[1] The church is a Grade I Listed building, notable for its topiary walk and a large monument to Sir Edward Waldegrave (a member of Mary I of England's privy council) and his wife.
[5] Not long after 1545, the manor was granted to Sir Edward Waldegrave (knighted in 1553 at the coronation of Queen Mary I of England, died in the Tower of London on 1 September 1561) by Henry VIII.
After the death of Edward VI of England, Waldegrave was admitted to Queen Mary's privy council and granted the manor of Navestock, where he moved the family seat.
On the chancel's north wall is a devotional statue of Magdala Southcote, Walgrave's daughter, who died 8 September 1598 (Nikolaus Pevsner notes it, but calls it "not good"[3]).
John Philip was a Pembroke graduate and one of the signees of a declaration protesting the Maynooth Grant in 1845;[10] William entered Peterhouse, Cambridge.
The Warrens and a group of photographers recruited for the investigation found in the Cemetery the presence of the spectral nun and then, inside the Church, they encountered the same figure walking the aisles, apparently praying.