The church dates from 1864 by the architect Malling.
[1] It replaced a previous building which was destroyed in a fire.
The small, squat tower contains a set of 8 tubular bells.
The churchyard contains six Commonwealth war graves, two British Army soldiers of World War I and, from World War II, three unidentified Merchant Navy seamen whose bodies had been washed ashore.
[2] and Royal Air Force Squadron Leader Nigel Seely (1902–1943), son of the politician and industrialist Sir Charles Seely, 2nd Baronet[3] A memorial to those killed in a 1957 flying boat crash also stands in the churchyard.