Welcome to the 2025 festival!

West Lindsey in May (with the Rambler's Church in the distance)*

Welcome to West Lindsey’s 2025 Churches Festival – a celebration of rich architecture and heritage, of beautiful tranquillity and spirituality, and a welcoming oasis of peace that all our churches offer.

This year a record 103 churches are participating over the two weekends and we are also pleased to include eighteen churches across the border in North Lincolnshire.

The first weekend takes place in the west of the area and what a treat our churches have in store for you. Tower tours at St Andrew’s, Kirton in Lindsey, a family friendly ‘mouse hunt’ at St Genewys, Scotton, and Viking Graffiti at the cruciform Anglo-Saxon Minster church of St Mary at Stow.

Travel across the border to Epworth, birthplace of Methodism and visit the Wesley Memorial Methodist Church, built as a lasting memorial to John Wesley, considered the father of Methodism and his brother Charles, composer of over 6,500 hymns.

Buslingthorpe St Michael*

Highlights during week two include ‘Value it, Flog it’ at St Edmund’s, Riby, where you can receive expert advice on your treasured items. St Peter and St Paul, Middle Rasen enjoy ‘Holiday Memories’, Holy Rood, Market Rasen celebrate ‘angels’ and St John the Baptist, Nettleton depict the ‘Colours of The Rainbow’ through vibrant floral Decorations.

So are you interested in a spot of “church crawling” this May? 

Here on the website you will find an

St Thomas of Canterbury, Gainsborough*

Read on for more festival details, including visitor reviews and this year's highlights. 

In their own words: visitors explain the attraction of the event

Beth Sliwinski from Sheffield explains why she travels to the event from Yorkshire: "If ever a reason is needed to visit beautiful Lincolnshire, this is it. Every church provides its own treats - interesting architecture, friendly volunteers, delicious refreshments, picturesque churchyards - even the drives from one church to the next are a pleasure."

Long-time visitor Lexie Brookes-Ashmore, from Caistor, says she enjoys the graveyards as well as the churches: “I have been visiting the churches festival since 2012, so this will be my 12th year! My best friend and I cancel all other plans for the festival (plus the September one) and always end the day with a picnic. We love the architecture and history as well as the many interesting graves.”

Visitor Patrick Flynn explained how the opportunity to play many of the church organs was a highlight for him and his friend: "We travel from Hull and visit on one of the days each weekend. My friend is a professional organist and usually plays all the available instruments and we plan our route beforehand. We enjoy the festival very much indeed."

East Barkwith St Mary

Sheffield visitor Cath Mirfin offered her recommendation to people considering taking part this year: “Whether you love visiting a new church, finding out about the building’s history or just admiring the architecture this is the festival for you. Everyone we met were very friendly and full of interesting info. And some churches have fabulous cakes! We put it in our diary every year and make it a long weekend at the East coast.”

Visitor Angela Mayne from Middle Rasen explains her reasons for taking part: “I love taking pictures in Churches, so during the festival makes my job a lot more interesting. People looking round the displays in the Churches makes for good photography.”

Gillian Poucher (Wolds based author and URC minister) wrote: "May Churches Festival celebrates the rich variety of churches across our district, from ancient to modern, peaceful to vibrant, in hamlets, villages and market towns. The Festival offers something for everyone: opportunities for reflection in the Quiet Churches, enjoyment of organ and other music, fascinating heritage displays, and of course many cups of tea and mouth watering cakes!

Chris Gale, also from Sheffield, combines visiting her brother Andy (who lives in Lincolnshire) with church visits. "We always take time to visit the church festivals, last year we took the family’s Sealyham terrier Arthur who really enjoyed it, especially the ham sandwiches at Stainfield. This is an unusual Queen Anne-style church next to the Manor House in a tiny village that you would never know was there! The festival helps you discover some hidden gems in Lincolnshire."

Lincoln-based Tracey Kidner explains how much the event means to her.“Always a highlight of my year: such a delight to explore our beautiful county and discover our shared history and heritage. Plus amazing cakes!”

Market Rasen Methodist*

Highlights from the 103 churches taking part this year

Our churches showcase our communities’ histories through the ages. As well as delightful 14th-15th century pew ends, Ulceby, St Nicholas has a rood screen linked to nearby Thornton Abbey. 

Hainton, St Mary’s, remembers the Heneage Family through its collection of nationally important monuments, spanning five centuries from brass memorials of 1435 to modern day memorials of 1954. 

And 11th century Glentworth, St Michael shares its links to the Mayflower Pilgrims that sailed to American from Boston.

All Saints, Tealby displays information of the village links with Victorian poet Alfred Lord Tennyson.

