The
Church of England parish church,
St Bartholomew's, stands on high ground to the west of the town. The first
Saxon church was founded before the end of the 9th century as a "
minster", or main church of a Saxon royal estate that included an area which later became the parishes of
Seaborough,
Wayford and
Misterton. This church was replaced after the
Norman Conquest with a larger stone cruciform building, with a central tower. This was almost completely rebuilt and enlarged in the late 15th and early 16th centuries to create, for the most part, the church building visible today. It is an excellent example of the
Perpendicular style with many unusual and individual features. These include the west front, the
nave, the six-light aisle windows and the
Tudor-style chapels and windows in the north east corner. The building material is golden-coloured
Ham Hill stone, quarried nearby. There is a notable pair of '
green man' carvings within the church. No major alterations have been made since the Reformation in the 1530s and 1540s, but there have been many changes to the interior to accommodate various phases of
Church of England worship. Among these are an oven used for baking communion bread in the south east corner of the north chapel. Crewkerne also contains one of very few
Unitarian chapels left in the West Country, Crewkerne Unitarian Church, a tiny
chapel tucked away on Hermitage Street. The Methodist church on South Street is shared by
Roman Catholic and
Methodist congregations, following the closure and proposed redevelopment of St Peter's Catholic Church.
Christ Church, a
chapel of ease to St Bartholomew's, was built on South Street in 1852–54. It was declared redundant in 1969 and demolished in 1975. It is now the site of the residential Christchurch Court. ==Media==