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  1. St Michael and All Angels Church, Littlebredy. Coordinates: 50.6994°N 2.58519°W. The Church of St. Michael and All Angels in 1996. St Michael and All Angels Church is a Grade II listed Anglican church in the village of Littlebredy, Dorset, England. [1]

  2. St Michael and All Angels' Church, Church Broughton. /  52.898556°N 1.6967000°W  / 52.898556; -1.6967000. St Michael and All Angels’ Church, Church Broughton is the Church of England parish church of Church Broughton, Derbyshire. It is a Grade I listed building. [1]

  3. The first church dating from 1840, from a picture in The Parish Messenger, July 1937. St. Michael and All Angels church is located within Bartley Green. It was built as a chapel of ease to St. Laurence, Northfield. Construction of the church commenced in 1838 and was consecrated in 1840. It was by the architect Isaac Newry. [1]

  4. The Parish of Weltevreden Park is represented solely by St. Michael and All Angels' Anglican Church. [1] It is located at 1123 Cornelius Street. The Parish of Weltevreden Park is a parish of the Anglican Diocese of Johannesburg, part of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa. Weltevreden Park is one of the western suburbs of Johannesburg .

  5. Church of St Michael and All Angels, Puriton. / 51.1707; -2.9735. The Church of St Michael and All Angels in Puriton, Somerset, England was constructed from local Blue Lias stone. It has an early 13th-century tower, with the remainder of the building dating from the 14th and 15th centuries. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building. [1]

  6. The Church of St. Michael and All Angels in Little Badminton is a small church with nave and North aisle of almost equal size, divided by an Early English arcade of four bays with pointed arches and octagonal piers, the west pier and respond only having capitals. The 14th century East window has three lights with trefoiled heads.

  7. Caroline Armitage. St Michael and All Angels Church is a late nineteenth-century church in the settlement of Partridge Green in the parish of West Grinstead in West Sussex. It was built to cater for the then growing population of the village. Ian Nairn, in the Sussex volume of The Buildings of England, approves of the simplicity of this "flint ...