Finally, Scampton, St John the Baptist proudly recognises its close association with the RAF, with windows dedicated to personnel from RAF Scampton and 617 Squadron and interactive screens exploring the lives of people buried in the miliary and war graves in the churchyard. Some churches open for you to take time out from the busy pace of life. 

Blyton St Martin
The small wooden St John the Divine, Southrey invites just that, whilst also serving strawberries and cream! And there are plenty of other churches offering tempting cakes and refreshments. Just look for the teacup symbol in the guide.

We hope you enjoy our festival and that you tell your friends about your experiences here in West Lindsey. We know many of you visit year after year and we thank you for your support in making this one of the biggest and best Churches Festivals in Europe. Not only are you supporting our church heritage, you are also supporting many of our small villages. 

Every church really does have a story to tell…

* all photography on this page by the team at Push Creativity.





Newton by Toft - St Michaels

 

St Michael’s church (Newton By Toft) by Alice Ginnelly

Additional to the printed brochure - but open for you to visit! St Michael's is a small festival church in Newton by Toft. A quiet area for prayer and reflection. St Michael's holds various events over the year. 

Please follow us on social media platforms for more information. 

Church Facebook page

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61560216110082 

Church Twitter/X Page

Postcode: LN8 3NF

Open: 17th - 18th May, Saturday & Sunday: Dawn to Dusk.

Photo: 
St Michael’s church (Newton By Toft) by Alice Ginnelly


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Wrawby - St Mary

 

Paul Glazzard, St Mary's Church, Wrawby, CC BY-SA 2.0

A church has existed in Wrawby since the year 627 and is mentioned in the Domesday survey of 1068, being the oldest surviving building in Wrawby. 

St Mary’s shows traces of various periods in history with the tower dating from the 13th century and the font from the 14th. Much was rebuilt in the 1800s. The north porch was built in 1887. 

The church stands in peaceful grounds and is now also used for worship by Wrawby Methodist Church.

Postcode: DN20 8SL

Click here to find on Google Maps

Open: 17th - 18th May, Saturday 11am - 3pm • Sunday 12noon - 3pm

Photo: Paul Glazzard, St Mary's Church, Wrawby, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Ulceby - St Nicholas

John Beal, St Nicholas Church, Ulceby, CC BY-SA 2.0
 
St Nicholas church is a unique Grade I listed building on a site where there has been a church since the Saxon period. The building is of national architectural significance with a rood screen linked to Thornton Abbey. 

Other highlights include 15th century pew ends, a stained glass window dedicated to vicar Henry Flowers (who himself appears in the window), and a memorial to someone killed in one of the very first railway accidents. 

BBQ lunches and book sale.

Postcode: DN39 6TB

Open: 17th - 18th MaySaturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 10am - 4pm

Photo: John Beal, St Nicholas Church, Ulceby, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Cadney - All Saints

 
David Hitchborne, Cadney cum Howsham - All Saints, CC BY-SA 2.0

Grade I All Saints church is a hidden treasure. Built from Claxby Ironstone, parts date back to the 12th century. It is a beautiful, peaceful calm place to visit. 

Exhibition on former vicar of Cadney Revd E A Woodruff Peacock. He spent 29 years living in Cadney, and was a renowned botanist, while walking around Cadney and nearby Howsham, he would always carry a special notebook for collecting plant specimens and recording all the details, where he collected the specimen from, what the soil was like, what time of year it was etc. He had a collection of over 8,000 plant specimens.

Much of his collection is now in the Natural History Museum.

Postcode: DN20 9HS

Open: 17th - 18th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 10am - 4pm

Photo: David Hitchborne, Cadney cum Howsham - All Saints, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Brigg - Methodist Church

David Wright, Brigg Methodist Church, CC BY-SA 2.0

Brigg Methodist Church has a silver award within the La Rocha Eco-Church scheme. There is opportunity to hear about how this achievement was gained as part of the church’s missional response. And how the development of an eco/community garden is a springboard for engaging with young people and the wider community. 

A range of resources relating to Climate Change/Action/Justice is available and on the Saturday you may be directed to Oikos if you are interested in eco products, including refills.

Postcode: DN20 8TR

Open: 17th - 18th MaySaturday 11am - 4pm • Sunday 12noon - 4pm

Photo: David Wright, Brigg Methodist Church, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Brigg - St John the Evangelist

D H Wright on Flickr, Church of St. John, Brigg, CC BY 2.0

A Victorian Grade II listed church, built on the sight of the Chapel of Ease from 1699, completed and opened in 1843. Standing in the heart of the town with entrances off both Bigby Street on the south side and Wrawby Street pedestrian precinct on the north side. Hanging in the church is a History of the parish of Glandford Bridge written in 1902.

