Church is a village in Hyndburn, Lancashire, England. It contains six buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings. Of these, one is listed at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II. The Leeds and Liverpool Canal passes through the village, and three of the listed buildings are associated with it; two bridges and a warehouse. The other listed buildings in the village are a church, a large house, and a war memorial.
The oldest part of the church is the tower. The nave was built in 1804–05, and the chancel in 1895–96. The church is built in sandstone with slate roofs, and consists of a two-storey nave with two tiers of round-headed windows, a chancel, and a west tower. The tower has buttresses, a west door, Perpendicular window and bell openings, a clock face, and an embattledparapet. Inside the church are galleries on three sides.[2][3]
The warehouse stands by the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, it is in sandstone with a slate roof. There are four storeys and the building has an L-shaped plan. Facing the road are two gabled blocks joined by a range containing a giant arch with rusticatedvoussoirs. Behind the right block is a wing containing windows and loading doors.[6]
A large house, later used as a social centre, it is in stone with a hippedslate roof, and in Classical style, There are two storeys and a symmetrical five-bay front. In the central is a porch with four Corinthian columns, a cornice and a balustradedparapet. Above the door is a three-light window with an open segmental pediment and a cornice on consoles. All the upper floor windows have balconies.[2][7]
The war memorial stands in front of Elmfield Hall. It is in white stone and consists of a draped female figure with arms outstretched leaning against a plinth on a taped base. On the back is a carved script.[2][8]