Church of St Mary the Virgin, King's Pyon

The church sits on top of a steep slope above a giant redwood tree to the north, planted in memory of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897.

The parish also includes the small hamlet of Ledgemoor, between Kings Pyon and Weobley, which has its own stone-built mission chapel, and a village hall.

The inside of the roof of the nave and south transept date from the 14th century and have a magnificent two-tiered structure of black trefoiled headed wind-braces to each slope, in contrast to the whitewashed ceiling.

His limbs have been amputated, probably when much of the interior decoration of the church was destroyed by Scottish mercenary troops of the Parliamentarians during the siege of Hereford in 1645.

There is a carved Victorian altar screen at the east end of the church, and another in the west end behind the Victorian font, all in memory of former family members of the congregation as well as numerous memorial plaques and windows which trace the history of the principal families and benefactors of the church over the years.