Incorporated into the stain glass windows over the altar are three well known Brigg landmarks.

Postcode: DN20 8EJ

Open: 17th - 18th May, Saturday 9.30am - 12noon • Sunday 9.30am - 3pm

Photo: D H Wright on Flickr, Church of St. John, Brigg, CC BY 2.0

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Barnetby le Wold - St Mary

Pete Burnett, St Mary's, Barnetby Le Wold, CC BY-SA 2.0

St Mary’s dates back to the 11th century and is mentioned in the Domesday Book. It was extended in the 14th century with a tower with three bells that were made locally in Grasby. Outside on the south wall is a stone carving of a cat above one of the windows. 

The church is no longer used for worship and now looked after by The Churches Conservation Trust. It is on the edge of the village within the church graveyard. 

Exhibition of its history during the weekend.

Postcode: DN38 6JL

Open: 17th - 18th May, Saturday 12noon - 4pm • Sunday 12noon - 4pm

Photo: Pete Burnett, St Mary's, Barnetby Le Wold, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Barnetby le Wold - St Barnabas




Gary Brothwell, St Barnabas' Church, Barnetby Le Wold, CC BY-SA 2.0

The church was built in 1926/27 to replace the existing wooden church and be more central than the 11th century St Mary’s which is sited on the edge of the village. It was unfinished as money ran out! Beautiful coloured ceiling painted in railway colours.

Refreshments served over the weekend.

Exhibition on “History of Barnetby” during the weekend.

Postcode: DN38 6JE

Open: 17th - 18th May, Saturday 12noon - 4pm • Sunday 12noon - 4pm

Photo: Gary Brothwell, St Barnabas' Church, Barnetby Le Wold, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Scawby - St Hybald

 

David Wright, St Hybald Church, Scawby, CC BY-SA 2.0

St Hybald, a little known Saxon saint of the 7th century was probably the Abbot of Hibaldstow. Only 3 other local churches are dedicated to him: those in Ashby de la Launde, near Sleaford; Manton (although this is now a private dwelling) and our neighbouring village of Hibaldstow where he is believed to have been buried. 

The earliest recorded church in Scawby now only survives in the lower part of the 14th century tower. After a ‘fire’ in 1839 the rest of the church was rebuilt and extended. St Hybald’s contains many funereal monuments to the Nelthorpe family, who lived in the adjacent Scawby Hall.

Postcode: DN20 9AE

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 10am - 4pm

Photo: David Wright, St Hybald Church, Scawby, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Redbourne - St Andrew

 
Ian S, St Andrew's, Redbourne, CC BY-SA 2.0

This substantial church, built largely in the 14th and 15th centuries, has a wonderfully tall, slender tower. The interior is an attractive mix of Decorated and Perpendicular with Georgian and Victorian.

It includes a very beautiful, detailed, dramatic and vividly coloured stained glass window of the Day of Judgement from 1830. There are also some excellent 18th and 19th century monuments, some ducal hatchments of the St Albans family who lived at the Hall and a notable incised slab to Sir Gerald Sothill (1410). 

St Andrew’s is in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.

Postcode: DN21 4QN

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 10am - 4pm

Photo: Ian S, St Andrew's, Redbourne, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Hibaldstow - St Hybald

 

David Wright, St Hybald, Hibaldstow, CC BY-SA 2.0

We are one of only 3 churches in the country dedicated to St Hybald - the other two being our sister church in Scawby and Ashby-de-la-Launde. And we have the particular honour of having the bones of St Hybald himself buried under our chancel. 

The village name Hibaldstow means ‘burial-place of St Hybald’ and dates back to at least 664AD. It is thought the St Hybald, possibly a pupil of St Chad, set up a mission station or monastery in what became Hibaldstow, and was eventually buried there. 

Despite the long history of Christian worship, the present church dates from 1866 (chancel) and 1875 (nave), and the tower was rebuilt in the 1960s. St Hybald’s occasionally plays host to pilgrimages from to see the relics of St Hybald.

Postcode: DN20 9RA

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 10am - 4pm

Photo: David Wright, Hibaldstow Church, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Gate Burton - St Helen

Richard Croft, St Helen's Church, Gate Burton, CC BY-SA 2.0

St Helen’s church, Gate Burton is a beautiful estate church of 1866 by Sir G. G. Scott, with a west tower, nave and chancel. It has geometrical tracery. The font is Norman and drum shaped, and decorated with segmental arched arcading, revealing flowers or faces. Coffees and light snacks will be served in the church on the open weekend. 

