It contains five bells, four of which were cast by the Bilbie family of Chew Stoke in 1773.
[2][3] The organ, which was built by Palmers of Bristol, was installed in 1885.
[4] The church has associated with the Oxford Movement since the early 19th century.
[5] In 1877 the graveyard became the resting place of Newport Chartist John Frost.
Although Frost's grave site was lost for many years, in the 1980s a new headstone was created and re-erected on the site, with the aid of a grant from Newport City Council.