During the following century the tower and the nave were raised and new aisle roofs were built.
[3] In the early 19th century the fabric of the church was deteriorating, and in 1829 the chancel was demolished and rebuilt.
The local architect Henry Goddard added new seating and extended the gallery in 1843, and in 1855–56 he restored the roofs.
In 1874–76 Joseph Goddard and Alfred Paget undertook a restoration involving the addition of new windows, building a new nave roof, and removing the gallery.
[4] The chancel of All Saints is constructed in brick, while the rest of the church in stone; the roofs are in slate.
Its plan consists of a six-bay nave with a clerestory and north and south aisles, a four-bay chancel with a roof at a lower level, and a northeast tower.
The lowest stage has 12th-century angle pilasters with an unusual semicircular cross-section, and a west doorway with a pointed arch dating from the 13th century.
The clock over the south doorway dates from about 1620, and has faces on both the interior and the exterior of the church.
The other stained glass dates from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and includes work by Heaton, Butler and Bayne, and by Clayton and Bell.