The rebuilding of the church in 1476 took about one year,[3] and was performed under John Selwood, then Abbot of Glaston, who was also the patron and donor of the rectory.
[5] The main roofs are composed of Welsh slate with moulded coped gables, battlemented parapets.
It is squat with triple plinth bands, parapets, corner gargoyles, angled and straight buttresses.
The chancel was built with a moulded king post truss roof and many rosettes, angels and other carvings.
The north aisle has similar features as the chancel with double plinth eaves course, gargoyles, battlements, buttresses, and three-light windows of standard tracery in hollowed pointed-arched recesses.
The Gillet Monument is a late-18th-century altar tomb with an obelisk made of hamstone and it is located in the churchyard, 17 m (56 ft) southwest of the tower.
[11] Adding to the setting of the churchyard which it abuts is a portion of the east boundary wall, to Ham Court, 15 m (49 ft) south of the church.