was established in the 19th century. In July 2003, Mid Sussex District Council granted planning permission for a replacement chapel to be built on the site. In its present form, Bolney Village Chapel is part of the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion and a member of the Evangelical Alliance.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=42641|name=Bolney Evangelical Free Church|address=Bolney Common, Bolney|denom=Undenominational Evangelical|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Decisions%2014-07%20to%2018-07.PDF|title=Applications Determined Between 14 July 2003 to 18 July 2003|date=23 July 2003|work=Mid Sussex District Council website: planning application decisions|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|access-date=9 May 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110527011811/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Decisions%2014-07%20to%2018-07.PDF|archive-date=27 May 2011|url-status=dead}}][{{Cite web|url=http://www.eauk.org/churchsearch/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.ChurchDetail&ChurchID=152874|title=Church Search: Bolney Village Chapel|date=3 September 2008|publisher=The Evangelical Alliance|access-date=11 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727135641/http://www.eauk.org/churchsearch/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.ChurchDetail&ChurchID=152874|archive-date=27 July 2011|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.bolney.com/Village%20chapel.htm|title=Bolney Village Chapel|date=July 2008|work=Bolney Community website|publisher=Bolney Parish Council|access-date=11 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080704102903/http://www.bolney.com/Village%20chapel.htm|archive-date=4 July 2008|url-status=dead}}][{{cite web|url=http://www.cofhconnexion.org.uk/church-directory/bolney.php|title=Church Directory: Bolney|year=2010|publisher=Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion|access-date=22 October 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110216052210/http://www.cofhconnexion.org.uk/church-directory/bolney.php|archive-date=16 February 2011|url-status=dead}}] |
St John the Evangelist's Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9573 |
0.1332|name=St John the Evangelist's Church, Burgess Hill}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|The ecclesiastical parish of St John's Common was formed from part of Keymer parish when Thomas Talbot Bury's Gothic-style red, yellow and black brick church was completed in 1863. The church, opposite the town's park, has a three-stage tower with a tall spire.
|
[{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1025854|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St John, Church Road, Burgess Hill, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=5 May 2009}}] |
St Andrew's Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9602 |
0.1211|name=St Andrew's Church, Burgess Hill}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|A local farm owner built a mission hall and schoolroom on his land in the 1880s. A larger tin building replaced it; in 1908 a brick church superseded this. It was parished as soon as it opened. The east end was completed in 1924, but money ran out before a tower could be built.
|
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=13.}}][{{Harvnb|Matthews|2006|p=140.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Avery|2001|loc=§§54–55.}}] |
St Edward the Confessor's Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9605 |
0.1487|name=St Edward the Confessor's Church, Burgess Hill}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Standing in Burgess Hill's main cemetery in the west of town, St Edward's was built in 1936 on a {{convert|2.75|acre|ha|adj=on}} former brickyard site. It was allocated a parish in August 2000.
|[{{Harvnb|Avery|2001|loc=§57.}}] |
Centre Church (Mid-Sussex Christian Centre) (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9618 |
0.1372|name=Mid Sussex Christian Centre, Burgess Hill}}
|Assemblies of God
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The core of the building is W. Brooker's brick and tile Congregational church of 1829. Major alterations were made in 1923, and by its closure in 1976 it was called St John's Common United Reformed Church. In 1978 the Assemblies of God denomination acquired it.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=74287|name=Mid Sussex Christian Centre|address=Leylands Road, Burgess Hill|denom=Pentecostal Church|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{London Gazette|issue=46875|date=13 April 1976|page=5506}}][{{cite web|url=http://www.msccentre.org/communication|title=Communication|publisher=Mid-Sussex Christian Centre|year=2011|access-date=30 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130709142728/http://www.msccentre.org/communication/|archive-date=9 July 2013|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|pp=5–6, 12.}}] |
Gateway Baptist Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9539 |
0.1373|name=Gateway Baptist Church, Burgess Hill}}
|Baptist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Built in 1965–66 on a former brickworks, this church replaced E.J. Hamilton's red-brick Gothic building structure of 1894 in the town centre, which was demolished in 1970 when The Martlets shopping centre was developed.
|[{{Cite web|url=http://www.burgesshill.gov.uk/faithgroups|title=Faith Groups|year=2009|work=Burgess Hill Town Council website|publisher=Burgess Hill Town Council|access-date=16 April 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp179-181|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Keymer|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=179–181|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Harvnb|Avery|2001|loc=§§50–51.}}]
[{{WorshipReg|id=70551|name=Gateway Baptist Church|address=Station Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=14.}}] |
King's Church Mid-Sussex (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9546 |
0.1450|name=King's Church Mid-Sussex, Burgess Hill}}
|Evangelical
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This began as a small house church in 1977. Meetings transferred to Clair Hall in Haywards Heath, but this new £3.5 million building on Burgess Hill's Victoria Industrial Estate opened on 22 July 2012—by which time the church had about 400 members.
|[{{cite news|title=Hymns of praise as worshippers welcome new era|url=http://www.midsussextimes.co.uk/news/local/hymns-of-praise-as-worshippers-welcome-new-era-1-4068151|date=18 July 2012|newspaper=Mid Sussex Times|publisher=Johnston Publishing Ltd.|access-date=8 September 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|pp=13–14.}}] |
Kingdom Hall (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9555 |
0.1485|name=Jehovah's Witnesses Kingdom Hall, Burgess Hill}}
|Jehovah's Witnesses
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This modern brick building is used by the Burgess Hill and Haywards Heath Congregations of Jehovah's Witnesses. They originally met in a building on Grove Road (between 1959 and 1971) and then until 1985 in Haywards Heath at the former St Edmund's Hall, but the present building was erected in 1985. Exterior alterations were undertaken between 2009 and 2011.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=76991|name=Kingdom Hall|address=Victoria Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|p=13.}}] |
Burgess Hill Methodist Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9574 |
0.1393|name=Burgess Hill Methodist Church, Burgess Hill}}
|Methodist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This brick building on London Road was built in 1957–58 to replace an adjacent brick and stone church of 1900, which was built in the Perpendicular style by J. Weir. This is now the church hall.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=37874|name=Methodist Church|address=London Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Avery|2001|loc=§52.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|p=10.}}] |
Burgess Hill Community Mosque (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9572 |
0.1381|name=Burgess Hill Community Mosque, Burgess Hill}}
|Muslim
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|A community of Exclusive Brethren began meeting at a house in Mill Road in 1870 before moving to Lower Church Road and building this new red- and brown-brick meeting hall in 1905. In 1983 a new meeting room at Fairfield Road superseded it; the building was sold to the British Red Cross and was used as their local office until 2017. At that time the local Sunni Muslim community bought it and converted it into a mosque.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=76027|name=Church Road Meeting Room|address=128A Church Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=27 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|pp=7–8, 14.}}] |
Oakmeeds Gospel Hall (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9532 |
0.1320|name=Oakmeeds Gospel Hall, Burgess Hill}}
|Plymouth Brethren Christian Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This building on Station Road in Burgess Hill, originally the town's library, was registered in 2009 as a Brethren meeting room to cater for growth in Burgess Hill's Plymouth Brethren Christian Church community.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=82297|name=Oakmeeds Gospel Hall|address=Station Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
Brethren Meeting Room (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9629 |
0.1392|name=Brethren Meeting Room, Burgess Hill}}
|Plymouth Brethren Christian Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|When the Plymouth Brethren meeting room at Lower Church Road was sold in May 1983, a site was obtained at the junction of London Road and Fairfield Road and a new place of worship was erected there.
