A guide to towers throughout the world with bells used for change ringing and other bells of interest.
First published in book form by Ronald H Dove in 1950, this is the online guide managed by the Central Council of Church Bell Ringers, now extended to details of bells, frames, founders and projects. Find out more about Dove’s Guide…
The printed Dove’s Guide for Church Bell Ringers is
on sale.
Grateful thanks are given to those who contribute additions or revisions. This includes bellringers, researchers and the bellfounding and bellhanging industry. Your support is vital to maintain the quality of this resource.
Updates can be submitted from the individual tower pages, or by email to the Dove Team. Please see our help pages for further information.
14 Jan 2026: Transferred rings, change of ring type and augmentations
We are pleased to announce that Dove is able to capture specific changes to the location and constitution of rings.
Transfers - We now show when a ring has moved from one place to another. The transferred ring is shown on the pages for both source and destination places, although the source place page will not be accessible if there are no-longer any in-scope
bells. In due course we hope to extend the scope of Dove to include all places with lost rings. A summary page is available giving the list of transferred rings.
Ring types - We identify those projects where a collection of bells moves from, say, a full-circle ring to a chime (or vice versa). The data here will in future support the display of lost rings.
Augmentations (and reductions) - We can explicitly label when a ring is augmented or reduced. A summary page is available giving the list of augmentations and reductions.
The team is currently populating Dove with data on transfers, changes in ring types and augmentations from our own research. We therefore kindly ask readers NOT to send in updates relating to this at this time as it will likely duplicate what we already have.
It is worth emphasising that these features just relate to whole rings of bells. In due course we hope to extend this work to include individual bells.
Special thanks go to Dave Kelly and the Keltek Trust, the source of most of the data we are entering and presenting.
7 Jan 2026: When new rings are created
This is the first of a series of announcements about new features appearing in Dove. We are now able to describe the creation of a new ring.
For an entirely new ring, the creation year is the year the last bell of a ring of bells was cast. If a ring is not installed until a later year or installed by a different hanger from the founder, that is noted as a separate event in the history of the ring. Augmentations will also be dealt with as additions to an existing ring.
This also introduces the principle of what constitutes a new ring (or collection) of bells, particularly after a proportion of them are recast/replaced. If more than half of a ring of bells is recast we consider this to be a brand new ring (consequently leaving a lost
ring behind). If exactly half of the ring is recast, we only consider this to be a brand new ring if the tenor is one of those affected.
These details appear in the Projects & overhauls
section with the label ring created
.
8 Nov 2025: Listed Buildings Status
Back in 2013, a request came from the Church Buildings Council via the CCCBR Committee for Redundant Bells to include listed building grades against each CofE building with a ring of bells. We quickly determined that it would be beneficial for us to also store the individual list entry numbers, and to extend this to other areas of the British Isles. This allows our readers to access further information on the building in a single click.
Tim Jackson has been working on this long-term data collection project using existing data sets where possible and undertaking individual research for the rest. We are pleased to say that this work is now complete, with future updates expected to be triggered by changes and additions rather than filling in the gaps.