[2] Colemore is located some 6 miles (10 km) south of Alton to the east of the A32 road.
By 1463 it was again in a ruinous condition, and again the bishop had to intervene; the church was put in good order again by July 1464.
At this time the church had a cruciform plan, but in 1669 the parishioners considered that the interior was too dark, and they petitioned the bishop for the disused and ruinous south transept to be removed.
[4] Again by 1845 the church was in a bad condition and Owen Carter, a Winchester architect, was commissioned to carry out repairs and improvements; the latter included inserting new windows, paving the nave and replacing the pews.
[4] The plan of the church consists of a nave with a south porch and a north transept, a chancel, and a west bellcote.
The floor of the chancel contains ledger slabs commemorating former rectors of the parish, and from its ceiling hang two chandeliers.
It is made from Purbeck marble and consists of a square bowl supported by a central drum and columns at the corners.
Two bells hang from beneath the bellcote at the west end, one cast in about 1380 at Wokingham, and the other in 1627 by Ellis Knight of Reading.