|[{{Harvnb|Avery|2001|loc=§56.}}][{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|p=8.}}] |
St Wilfrid's Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9537 |
0.1346|name=St Wilfrid's Church, Burgess Hill}}
|Roman Catholic
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The former Congregational chapel in Grove Road served as Burgess Hill's Roman Catholic church until St Wilfrid's was built by a local firm in 1940. Frank Brangwyn provided the Stations of the Cross and Joseph Cribb, a pupil of Eric Gill, carved the statue of Saint Wilfrid above the entrance.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=59548|name=St Wilfrid's Catholic Church|address=Station Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Dudeney|Hallett|2006|p=13.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Avery|2001|loc=§59.}}][{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|pp=10–12.}}] |
Salvation Army Citadel (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9563 |
0.1300|name=Salvation Army Citadel, Burgess Hill}}
|Salvation Army
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The Salvation Army have a small hall on Cyprus Road in the town centre. It was built in 1906 to replace a building in nearby Mill Road, in which the congregation had met since 1898. The white-painted hall is of stone and brick.
|
[{{Harvnb|Matthews|2006|p=141.}}]
[{{WorshipReg|id=42150|name=Salvation Army Citadel|address=Cyprus Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
All Saints Church (More images)
|100px
|Burgess Hill {{Coord|50.9539 |
0.1250|name=All Saints United Reformed Church, Burgess Hill}}
|United Reformed Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Burgess Hill's first Congregational chapel, in Grove Road, was replaced by this Classical building with a large portico and columns—an unusual style for such a late construction date (1881). John Betjeman thought it was the town's only decent piece of architecture. It was registered as Junction Road Church.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=26458|name=Junction Road United Reformed Church|address=Junction Road, Burgess Hill|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Harvnb|Dudeney|Hallett|2006|pp=2–4.}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|1981|loc=§72.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Davis|2021|pp=6–7.}}] |
St John the Baptist's Church (More images)
|100px
|Clayton {{Coord|50.9105 |
0.1534|name=St John the Baptist's Church, Clayton}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|This ancient church's 12th-century wall paintings are "unique in England" according to Pevsner. The nave, chancel arch and parts of the chancel are pre-Norman. The wooden bell-turret has three bells.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp140-144|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Clayton|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=140–144|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1286147|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St John the Baptist, Underhill Lane, Clayton, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=16 April 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|title=Clayton|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2125|access-date=16 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011092037/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2125|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}][{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=472–474.}}] |
St John the Evangelist's Church (More images)
|100px
|Copthorne {{Coord|51.1394 |
0.1177|name=St John the Evangelist's Church, Copthorne}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Copthorne parish was created from part of Worth in 1881. Designed in Early English style by William Habershon and built in 1877, the stone-built parish church has a chancel, nave with north and south aisles, and a tower topped with a steeple and incorporating a porch.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp192-200|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Worth|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=192–200|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=474.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=17.}}] |
Copthorne Chapel (More images)
|100px
|Copthorne {{Coord|51.1398 |
0.0906|name=Copthorne Chapel}}
|Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This was one of four chapels established in the area by this small evangelical group—Turners Hill, Crawley Down and West Hoathly had them by the early 19th century as well—but it is the only one still used by them. The stone building was opened on 5 September 1827.
|
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.copthornechapel.org.uk/chapel_story.htm|title=Copthorne Chapel... the story so far...|year=2001|publisher=Copthorne Chapel|access-date=17 June 2009}}][{{WorshipReg|id=11447|name=Copthorne Chapel|address=Copthorne, Worth|denom=Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
All Saints Church (More images)
|100px
|Crawley Down {{Coord|51.1213 |
0.0839|name=All Saints Church, Crawley Down}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The church, built in 1843–44 of rough-dressed stone in the Early English style, gained its own parish in 1862. North and south aisles were added in 1871 and 1888 respectively. The original galleries were taken out in 1888, and a porch was built in 1892.
|[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=475.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=18.}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|1981|loc=§83.}}] |
Holy Trinity Church (More images)
|100px
|Cuckfield {{Coord|51.0049 |
0.1434|name=Holy Trinity Church, Cuckfield}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|Most of the present structure was built between 1250 and 1340, but an older church on the site was held by Lewes Priory in around 1090. The tower, with its thin spire of shingle, is the oldest part. Charles Eamer Kempe added much stained glass in the 19th century.
|[{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Cuckfield_EUS_report.pdf|title=Cuckfield Historic Character Assessment Report|last=Harris|first=Roland B.|date=October 2005|work=Sussex Extensive Urban Survey (EUS)|publisher=East Sussex County Council, West Sussex County Council, and Brighton and Hove City Council|page=12|access-date=5 May 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515233814/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Cuckfield_EUS_report.pdf|archive-date=15 May 2011}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=477–478.}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1191625|title=Detailed Record: Parish Church of Holy Trinity, Church Street, Cuckfield, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=5 May 2009}}] |
Cuckfield Baptist Church (More images)
|100px
|Cuckfield {{Coord|51.0111 |
0.1398|name=Cuckfield Baptist Church, Cuckfield}}
|Baptist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Cuckfield's Baptist community numbered 20 by 1724, and it established a church in 1772. The small, rendered building, erected in a farmer's field, was extended in 1968.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp147-163|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Cuckfield|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=147–163|access-date=5 May 2008}}][{{WorshipReg|id=31120|name=Cuckfield Baptist Chapel|address=Polestub Lane, Cuckfield|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=19.}}][{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Cuckfield_EUS_report.pdf|title=Cuckfield Historic Character Assessment Report|last=Harris|first=Roland B.|date=October 2005|work=Sussex Extensive Urban Survey (EUS)|publisher=East Sussex County Council, West Sussex County Council, and Brighton and Hove City Council|page=14|access-date=5 May 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515233814/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Cuckfield_EUS_report.pdf|archive-date=15 May 2011}}] |
St Swithun's Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1243 |
0.0059|name=St Swithun's Church, East Grinstead}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|Although first documented in about 1100, when it came under the control of Lewes Priory, East Grinstead's parish church may have older origins. Little is known about the original structure, which fell into disrepair, collapsed and was rebuilt in 1789 by James Wyatt in local yellow sandstone. Charles Eamer Kempe designed the stained glass.
