This included insertion of a carved and painted oak rood screen dividing the nave from the chancel and the south aisle from the lady chapel.
[3] Also removed to Galmpton were the broken remains of two 15th-century alabaster reredoses depicting scenes from the life of Christ.
[1] The bench ends were acquired by the Earl of Devon and it is thought that they were installed in the chapel at Powderham Castle.
The ruins include a blocked west doorway, above which is a damaged Perpendicular window and a round-headed south porch.
[1] The porch dates from the early-mid 16th century and contains stone benches along its sides and a flue on its western face.
The interior of the church has been stripped of almost all of its former features,[1] but in an archaeological survey of 2005, undertaken by Robert Waterhouse BA, MIfA, three image brackets were identified in the porch, nave and lady chapel.