Old Isleworth
Churches







Hounslow Jamia Masjid Islamic Centre
Wellington Rd South
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8572 4034
The Coptic Orthodox Church
594, Great West Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8577 7222
Hounslow & District Affiliated Synagogue
100, Staines Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
TW4 5AL
Tel: 020 8572 2100
Cornerstone Seventh Day Adventist Church
178 Heston Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8570 2542

St. Pauls Church Centre
Bath Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8737 1004

Shree Jalaram Jupdi
497a, Staines Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8569 5710

Sikh Temple
rear of 231, Hanworth Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8577 2793
Bell Road Methodist Church
Bell Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8577 8442
Hounslow Evangelical Church
186, Hanworth Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8572 9724
Hounslow Pentecostal Church
101a, Pears Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8570 1262
Guru Nanak Nishkam Sewak Jatha (Sikh Temple)
134-142, Martindale Rd
Hounslow Middlesex
Tel: 020 8570 4774

St Bridget Rc Church
112 Twickenham Road 
Isleworth  TW7 6DL 
Phone 0208 5601431

St Mary's catholic
On the corner of
south street  and the
Twickenham road

All Saints' church
Church Street
Telephone
(020) 8560 6662

St Vincent De Paul
2 Witham Road 
Isleworth  TW7 4AJ
Tel  0208 5604737

St Vincent De Paul
2 Witham Road 
Isleworth  TW7 4AJ
Tel  0208 5604737

St Vincent De Paul
2 Witham Road 
Isleworth  TW7 4AJ
Tel  0208 5604737

Our Lady Of Sorrow
& St Bridget R C Church
Twickenham Rd, Isleworth
tel 020 85601431

St Mary's
Osterley Road
Isleworth
Telephone
020 8560 3555

St Francis  of Assisi
865 Great West Road
Isleworth
Telephone
(020) 8560 4839



Church of England

Isleworth cemetery

Equippers'

Syon Monastery
founded in 1415 by King Henry V at his manor of Isleworth. The "Monastery of St. Saviour and St. Bridget of Syon" was the only one in England belonging to the modified order of St. Augustine, as reformed by St. Bridget , and comprised thirteen priests,, four deacons, and eight lay brethren, besides sixty nuns. The property extended for half a mile along the bank of the Thames, near Twickenham; and the chief duty of the community was to pray for the souls of the royal founder and his near relatives and for all the faithful departed. Martin V confirmed the foundation in 1418, and the first novices were professed in 1420. Six years later the Regent (John, Duke of Bedford) laid the first stone of the chapel; endowments and benefactions rapidly flowed in, and towards the close of the century and a quarter which elapsed between its foundation and dissolution, the annual income of the monastery was estimated at 1730, equal in modern money to 100,000 dollars. The good observance of Syon was maintained to the last; and even Layton and Bedell, Henry VIII's servile commissioners, could find little or nothing to bring against the community. The inmates were nevertheless expelled in 1539, and the buildings seized by Henry, who imprisoned his fifth wife, Katherine Howard, in them for some months. The nuns retired to a house of their order in Flanders, but in 1557, on the accession of Queen Mary, they returned to Syon, and the greater part of their property was restored to them. At the queen's death, however, they were once more exiled, and after various wanderings in France and Spain settled in Lisbon, where they still own property. The Lisbon community returned to England in 1861, settling at Spettisbury, Dorset shire (transferred to Chudleigh, Devon, in 1887). The Isleworth monastery was granted by James I to the ninth Earl of Northumberland, whose descendants still hold it. The present mansion is mostly the work of Indigo Jones, the ancient mulberry-trees in the garden being, it is said, the sole relic of the conventual's domain.