|
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=491–492.}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1277758|title=Detailed Record: Church of St Swithun, East Grinstead, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=14 June 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=6.}}][{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=12.}}] |
St Barnabas' Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1150 |
0.0116|name=St Barnabas' Church, East Grinstead}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The present building dates from 1975 and replaced its 63-year-old predecessor—a barn donated by Lady Musgrave. The west wall is stone-built; the rest of the building is timber. It is a daughter church of St Swithun's, and serves the southern part of the parish.
|[{{Cite web|url=http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/451/33/|title=East Grinstead – St Barnabas, Sunnyside|last=Allen|first=John|date=16 March 2009|work=Sussex Parish Churches website|publisher=Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org)|access-date=12 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110728073937/http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/451/33/|archive-date=28 July 2011|url-status=dead}}][{{Cite web|url=http://www.achurchnearyou.com/east-grinstead-st-barnabas/|title=St Barnabas, East Grinstead|work=A Church Near You website|publisher=Archbishops' Council|year=2009|access-date=12 June 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=139.}}] |
St Mary the Virgin Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1323 |
0.0199|name=St Mary the Virgin Church, East Grinstead}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Construction started in 1891 and proceeded gradually until 1912. The church was parished and consecrated in 1905. W.T. Lowdell's Decorated Gothic red-brick building, which serves the northwest part of the town, has a flèche and a wooden bell-tower.
|[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=23.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=492.}}][{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=104.}}] |
West Street Baptist Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1242 |
0.0089|name=West Street Baptist Church, East Grinstead}}
|Baptist
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|This was built in 1810 as the Zion Chapel—a name it retained for many years. The brick façade, in a loosely Classical style, has three large arched windows in shallow recesses at first-floor level, below a brick pediment; the ground floor is much altered. It was funded by a local brewer and was the town's first Nonconformist place of worship.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=80514|name=West Street Baptist Church|address=West Street, East Grinstead|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1249041|title=Detailed Record: Zion Chapel, West Street, East Grinstead, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=3 June 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/East_Grinstead_EUS_report.pdf|title=East Grinstead Historic Character Assessment Report|last=Harris|first=Roland B.|date=September 2005|work=Sussex Extensive Urban Survey (EUS)|publisher=East Sussex County Council, West Sussex County Council, and Brighton and Hove City Council|page=19|access-date=17 April 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110527005527/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/East_Grinstead_EUS_report.pdf|archive-date=27 May 2011}}][{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=67.}}] |
Jubilee Community Church
|
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1337 |
0.0148|name=Jubilee Community Church, East Grinstead}}
|Evangelical
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This Evangelical church, previously known as New Life Church, is part of the Evangelical Alliance and worships in a {{convert|44000|sqft|sqm|adj=on}} building called the Jubilee Community Centre.
|[{{cite web|url=https://www.jcceg.co.uk/wider-church/|title=Wider Church|year=2021|publisher=Jubilee Community Church|access-date=15 January 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220814035547/https://www.jcceg.co.uk/wider-church/|archive-date=14 August 2022|url-status=live}}][{{cite web|url=http://www.nicholassoames.org.uk/content/soamess-column-east-grinstead-courier-and-observer|title=Soames's Column – East Grinstead Courier and Observer|year=2019|publisher=Nicholas Soames M.P.|access-date=15 January 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181215174634/http://www.nicholassoames.org.uk/content/soamess-column-east-grinstead-courier-and-observer|archive-date=15 December 2018|url-status=live}}] |
Kingdom Hall (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1280 |
0.0138|name=Jehovah's Witnesses Kingdom Hall, East Grinstead}}
|Jehovah's Witnesses
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|A Jehovah's Witnesses community became established in East Grinstead in 1965 or 1967, when it moved into a hall formerly used by the Salvation Army at Portland Road. A new Kingdom Hall, used by the East Grinstead Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses, has since been built.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=77320|name=Kingdom Hall|address=170 London Road, East Grinstead|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{London Gazette|issue=45452|date=20 August 1971|page=9138}}] |
Trinity Methodist Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1314 |
0.0187|name=Trinity Methodist Church, East Grinstead}}
|Methodist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The Primitive Methodist community, established in 1868, worshipped at a building in London Road from 1884 until 1938, when they moved to new premises nearby. The church was extended in 1970 and 1980 as membership grew.
|[{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=173.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=91.}}][{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=137.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=187.}}][{{WorshipReg|id=58293|name=Trinity Methodist Church|address=London Road, East Grinstead|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, East Grinstead Chapel (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1234 |
0.0098|name=Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, East Grinstead Chapel, East Grinstead}}
|Mormon
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|East Grinstead's Mormon community worshipped in church halls around the town until they built their own church in 1985 on Ship Street. Administratively, it is in the Crawley Stake. In 1958, London England Temple—Britain's first Mormon temple—was built nearby at Newchapel.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=77284|name=Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints East Grinstead Chapel|address=Ship Street, East Grinstead|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=163.}}][{{Cite web|url=https://www.lds.org.uk/chapel_locator.php?county=161&keyword=&post_code=&show_text=1&town=&type=MH|title=The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – Where are we? (Region = West Sussex)|year=2006|work=The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints official country website: British Isles|publisher=Intellectual Reserve|access-date=3 July 2009}}{{Dead link|date=May 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}] |
Our Lady and St Peter's Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1286 |
0.0149|name=Our Lady and St Peter's Church, East Grinstead}}
|Roman Catholic
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|Frederick Walters designed a Norman-style stone church for East Grinstead's Roman Catholic community in 1898. The interior, which does not continue this architectural theme, has a window commemorating the founders, Sir Edward Blount (part of the Blount baronetcy) and his wife. They founded the first Catholic chapel, dedicated to St Edward and St Louis, in the town in 1879. The new church, a "strong and original design", opened on 2 October 1898 and has seen little alteration since.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=42965|name=Catholic Church of Our Lady and St Peter|address=London Road, East Grinstead|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=22.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|1981|loc=§101.}}][{{Harvnb|Leppard|2001|p=106.}}]
[{{NHLE|num=1426322|desc=Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady and St Peter, London Road, East Grinstead, Sussex, RH19 1EY|grade=II|accessdate=3 July 2015}}] |
Moat United Reformed Church (More images)
|100px
|East Grinstead {{Coord|51.1287 |
0.0141|name=Moat United Reformed Church, East Grinstead}}
|United Reformed Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|A Congregational community started to meet in the town in 1866. In 1870 they built a permanent church near the railway station. Edward Steer designed it in the Early English style; his building is of stone and has a tower with a spire.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=20014|name=Moat United Reformed Church|address=East Grinstead|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
All Saints Church (More images)
|100px
|Handcross {{Coord|51.0525 |
0.2023|name=All Saints Church, Handcross}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The village's Anglican church, with a distinctive bell-turret, is administered from Slaugham. In the 1950s, some of its land had to be acquired for the building of the adjacent A23 bypass.
