[2] By the beginning of the 19th century the fabric of the church was in a poor condition, and it was restored in 1878–79 by the Lancaster architects Paley and Austin.
[5][6] The body of the church is constructed in limestone, the porch is in sandstone and timber, and the roofs are slated.
At the west end is a three-light window containing Perpendicular tracery, and a double bellcote with a gable and a cross finial.
[2] Incorporated in the fabric of the north wall of the nave are carvings, some dating from the 11th century, including a tomb slab.
There is a glass box in the small pointed window in the south wall of the chancel containing a 13th-century corbel head.