All Saints Church, Wraxall

[1] Parish registers survive from 1562, and include examples of the baptism of enslaved black people.

[2] The large churchyard contains several monuments to the Gibbs family which owned the nearby Tyntesfield Estate, which has recently been purchased by the National Trust following the death of Baron Wraxall.

It appears that portions of the chancel, north aisle and south porch were rebuilt at that time.

Members of the Gorges family, who were lords of this manor for some 400 years, are buried under the building's floors, although most of their headstones have been moved or destroyed.

[3] In 2006 parish leaders began a project to convert an abandoned school building on the grounds (the Old Georgian School, which opened in 1809) into a new meeting room and parish office, with restrooms, handicapped facilities and a kitchen.