|
[{{Cite web|url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1959/feb/24/handcross-by-pass|title=Handcross Bypass |date=24 February 1959|work=Hansard 1803–2005 website|publisher=UK Parliament|access-date=5 May 2009}}][{{Cite web|url=http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/562/33/|title=Slaugham – (1) St Mary, (2) All Saints, Handcross and (3) Ascension, Pease Pottage|last=Allen|first=John|date=19 April 2009|work=Sussex Parish Churches website|publisher=Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org)|access-date=12 June 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110728073954/http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/562/33/|archive-date=28 July 2011}}] |
Zoar Strict Baptist Chapel
|100px
|Handcross {{Coord|51.0543 |
0.2007|name=Zoar Strict Baptist Chapel, Handcross}}
|Baptist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|A round-windowed, red and yellow brick building of 1888 replaced the village's first Baptist chapel, first recorded in 1782. The chapel's congregation is aligned with the Gospel Standard movement.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=30996|name=Zoar Chapel|address=Handcross, Slaugham|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.slaughampc.org.uk/content.asp?pageId=8|title=Schools & Churches|year=2009|work=Slaugham Parish Council website|publisher=Slaugham Parish Council|access-date=5 May 2009}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=26.}}]
[{{cite web|url=http://www.gospelstandard.org.uk/gs/media/GS/chandcor.pdf |title=List of Chapels and Times of Services |year=2009 |work=Gospel Standard Trust Publications |access-date=14 February 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130627014706/http://www.gospelstandard.org.uk/gs/media/GS/chandcor.pdf |archive-date=27 June 2013 |url-status=dead }}] |
St Francis of Assisi's Church (More images)
|100px
|Hassocks {{Coord|50.9305 |
0.1461|name=St Francis of Assisi's Church, Hassocks}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This small church was built in 1975 and is one of three in the Anglican parish of Clayton with Keymer.
|[{{Cite web|url=http://www.achurchnearyou.com/keymer-st-francis-of-assisi-hassocks/|title=St Francis of Assisi, Hassocks|work=A Church Near You website|publisher=Archbishops' Council|year=2009|access-date=3 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090712123429/http://www.achurchnearyou.com/keymer-st-francis-of-assisi-hassocks/|archive-date=12 July 2009|url-status=dead}}] |
Hassocks United Reformed Church (More images)
|100px
|Hassocks {{Coord|50.9246 |
0.1414|name=Hassocks United Reformed Church, Hassocks}}
|United Reformed Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Standing in the centre of the village, this is a former Congregational church which dates from 1885. The former red-brick exterior can still be seen at the side, but the front was rebuilt in imitation stone in 1964.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=36192|name=Hassocks United Reformed Church|address=Hassocks|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=27.}}] |
St Wilfrid's Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9992 |
0.1046|name=St Wilfrid's Church, Haywards Heath}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|George Frederick Bodley's Decorated Gothic sandstone church of 1863–65 is Haywards Heath's Anglican parish church. It was consecrated in 1865 by the Bishop of Chichester. The tower is {{convert|88|ft|m}} tall and has 11 bells. The stained glass includes depictions of wounded First World War soldiers.
|
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=529–530.}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354934|title=Detailed Record: Church of St Wilfred (sic), Church Road, Haywards Heath, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=14 June 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|pp=61–62.}}] |
St Richard's Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|51.0062 |
0.1015|name=St Richard's Church, Haywards Heath}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|The dark brick exterior hides reinforced concrete, the main building material for this late-1930s church by Keir Hett, which has elements of the Art Deco style. It replaced an earlier chapel with the same dedication, and became parished in 1939.
|[{{Cite web|title=St Richard's Church, Sydney Road, Haywards Heath, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://www.heritagegateway.org.uk/Gateway/Results_Single.aspx?uid=1385286&resourceID=5|work=Listed Buildings Online|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=9 May 2009}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/496/33/|title=Haywards Heath – St Richard|last=Allen|first=John|date=28 March 2009|work=Sussex Parish Churches website|publisher=Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org)|access-date=12 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110728074201/http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/496/33/|archive-date=28 July 2011|url-status=dead}}] |
Church of the Ascension (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9891 |
0.1077|name=Church of the Ascension, Haywards Heath}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|In the 1960s, St Edmund's Hall—home to an Anglican congregation at that time—was sold and the money raised was used to build this church on a new housing estate in the south of the town. Since 2003, when the Church of the Good Shepherd closed, it has also served the Franklands Village estate. The original octagonal timber structure was rebuilt in brick and concrete in 1997.
|[{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Haywards_Heath_EUS_report.pdf |title=Haywards Heath Historic Character Assessment Report |last=Harris |first=Roland B. |date=September 2005 |work=Sussex Extensive Urban Survey (EUS) |publisher=East Sussex County Council, West Sussex County Council, and Brighton and Hove City Council |page=15 |access-date=17 April 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110527005429/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Haywards_Heath_EUS_report.pdf |archive-date=27 May 2011 }}][{{Cite web|url=http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/499/33/|title=Haywards Heath – Ascension|last=Allen|first=John|date=27 March 2009|work=Sussex Parish Churches website|publisher=Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org)|access-date=12 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110728074001/http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/499/33/|archive-date=28 July 2011|url-status=dead}}]
[{{cite web|url=http://www.achurchnearyou.com/haywards-heath-church-of-the-good-shepherd/|title=Church of the Good Shepherd, Haywards Heath|year=2009|work=A Church Near You website|publisher=Archbishops' Council|access-date=15 December 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100302145241/http://www.achurchnearyou.com/haywards-heath-church-of-the-good-shepherd/|archive-date=2 March 2010|url-status=dead}}] |
Church of the Presentation (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|51.0009 |
0.0927|name=Church of the Presentation, Haywards Heath}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|A temporary church made of iron, erected in 1882, was the first to bear this dedication. It was replaced by a permanent building in 1897. Its pebble-dashed exterior hides red-brick walls. Lancet windows illuminate the large apse.
|[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=30.}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/497/33/|title=Haywards Heath – Presentation|last=Allen|first=John|date=27 March 2009|work=Sussex Parish Churches website|publisher=Sussex Parish Churches (www.sussexparishchurches.org)|access-date=12 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110728074153/http://www.sussexparishchurches.org/content/view/497/33/|archive-date=28 July 2011|url-status=dead}}] |
Haywards Heath Baptist Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9949 |
0.1002|name=Haywards Heath Baptist Church}}
|Baptist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The façade of this church, altered and simplified in 1957–58, hides its Renaissance-style origins. A Primitive Methodist congregation occupied the building from September 1876; it was extended and reopened in 1877. Its registration as a Methodist chapel was cancelled in 1991, and it is now used by Baptists.
