[5] The church website states that the architect was Edmund Sharpe of Lancaster.
[5] There is no other documentary evidence that Sharpe was the architect, but owing to the stylistic similarity of the design to his other works at about the same time it has been attributed to him.
[4] A considerable restoration was undertaken in 1888, which included covering the internal brick walls with cement rendering.
[2] Inside the church is a gallery at the west end carried on cast iron columns.
[3][5] The authors of the Buildings of England series describe the pulpit as being "Puginesquely elaborate".