While the road is marked private, access to the church is permitted

Postcode: DN21 5BA

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 9am - 4pm • Sunday 9am - 4pm

Photo: Richard Croft, St Helen's Church, Gate Burton, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Broughton - St Mary

Richard Croft, St Mary's Church Broughton, CC BY-SA 2.0

St Mary’s church can safely be dated from 1066, although the tower is possibly earlier, giving evidence that there has been a centre of Christian worship in Broughton for over 900 years at least. 

There are many interesting features in St Mary’s including architecture from various periods in its history, Lindsey type grave slabs, and monuments to the Redford and Anderson families.

Postcode: DN20 0HY

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 12noon - 4pm (Sunday times are an update to those advertised in the brochure). 

Photo: Richard Croft, St Mary's Church Broughton, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Epworth - Wesley Memorial Methodist

 
Wesley Memorial Methodist, Epworth (photograph from church's website)

Built as a lasting memorial to John and Charles Wesley - opened on 15 September 1889. Visitors can see the famous stained glass window and the communion table which once stood in St Andrew’s church and was used by Samuel Wesley to celebrate communion.

Postcode: DN9 1EP

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 12noon - 4pm

Photo provided by the church


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Epworth • St Andrew

 
Richard Croft, St.Andrew's Church,  Epworth, CC BY-SA 2.0

St Andrew’s is Grade I listed, parts of which date back to the 12th century. It is best known for Samuel Wesley, rector from 1695 to 1735. His sons John and Charles were born and brought up in Epworth. Epworth is therefore seen as the birthplace of Methodism. Samuel is buried in the churchyard. 

We will be holding an exhibition and serving refreshments. There are various architectural features in the church, the north and south aisles are the earliest surviving.

Postcode: DN9 1ES

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4pm • Sunday 12noon - 4pm

Photo: Richard Croft, St.Andrew's church Epworth, CC BY-SA 2.0

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Bottesford - St Peter Ad Vincula

 

St Peter ad Vincula, Parish Church, Bottesford, by Christ Morgan

Mentioned in the Domesday Book, the breath-taking Grade I listed Early English style building largely dates from the 13th century with a later 14th century tower which houses a ring of six bells dating from 1710 to 2002 and rung regularly. 

A warm welcome awaits those who come to quietly experience the incredible craftsmanship of our ancestors with some fascinating features. Enjoy light refreshments which will be available 2pm-4.30pm both days. Well behaved dogs welcome.

Postcode: DN16 3RD 

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday 10am - 4.30pm • Sunday 12noon - 4.30pm

Photo: Chris Morgan, St Peter ad Vincula, Parish Church, Bottesford, CC BY-SA 2.0

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South Carlton - St John the Baptist

Richard Croft, St John the Baptist's church, South Carlton, CC BY-SA 2.0

Additional to the printed brochure - but open for you to visit! 

South Carlton Church (Grade I listed) is beautifully situated below the cliff edge north of Lincoln.

Although remodelled by Teulon in 1859, the Norman chancel arch and reconstructed 13th century arcades bear witness to the church's early origins. 

Home since the 16th century for the Monson family, there is a magnificent 17th century memorial to Sir John and Lady Jane Monson. Newly repaired and conserved in 2024, the monument is again open to visitors. The private Monson mausoleum is located on the north of the church. 

Postcode: LN1 2RH 

Open: 10-11th May, Saturday & Sunday: 10am - 4pm.

Photo: Richard Croft, 
St John the Baptist's church, South Carlton, CC BY-SA 2.0


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Sixhills • All Saints

Sixhills All Saints - Photo by Angela Montague at Push Creativity

All Saints church is a Grade II listed building standing in a picturesque location on the edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds, with a wonderful view.

The village has associations with Gilbert of Semperingham through the Gilbertine Priory.

The church was rebuilt in the late 1860s-1875 by James Fowler of Louth. Light refreshments will be available throughout the day.

Postcode: LN8 3RL

Open: 17th-18th May - Saturday 10:30am - 4pm • Sunday 11am - 4pm

Photos: copyright Angela Montague


Sixhills All Saints roof - Photo by Angela Montague at Push Creativity

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Hainton • St Mary

Hainton St Mary, David Wright for Flickr  CC BY 2.0

A church of Anglo-Saxon origins rebuilt in the 13th and 14th centuries and sympathetically restored in the 19th century. 

The spire was suggested by Capability Brown when he redesigned the park. 

Inside, there is a ‘nationally important’ series of absolutely stunning monuments to the Heneage Family.

From brass of 1435 to modern memorials of 1954, in varying styles all relating to a time span of one family. 

Light refreshments available throughout the day.

Postcode: LN8 6LS,


Open 17-18th May, Saturday 10am-4pm • Sunday 10.30am-4pm

Photo: Hainton St Mary, David Wright for Flickr  CC BY 2.0

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