|
[{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|p=73.}}][{{WorshipReg|id=79183|name=Haywards Heath Baptist Church|address=7 Sussex Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{London Gazette|issue=52788|date=8 January 1992|page=244}}] |
Jireh Strict Baptist Chapel (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9933 |
0.0999|name=Jireh Strict Baptist Chapel, Haywards Heath}}
|Baptist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Sussex has many 19th-century Independent and Baptist chapels in this Vernacular style: a tiled, gabled roof, porch, and red-brick walls with round-arched windows. This example was built in 1879 by William Knight, a horticulturist who was also the chapel's first pastor. It is a Gospel Standard movement chapel.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=24886|name=Jireh Chapel|address=Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|1981|loc=§140.}}][{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|p=74.}}] |
Christ Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|51.0003 |
0.0948|name=Christ Church, Haywards Heath}}
|Evangelical
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The community built its first church here in 1936, but its rapid growth led to the construction of a 300-capacity brick building with a total-immersion baptismal pool. It opened in September 1967 as Haywards Heath Evangelical Free Church. The FIEC-aligned church was rebuilt again in 2010–11 and renamed Christ Church.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=71287|name=Evangelical Free Church|address=New England Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|p=76.}}]
[{{cite web|url=http://www.cchh.org.uk/about-us/history/|title=History|year=2011|publisher=Christ Church, Haywards Heath|access-date=17 October 2011}}] |
Haywards Heath Methodist Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|51.0036 |
0.1033|name=Haywards Heath Methodist Church}}
|Methodist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The Sussex Wesleyan Mission founded a church on Perrymount Road in March 1900. It was dedicated in August that year. A church hall was added in 1959, and more extensions were made in 1983 and 2000. The red-brick church is in the Early English style.
|
[{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|pp=69–71.}}][{{WorshipReg|id=37873|name=Haywards Heath Methodist Church|address=Perrymount Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
Mid Sussex Islamic Centre (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9917 |
0.0998|name=Mid Sussex Islamic Centre (former St Edmund's Hall), Haywards Heath}}
|Muslim
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Used by Congregationalists (1861–1915), Anglicans (until the 1960s, when the Church of the Ascension superseded it) and then Jehovah's Witnesses, this chapel (latterly called St Edmund's Hall) later became a Scout hut before being bought and renovated by the Muslim community, who opened it as a mosque in November 2010.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=72430|name=Kingdom Hall|address=Wivelsfield Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=27 August 2012}}][{{cite web|url=http://www.haywardsheathmosque.co.uk/|title=Mid Sussex Islamic Centre and Masjid, Haywards Heath|year=2012|publisher=Haywards Heath Mid Sussex Islamic Centre|access-date=25 October 2012}}]
[{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-sussex-12452413|title=Three charged with Haywards Heath mosque arson|date=14 February 2011|publisher=BBC News|access-date=25 October 2012}}] |
Franklynn Gospel Hall (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9966 |
0.0919|name=Franklynn Gospel Hall, Haywards Heath}}
|Open Brethren
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This modern meeting hall, in the east of the town, was opened as the Franklynn Christian Fellowship Gospel Hall and was registered for worship and marriages in January 1962. It is registered as a meeting place of Open Brethren. It succeeded a building on Franklynn Road which had been registered as an Unsectarian Gospel Hall since September 1936.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=68493|name=Franklynn Gospel Hall|address=Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|p=77.}}]
[{{London Gazette|issue=42579|date=23 January 1962|page=622}}][{{London Gazette|issue=42604|date=20 February 1962|page=1494}}] |
Kents Road Christian Meeting Hall (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9940 |
0.0981|name=Kents Road Church, Haywards Heath}}
|Plymouth Brethren
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This small brick building just south of the town centre was originally an Exclusive Brethren meeting room, established here in the 1930s. The old meeting room replaced one which stood on South Road adjacent to Victoria Park. Since 1970 it has been a meeting place for Christians meeting in accordance with the principles held by early Brethren.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=78095|name=Kents Road Christian Meeting Hall|address=Kents Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://kentsroadchurch.weebly.com/index.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130209154757/http://kentsroadchurch.weebly.com/index.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=9 February 2013|title=Kents Road Church|year=2012|publisher=Kents Road Church|access-date=14 June 2012}}][{{cite web|url=http://www.mybrethren.org/history/fram1963.htm|title=List of Meetings Great Britain and Ireland – 1963|last=Trowbridge|first=W.H.|orig-year=1963|publisher=The Stow Hill Bible and Tract Depot|location=Hampton Wick|year=1998–2012|work=MyBrethren.org website (History and Ministry of the early "Exclusive Brethren" (so-called) – their origin, progress and testimony 1827–1959 and onward)|access-date=4 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201026131306/http://www.mybrethren.org/history/fram1963.htm|archive-date=26 October 2020|url-status=live}}] |
St Paul's Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9971 |
0.1002|name=St Paul's Church, Haywards Heath}}
|Roman Catholic
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Founded in 1928 and opened on 12 June 1930, this large brick church was designed by W.G. Maugan in the Romanesque Revival style with Byzantine elements. Interior features include oak panelling, marble paving and Romanesque Stations of the Cross from France.
|[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=31.}}][{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=530.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Ford|Gabe|1981|pp=75–76.}}][{{WorshipReg|id=52604|name=St Paul's Catholic Church|address=Hazelgrove Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{London Gazette|issue=33657|date=31 October 1930|page=6854}}] |
Haywards Heath United Reformed Church (More images)
|100px
|Haywards Heath {{Coord|50.9963 |
0.1020|name=Haywards Heath United Reformed Church}}
|United Reformed Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This church opened on 21 July 1915 as a Congregational church, on South Road in the town centre, to replace St Edmund's Hall. The firm of George Baines and Son designed the Perpendicular Gothic building in red brick with pale stone dressings.
