Church of St Clement, Liverpool

A west porch was added later, and in 1892 the original straight flight of stairs leading up to the pulpit was replaced by a separate spiral staircase.

Its plan consists of a seven-bay nave and a chancel with a shallow canted apse at the east end.

On the summit is an octagonal bell turret with gabled openings, surmounted by a short spire with a finial.

At the east end of the church the apse has a hipped roof and a triple lancet window.

[2][3] Pollard and Pevsner in the Buildings of England series say of the interior: "This is a rare survival of an all but complete pre-Ecclesiological Victorian church".