Following the partial destruction of St Bartholomew's in the early 1830s, a replacement church, dedicated to All Saints, was constructed between 1835 and 1836 as a result of a petition to the Bishop of Winchester and much fund-raising.
[1] The parcel of land on which the church is built was given by James Warner (Snr) and the foundation stone was laid on 11 June 1835.
The yellow-brick Gothic Revival church, designed by James William Wild, was consecrated on 22 August 1836 at a service with a congregation of 700.
The north wall was removed and replaced with an arcade supported by oaken pillars on stone bases.
[3] Its only ancient features - all retrieved from St Bartholomew's - are the font (12th century, recovered from a field in 1740),[2] a monument (c. 1330) in the south wall, and three bells (dating from c.