|
[{{Harvnb|Smith|1993|loc=§39.}}][{{WorshipReg|id=46675|name=United Reformed Church|address=South Road, Haywards Heath|accessdate=24 August 2012}}] |
Brethren Meeting Room
|
|Hickstead {{Coord|50.9668 |
0.1948|name=Brethren Meeting Room, Hickstead}}
|Plymouth Brethren Christian Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Planning permission for this meeting room was granted in 2016, and it was registered three years later.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=84768|name=Hickstead Gospel Hall|address=London Road, Hickstead|denom=Plymouth Brethren|accessdate=15 January 2024}}][Mid Sussex District Council Planning Application DM/15/4894: Land Adjacent to Hickstead Cottage, London Road, Hickstead, Haywards Heath, West Sussex RH17 5NU. Erection of a single storey Local Meeting Hall (D1 Use Class) and car parking and access improvements from London Road] |
All Saints Church (More images)
|100px
|Highbrook, West Hoathly {{Coord|51.0549 |
0.0574|name=All Saints Church, Highbrook}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|Benjamin Ingelow and R.H. Carpenter designed this church in 1884 in a 13th-century Gothic style. There is a tower with a shingled spire, originally of oak. The nave has one aisle and a porch on the opposite side. The church has always been parished.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp164-172|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: West Hoathly|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=164–172|access-date=16 April 2008}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=32.}}]
[{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1181989|title=Detailed Record: All Saints Church, Hammingden Lane, West Hoathly, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=16 April 2009}}][{{Cite web|title=Highbrook|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2133|access-date=16 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011110957/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2133|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=538.}}] |
St Giles' Church (More images)
|100px
|Horsted Keynes {{Coord|51.0402 |
0.0281|name=St Giles' Church, Horsted Keynes}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|An aisle and porch were built in 1888, but the rest of this cruciform church dates from the 12th and 13th centuries. It has a chancel, nave, transept and tower with a tall, narrow spire. Lancet windows were added in the 13th century. Charles Eamer Kempe installed stained glass in 1895.
|[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=540.}}][{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1025684|title=Detailed Record: Parish Church of St Giles, Church Lane, Horsted Keynes, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=14 June 2009}}] |
Horsted Keynes Mission Hall (More images)
|100px
|Horsted Keynes {{Coord|51.0367 |
0.0248|name=Mission on the Green, Horsted Keynes}}
|Evangelical
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|This 18th-century mission hall is built of a mixture of stone and red-brick, with quoins of ashlar. The area below the gable at the south end of the roof is hung with red tiles, and the roof itself is also tiled. A porch was added on the south side in the 19th century. It was founded by members of a Bible class at the parish church, and has also been known as a Gospel Hall.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1194609|title=Detailed Record: Horsted Keynes Mission Hall, The Green (north side), Horsted Keynes, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=3 June 2009}}][{{WorshipReg|id=59749|name=Mission Church (Interdenominational)|address=The Green, Horsted Keynes|accessdate=24 August 2012}}]
[{{Harvnb|Stenton Eardley|1939|p=139.}}] |
Holy Trinity Church (More images)
|100px
|Hurstpierpoint {{Coord|50.9337 |
0.1805|name=Holy Trinity Church, Hurstpierpoint}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|Rebuilt on the site of the former St Lawrence's Church by Charles Barry in 1843–45, and extended in 1854 and 1874, this large church has Flemish-style stained glass, a 13th-century font and other fittings from the old church. Its style is Gothic Revival.
|[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=541.}}]
[{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: The Parish Church of the Holy Trinity, High Street (south side), Hurstpierpoint, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354863|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}] |
Hurstpierpoint Evangelical Church (More images)
|100px
|Hurstpierpoint {{Coord|50.9324 |
0.1742|name=Hurstpierpoint Evangelical Church}}
|Evangelical
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This church has links with the Evangelical Free church in Haywards Heath and the Baptist church at Cuckfield. It has its roots in an independent mission chapel, possibly as early as 1833. The name was changed in 1938 to reflect its connection with Evangelicalism.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=56458|name=Evangelical Free Church|address=High Street, Hurstpierpoint|accessdate=27 August 2012}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.cuckfieldbaptistchurch.co.uk/Pages/hurstpierpoint.htm|title=Hurstpierpoint|year=2008|work=Cuckfield Baptist Church website|publisher=Cuckfield Baptist Church|access-date=6 May 2009}}][{{Harvnb|Nelson|2001|p=213.}}] |
Hurstpierpoint Methodist Church (More images)
|100px
|Hurstpierpoint {{Coord|50.9361 |
0.1790|name=Hurstpierpoint Methodist Church}}
|Methodist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The present church was built in 1981 on the site of its Art Nouveau-style red-brick predecessor. This was designated as a Wesleyan chapel and was founded in August 1909; building work continued through 1910. It had in turn replaced an earlier (1834) chapel elsewhere in the village.
|
[{{Harvnb|Packham|1997|loc=§36.}}][{{WorshipReg|id=44185|name=Methodist Church|address=Cuckfield Road, Hurstpierpoint|accessdate=27 August 2012}}] |
St Cosmas and St Damian Church (More images)
|100px
|Keymer {{Coord|50.9219 |
0.1306|name=St Cosmas and St Damian Church, Keymer}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|A Saxon church on this site was rebuilt in the 12th century, and the walls of the chancel and apse remain from that era. In 1866, Edmund Scott rebuilt the church in a 14th-century style, and added aisles to the nave. The tower has a steeple and a small spire.
|
[{{Cite web|title=Church of St Cosmas and St Damian, Keymer Road, Keymer, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://www.heritagegateway.org.uk/Gateway/Results_Single.aspx?uid=1392037&resourceID=5|work=Listed Buildings Online|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}][{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=546–547.}}] |
St Edward the Confessor's Church (More images)
|100px
|Keymer {{Coord|50.9219 |
0.1325|name=St Edward the Confessor's Church, Keymer}}
|Roman Catholic
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Leo Hothersall's £35,000 church replaced a temporary building on the same site. Work began in May 1972 and the first service was held on 6 April 1973. The adjacent presbytery was added later. The interior was altered and new fittings, including a stone font, were provided in 1999. The French crucifix above the altar dates from 1781.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=73447|name=Catholic Church of St Edward the Confessor|address=Lodge Lane, Keymer|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Cite web|title=English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): St Edward the Confessor, Keymer |url=http://www.dabnet.org/Resources/DABNet/English%20Heritage%20Reports%20Extracts/Keymer%20EH.pdf |access-date=6 May 2009 |year=2005 |publisher=English Heritage |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604203830/http://www.dabnet.org/Resources/DABNet/English%20Heritage%20Reports%20Extracts/Keymer%20EH.pdf |archive-date=4 June 2011 }}]
[{{Harvnb|Various authors|1999|pp=3–4.}}] |
All Saints Church (More images)
|100px
|Lindfield {{Coord|51.0162 |
0.0784|name=All Saints Church, Lindfield}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|Formerly dedicated to St John the Baptist and built of sandstone with locally produced roof tiles, this church is mostly 14th-century, although one existed on the site 200 years earlier. The three-stage tower at the west end has a tall shingled spire. Victorian restoration focused on the nave and its roof.
