[1] [3] The inscription reads- "To the Glory of God and in ever most loving memory of my husband, Lieut-Colonel James Cosmo Russell DSO 9th Hodson's Horse Indian Army/Killed in action on July 31st 1917 at the third battle of Ypres whilst in command of the 6th Battalion Queen's Own.
"The widow was erected to commemorate Lieutenant Colonel James Cosmo Russell, commander to the 6th Battalion Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders.
To the Glory of God and in loving memory of our son Bernard Winthrop Smith, Captain 1st/ Scots Guards"The window has three lights and a Saint is depicted in each.
In the light to the far left St Michael is portrayed with portraits of the three brothers remembered together with a kneeling woman and the Wilson family crest.
In "The Buildings of England:Wiltshire" by Nikolaus Pevsner, revised by Bridget Cherry, the window is described as "in a kind of Pre-Raphaelite Expressionism".
[14] To the Glory of God and in tender memory of Stephen Edmund Fell Lieut Irish Guards and of Basil Robert Francis Sec Lieut Coldsteam Guards aged 20 and 19 who gave their lives for their country at Ypres and at Les Boeufs July 12th and Oct 3 1916/The dearly loved only sons of their sorrowing parents Henry E and Ethel M Christy by whom this window is dedicated.
The three angels in the work represent "Trial and Sacrifice" (crown of thorns), "Victory and Triumph" (resurrection and torch) and "Christian Duty" (baptism of the infant).
The lower panels show 1) the horror and destruction of war 2) the conquest of evil 3) stilling the storm and 4) a boat reaching safe harbour.
In the volume in The Buildings of England series which covers "Yorkshire: York and the East Riding", David Neave and Nikolaus Pevsner describe the window as "adventurous".