A brick church dedicated to St Patrick was built at Salter Street in 1840 and the area formed into a parish in 1843. A tower with five bells was added in 1860 by Thomas Burman in memory of his father; and in 1899 the body of the church was rebuilt. The living, now known as Earlswood, is a vicarage in the gift of the vicar of Tanworth.[8] The church is grade II* listed, and the "reasons for designation" include "The fine High Victorian Gothic tower by G.T. Robinson (1860-1), forms a striking and unexpected accent in a wholly rural landscape".[9] Apart from the tower, it has been described as "one of the finest Arts & Crafts period churches in the Midlands".[10] The church is in the civil parish of Cheswick Green, in Solihull, as Salter Street forms the parish boundary and the church is on its east side, while the ecclesiastical parish of St Patrick covers "Cheswick Green, Dickens Heath, Monkspath, Blythe Valley, Illshaw Heath, and parts of Earlswood".[11]