|[{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: Parish Church of All Saints, High Street (east side), Lindfield, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1025462|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=13 June 2009}}][{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Lindfield_EUS_report.pdf|title=Lindfield Historic Character Assessment Report|last=Harris|first=Roland B.|date=January 2006|work=Sussex Extensive Urban Survey (EUS)|publisher=East Sussex County Council, West Sussex County Council, and Brighton and Hove City Council|access-date=17 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100602030456/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Lindfield_EUS_report.pdf|archive-date=2 June 2010|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=561.}}] |
Lindfield Evangelical Free Church (More images)
|100px
|Lindfield {{Coord|51.0117 |
0.0799|name=Lindfield Evangelical Free Church}}
|Evangelical
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This church had its origin in the Sewell Memorial Mission, named after a former vicar of All Saints Church who built the mission hall opposite the church in the mid-19th century. The congregation moved to a new building in 1939, and the name was changed in 1980.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=58857|name=Lindfield Evangelical Free Church|address=Chaloner Road, Lindfield|accessdate=27 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=39.}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.lefc.co.uk/churchlife/churchhistory.asp|title=Church History|year=2004|work=Lindfield Evangelical Free Church website|publisher=Lindfield Evangelical Free Church|access-date=17 April 2009}}] |
Lindfield United Reformed Church (More images)
|100px
|Lindfield {{Coord|51.0125 |
0.0811|name=Lindfield United Reformed Church}}
|United Reformed Church
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Architects William and Edward Habershon designed this chapel for the Congregational Church (now part of the United Reformed Church). It was built in the Decorated Gothic style between 1857 and 1858 using yellow brick and stone.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=58918|name=United Reformed Church|address=High Street, Lindfield|accessdate=27 August 2012}}] |
St John the Evangelist's Church (More images)
|100px
|Newtimber {{Coord|50.9060 |
0.1937|name=St John the Evangelist's Church, Newtimber}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|The 13th-century church was substantially restored by Benjamin Ingelow and R.H. Carpenter in 1875. The tower, with a large rose window, was added in 1839. The north chapel was originally a private chapel for the occupants of Newtimber Place.
|[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=572.}}][{{Cite web|title=Newtimber|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2141|access-date=17 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011092100/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2141|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354879|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of St John Evangelist, Church Lane, Newtimber, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=17 April 2009}}] |
Holy Trinity Church (More images)
|100px
|Poynings {{Coord|50.8944 |
0.2035|name=Holy Trinity Church, Poynings}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|This cruciform church, in the 13th-century style, was built in around 1370. A window from Chichester Cathedral was installed in the south transept in the mid-17th century. Other windows have 15th-century stained glass. Architecturally, the church is early Perpendicular Gothic.
|[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=586.}}][{{Cite web|title=Poynings|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2143|access-date=17 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011111011/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2143|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1285135|title=Detailed Record: The Parish Church of The Holy Trinity, The Street, Poynings, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|year=2007|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|access-date=17 April 2009}}] |
Church of the Transfiguration (More images)
|100px
|Pyecombe {{Coord|50.8983 |
0.1644|name=Church of the Transfiguration, Pyecombe}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|The chancel, chancel arch and nave of this isolated downland church date from about 1170. The tower, with a shallow "cap"-style roof, was built in the 13th century. Minor restoration was carried out in the 19th century. The churchyard has a rare Tapsel gate, a centrally pivoted design unique to Sussex.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp212-214|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Pyecombe|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=212–214|access-date=17 April 2009}}][{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: The Parish Church, Church Lane, Pyecombe, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1025593|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=587.}}][{{Cite web|title=Pyecombe|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2144|access-date=17 April 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|work=Mid Sussex District Council website|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011092325/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2144|archive-date=11 October 2007|url-status=dead}}] |
Christ Church (More images)
|100px
|Sayers Common {{Coord|50.9532 |
0.1945|name=Christ Church, Sayers Common}}
|Anglican
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Sayers Common became parished in 1881; previously it had been part of Hurstpierpoint. The church, in the Early English style of flint dressed with red brick, was built in 1880; a chancel and vestry were added in 1909.
|
[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp172-178|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Hurstpierpoint|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=172–178|access-date=5 May 2009}}][{{Harvnb|Packham|1997|loc=§18.}}] |
St Augustine of Canterbury Church (More images)
|100px
|Scaynes Hill {{Coord|50.9924 |
0.05116|name=St Augustine of Canterbury's Church, Scaynes Hill}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|Matthew Habershon designed this red-brick church in 1858 with elements of the Decorated and Perpendicular Gothic styles. The tower, with a timber belfry and pyramid spire, was added at the southwest corner in 1883, and Thomas Garrett built a north aisle in 1913.[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=48.}}]
|[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=602.}}][{{Cite web|title=Church of St Augustine of Canterbury, Church Road, Scaynes Hill, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://www.heritagegateway.org.uk/Gateway/Results_Single.aspx?uid=1391733&resourceID=5|work=Listed Buildings Online|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|1981|loc=§181.}}] |
Scaynes Hill Strict Baptist Chapel (More images)
|100px
|Scaynes Hill {{Coord|50.9931 |
0.0505|name=Scaynes Hill Strict Baptist Chapel}}
|Baptist
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The village's small Strict Baptist chapel dates from 1875 and was extended in 2008. The red-brick building, with round-headed, segmental-arched windows, stands just north of St Augustine of Canterbury Church. It is aligned with the Gospel Standard Baptist movement.
|
[{{WorshipReg|id=29501|name=Scaynes Hill Baptist Chapel|address=Scaynes Hill, Lindfield|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Cite web|url=http://sash.org.uk/scaynes_hill |title=Scaynes Hill |date=13 July 2009 |publisher=St Augustine's Church, Scaynes Hill |access-date=26 April 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100926124205/http://sash.org.uk/scaynes_hill |archive-date=26 September 2010 }}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.lindfieldrural-pc.org.uk/planning.asp |title=Planning Applications |year=2010 |publisher=Lindfield Rural Parish Council |access-date=26 April 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090717055734/http://www.lindfieldrural-pc.org.uk/planning.asp |archive-date=17 July 2009 }}] |
St Mary's Church (More images)
|100px
|Slaugham {{Coord|51.0383 |
0.2080|name=St Mary's Church, Slaugham}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II* colour}}|{{sort|B|II*}}
|The parish of this mostly 12th- and 13th-century church covers Handcross, Pease Pottage and Warninglid as well as the hamlet of Slaugham. The square font is as old as the building and is of local marble.
|[{{Cite web|url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/Sussex/vol7/pp181-186|title=A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Slaugham|editor-last=Salzman|editor-first=L. F. |year=1940|work=Victoria County History of Sussex|publisher=British History Online|pages=181–186|access-date=5 May 2009}}][{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: The Parish of St Mary, The Green (south side), Slaugham, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1025603|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=606–607.}}] |
St Mark's Church (More images)
|100px
|Staplefield {{Coord|51.0388 |
0.1788|name=St Mark's Church, Staplefield}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|Benjamin Ferrey's Early English-style church of 1847 became parished the next year. The chancel has wall paintings and stained glass by Charles Eamer Kempe. A three-stage bell-arch tops the roof at the west end. Memorials include one to Boy Scout casualties of the First World War.
