List of new churches by Temple Moore
Temple Moore was an English architect who practised from an office in London. He was born in Tullamore, Ireland, the son of an army officer. He was educated at Glasgow High School, and later privately. In 1875 he was articled to George Gilbert Scott, Jr. Moore established an independent practice in 1878, but continued to work with Scott for some years and completed a number of his commissions.
Moore's designs were mainly in the Gothic Revival style, and although he worked in the later years of that tradition, his "artistic destiny was not to preserve an attenuating tradition but to bring to maturity a development which otherwise would have remained incomplete". Moore was primarily a church architect, designing around 40 new churches and restoring or making alterations and additions to others. He also designed a range of other buildings, including country houses, memorials, schools, parish halls, and a hospital. One of his pupils was Giles Gilbert Scott.
In 1919 Moore's son-in-law, Leslie Moore, became a partner, and he continued the work of the practice after Temple Moore's death at his home in Hampstead in 1920.
This list includes the major new churches designed by Temple Moore: the listed churches recorded in the National Heritage List for England, together with his cathedral in Nairobi, Kenya.
Key
| Grade | Criteria |
| Grade I | Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important. |
| Grade II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest. |
| Grade II | Buildings of national importance and special interest. |
Churches
| Name | Location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
| St Aidan | Carlton, Helmsley, North Yorkshire | 1884–1887 | New church. | ||
| All Saints | Peterborough, Cambridgeshire | 1886–87 | The chancel and two bays of the nave were built in 1886–87, the nave was completed in 1891, and the tower in 1901. | ||
| Chapel of Rest | Brompton, Scarborough, North Yorkshire | 1889 | A chapel of rest for the new cemetery. | ||
| The Good Shepherd | Lake, Isle of Wight | 1892 | A church with a double nave and bellcote in Decorated style. | ||
| St Magnus | Bessingby, East Riding of Yorkshire | 1893–94 | A new church replacing one of 1767 in Decorated style. | ||
| St Peter | Barnsley, South Yorkshire | 1893–1910 | A new church in brick with ashlar dressings. | ||
| St John | Hendon, Greater London | 1895 | The church was never completed, and consists only of the nave and the south aisle. | ||
| St Botolph | Carlton-in-Cleveland, North Yorkshire | 1896 | A new church with a west tower. | ||
| St John the Evangelist | Bilsdale Midcable, North Yorkshire | 1896–1898 | A church in an isolated condition in Decorated style. | ||
| St Mark | Mansfield, Nottinghamshire | 1897 | A new church in Perpendicular style. | ||
| St Cuthbert | Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire | 1897–1902 | A new church, converted into a leisure centre in 1977. | ||
| St Mary | Sledmere, East Riding of Yorkshire | 1898 | A new church incorporating some ancient fabric for Sir Tatton Sykes, 5th baronet, in the grounds of his home, Sledmere House. | ||
| St Columba | Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire | 1900–1902 | A church designed to fit an awkward site; in brick with a few stone dressings. | ||
| St James the Greater | Lealholm, North Yorkshire | 1902 | A new church. | ||
| St Wilfrid | Harrogate, North Yorkshire | 1904 | Started by Temple Moore, extended and completed later. | ||
| St Wilfrid | Bradford, West Yorkshire | 1904–05 | New church; furnishings added later. | ||
| St Mary | Rievaulx, North Yorkshire | 1906 | A new church, incorporating 13th-century fabric from an older church, with a north tower. | ||
| All Saints | Tooting, Wandsworth, Greater London | 1906 | A new church. | ||
| St Luke | Eltham, Greenwich, Greater London | 1906–07 | New church replacing a temporary mission church. | ||
| Chapel | Bishop's Hostel, Lincoln | 1906–07 | The building was later used as a theological college, and subsequently renamed Chad Varah House. | ||
| All Saints | Stroud, Gloucestershire | 1907–1910 | The nave, chancel, and aisles were built at this time. It was later completed to Temple Moore's designs by Leslie Moore. | ||
| St Margaret | Leeds, West Yorkshire | 1908–09 | A new church, never finished. Now redundant and used as an arts centre, the Left Bank Centre. | ||
| St Anne | Royton, Oldham, Greater Manchester | 1908–09 | A new church. The tower was added to Temple Moore's design in 1926–27. | ||
| St Wilfrid's Priory | Leeds, West Yorkshire | 1908–1928 | Built for the Community of the Resurrection in Tudor style. Later used as an adult education centre for the University of Leeds. | ||
| St Thomas | Boston, Lincolnshire | 1911 | New church. | ||
| St Mary, St Giles and All Saints | Canwell, Hints, Staffordshire | 1911 | A new chapel of ease. | ||
| All Saints | Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire | 1912 | A larger church was planned, but only the north aisle was completed; it is in Art Nouveau style. | ||
| St James | Clacton-on-Sea, Essex | 1912–13 | A church in Perpendicular style, but never completed. | ||
| St Michael and All Angels | Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham | 1913 | A new church in brick with stone dressings and a west tower. | ||
| St Aidan | Rochdale, Greater Manchester | 1913–1915 | A new church in Early English style. | ||
| St Mary | Walesby, Lincolnshire | 1914 | A new church with a west tower. | ||
| All Saints | Basingstoke, Hampshire | 1915 | New church in mainly Perpendicular style. | ||
| St Mary | Sculthorpes, Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire | 1916–1920 | A new church incorporating columns from a church dating from about 1760. | ||
| All Saints' Cathedral | Nairobi, Kenya | 1917–18 | The Anglican cathedral. | ||
| St Mary | Nunthorpe, North Yorkshire | 1924–1926 | Designed with Leslie T. Moore, his son-in-law, in Early English style. | ||
| St Columba | Scarborough, North Yorkshire | 1926 | New church built after his death. |