All Saints Church
All Saints Church was designed in Early English Gothic style by the architect Robert Wheeler of Brenchley and was built in 1869-70 as an Anglican chapel-of-ease to the parish church at Horsmonden.
The church was located about a mile and a half to the north-east of the centre of the village to serve the northern part of the parish. The foundation stone was laid by Mrs Austen of Capel Manor and Kelly's Directory of 1882 notes the cost as around £1,600.

All Saints photo from the 1960s when used by the Church of England
It closed for Church of England worship in 1970, was acquired by the Diocese of Southwark in 1971 and re-opened as a Catholic church in 1972, becoming the third Catholic church in the parish of Goudhurst and Hawkhurst.

In 2013 it was listed Grade II as a Building of Historic Interest for the following principal reasons:
• Architectural interest: a simple but complete chapel-of-ease in polychrome brickwork, carried through into the interior;
• Fittings, fixtures and decoration: complete good quality interior of 1869-70 including font, pulpit, sedilia, floor tiles, pews, stained glass windows, painted decoration to chancel roof and organ;
• Intactness: exterior unaltered and a complete set of interior fixtures;
• Comparators: there are similarities in style, materials and survival of interior fittings with the Grade II listed Pembury Hospital Chapel, Kent, also by Robert Wheeler of Brenchley.

A typical small mid-Victorian chapel of yellow brick with bands of red and black brick and minimal stone dressings, red brick double modillion cornice and stone window heads and cills and a tiled roof.
The chancel arch is of two main orders supported on short stone and marble columns, with stiff-leaf capitals and supported on angel corbels.
There are ornamental iron railings with a carved wooden handrail.
The interior has exposed polychromatic brickwork in English bond, mainly red brick with bands and arched voussoirs picked out in black brick.
The plan consists of a 3 bay nave with projecting south penticed porch, slightly narrower two-bay apsidal-ended chancel with a north organ chamber and vestry.
The style is Early English Gothic, with six single trefoil-headed lancets in the chancel and pairs of lancets in the nave with leaded lights, separated by buttresses and two west lancets with a circular window in the gable.
The built-in twin-arched sedilia with trefoil heads are divided by a stone and marble colonnette with further stone and marble detailing around
The organ is of 1870 by Thomas C Lewis and has a panelled base with trefoil decoration, the two right hand panels opening to form a door into the vestry.
The canted pulpit has a red brick base with a carved stone top including double panels of black marble and colonnettes of red marble and is surmounted by a brass lectern.
Opposite the south door is heavy stone font, the square bowl with incised roundels, on a cylindrical base with corner colonnettes. The wooden font cover has circular metal decoration and handle.
The chancel ceiling is painted depicting the starry firmament
In the chancel there are six single apse lancet windows with good religious contemporary stained glass.
The original trowel used for laying the foundation stone in 1969, the inscription reads:
PRESENTED TO MRS AUSTEN OF CAPEL MANOR ON HER LAYING THE FOUNDATION STONE OF A CHAPEL OF EASE TO THE PARISH CHURCH OF ST MARGARET HORSMONDEN AUGUST 10TH 1869