|[{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: St Mark's Church, Brantridge Lane, Staplefield, Cuckfield Rural, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354813|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=610.}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=51.}}]
[{{Cite web|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Cuckfield_EUS_report.pdf|title=Cuckfield Historic Character Assessment Report|last=Harris|first=Roland B.|date=October 2005|work=Sussex Extensive Urban Survey (EUS)|publisher=East Sussex County Council, West Sussex County Council, and Brighton and Hove City Council|page=16|access-date=5 May 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515233814/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/Nimoi/sites/msdcpublic/resources/Cuckfield_EUS_report.pdf|archive-date=15 May 2011}}] |
Our Lady of Fatima Church (More images)
|100px
|Staplefield {{Coord|51.0369 |
0.1795|name=Our Lady of Fatima Church, Staplefield}}
|Roman Catholic
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|Originally a Baptist chapel of 1827, this stone building was altered considerably when a local family bought it and presented it to the Roman Catholic Church in 1966. The first Mass was celebrated on 9 October of that year.
|[{{Cite web|title=English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): Our Lady of Fatima, Staplefield|url=http://www.dabnet.org/Resources/DABNet/English%20Heritage%20Reports%20Extracts/Staplefield%20EH.pdf|access-date=5 May 2009|year=2005|publisher=English Heritage|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604203738/http://www.dabnet.org/Resources/DABNet/English%20Heritage%20Reports%20Extracts/Staplefield%20EH.pdf|archive-date=4 June 2011|url-status=dead}}]
[{{WorshipReg|id=72091|name=Church of Our Lady of Fatima|address=Cuckfield Road, Staplefield, Haywards Heath|accessdate=27 August 2012}}] |
St Leonard's Church (More images)
|100px
|Turners Hill {{Coord|51.1021 |
0.0915|name=St Leonard's Church, Turners Hill}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|The original design of 1895 by Lacy W. Ridge—responsible for many churches in the Diocese of Chichester—lacked the tower which now stands at the west end. This was built in 1923 to a plan made by Aston Webb, and serves as a memorial to World War I. Charles Eamer Kempe provided all the stained glass.
|[{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: St Leonard's Church, Church Road, Turners Hill, Worth, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1354925|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}][{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|p=614.}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|1981|loc=§189.}}] |
Turners Hill Free Church (More images)
|100px
|Turners Hill {{Coord|51.1043 |
0.0850|name=Turners Hill Free Church}}
|Independent
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|The present building dates from 1906, but it is the second on this site: the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion established a presence in the village in 1823. The stone and red-brick, Decorated Gothic-style building is now used by the Free Church.
|[{{WorshipReg|id=11442|name=Turners Hill Free Church|address=Turners Hill, Worth|denom=Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion|accessdate=24 August 2012}}][{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=52.}}] |
St Peter's Church (More images)
|100px
|Twineham {{Coord|50.9657 |
0.2174|name=St Peter's Church, Twineham}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|Built entirely of brick in the 16th century—an early date for a brick church—Twineham's parish church stands in a very rural situation. It consists of a chancel, nave, tower at the west end and wooden porch. The tower has a spire and a peal of five bells. The churchyard has a section for Quaker burials.
|[{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: The Parish Church of St Peter, Church Lane, Twineham, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1284819|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=17 April 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Wales|1999|p=214.}}] |
St Margaret's Church (More images)
|100px
|West Hoathly {{Coord|51.0766 |
0.0557|name=St Margaret's Church, West Hoathly}}
|Anglican
!{{Grade I colour}}|{{sort|A|I}}
|The oldest part of this church is the nave, which dates from the late 11th century. The chancel, aisle, tower, spire, porch and lancet windows were added over the next 350 years. The nave and chancel underwent restoration in 1870. The churchyard is terraced with a series of retaining walls.
|[{{Cite web|title=Detailed record: The Parish Church of St Margaret, Queen's Square (east side), West Hoathly, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1182137|work=historicengland.org.uk|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=12 June 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Nairn|Pevsner|1965|pp=626–627.}}][{{Harvnb|Wales|1999|p=229.}}]
[{{Cite web|title=West Hoathly|url=http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2154|access-date=14 June 2009|publisher=Mid Sussex District Council|year=2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110527012442/http://www.midsussex.gov.uk/page.cfm?pageID=2154|archive-date=27 May 2011}}] |
St Dunstan's Church (More images)
|100px
|West Hoathly {{Coord|51.0777 |
0.0550|name=St Dunstan's Church, West Hoathly}}
|Roman Catholic
!align="center"|{{sort|D|–}}
|This church is administered from the Abbey Church at Worth Abbey, and is part of its parish. Until 1957 it was a cottage with an attached butcher's shop; with little alteration, the 19th-century structure was converted into a place of worship. English Heritage describes it as a "curiosity".
|[{{Cite web|title=English Heritage Review of Diocesan Churches 2005 (Extract): St Dunstan, West Hoathly, West Sussex|url=http://www.dabnet.org/Resources/DABNet/English%20Heritage%20Reports%20Extracts/West%20Hoathly%20EH.pdf|access-date=12 June 2009|year=2005|publisher=English Heritage|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604204856/http://www.dabnet.org/Resources/DABNet/English%20Heritage%20Reports%20Extracts/West%20Hoathly%20EH.pdf|archive-date=4 June 2011}}]
[{{WorshipReg|id=66830|name=Catholic Chapel of St Dunstan|address=West Hoathly|accessdate=27 August 2012}}] |
Abbey Church of our Lady Help of Christians (More images)
|100px
|Worth Abbey {{Coord|51.0926 |
0.1183|name=Worth Abbey Parish Church}}
|Roman Catholic (Benedictine)
!{{Grade II colour}}|{{sort|C|II}}
|Although the foundation stone is dated 1968, work on Francis Pollen's Modernist rotunda-style church started in 1964 and continued after his death in 1987. Its 1,400 capacity makes it Sussex's largest church. The main building material is reinforced concrete, although there is some timber work.
|[{{Cite web|url=http://www.worthabbey.net/ml/church.htm|title=The Abbey Church|date=1999–2005|work=Worth Abbey website|publisher=Fr. Patrick Fludder OSB|access-date=27 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090413043129/http://worthabbey.net/ml/church.htm|archive-date=13 April 2009|url-status=dead}}]
[{{Harvnb|Pé|2006|pp=109–110.}}][{{Cite web|title=Abbey Church of Our Lady Help of Christians, Turners Hill, Worth, Mid Sussex, West Sussex|url=https://www.heritagegateway.org.uk/Gateway/Results_Single.aspx?uid=1392325&resourceID=5|work=Listed Buildings Online|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|access-date=3 June 2009}}]
[{{Harvnb|Elleray|2004|p=56.}}] |