[1] The Church was built in 1848–9, on land given by the bishop of Winchester and the duke of Marlborough; the cost was met largely from subscriptions, and a gift from the rector Charles Jerram.
[2] The church of squared and coursed limestone with ashlar quoins and dressings and a gabled stone slate roof.
The five-bay nave has offset buttresses, lancets and two-light windows in each east bay.
In 1887 the vestry was enlarged to designs by Clapton Crabb Rolfe, and in 1895 an organ by Charles Martin of Oxford replaced the earlier one.
It was created in the Wood Green workshop of their son Leonard Shuffrey, the leading architect and architectural designer, who is buried in the Churchyard.