Christ Church, Coseley

It was built in 1830; the interior has many additions of the late 19th and early 20th century.

[1] In 1825, when industry in the area had led to an increase in population, the Earl of Dudley, the lord of the manor, gave land for the building of a church in Coseley.

[1][3][4] It is built of Gornal stone, with slate roofs, and has a west tower.

Inside, there are perpendicular-style arcades of six bays separating the nave from the north and south aisles.

[1][3] William Spencer was the incumbent from 1883 to 1912; his family owned a steelworks in Northumberland, and he and his father financed improvements to the church, particularly the oak rood screen of 1904, carved by Advent Hunstone, and the fittings of the lady chapel, described in the listing text as "a tour-de-force of Edwardian design".