[3] A restoration of the church was carried out by the Lancaster architects Austin and Paley in 1902, when they removed plaster from the walls, added new floors, steps and seat, repaired the roof, and inserted stone mullions in three windows.
[4][5] During the course of the restoration the architects discovered the foundation of an earlier canted apse at the east end.
Its plan consists of a nave, a wider chancel, and a north transept containing the organ and a vestry.
On the south side of the church is a Norman doorway, with badly eroded carving.
[2] In the churchyard, to the south of the church is a sandstone cross base and part of its shaft, probably dating from the medieval era.