[3] The small flint and stone Norman Anglican Church of St Andrew has an apse at the east end and a barrel vault roof which curves around it.
[1] The interior has limewashed walls, a 15th-century font[1] and flag stone floor, along with early 18th-century oak fittings.
The eighteenth century oak pews, the pulpit, screen, communion rails and matching table with barley sugar turned legs, and other woodwork were provided by William Wake, Archbishop of Canterbury, who had been raised in the village of Shapwick and whose family lived locally.
The west end has a late medieval gallery with a panelled front which was probably originally a rood screen.
Repairs were paid for by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings who sold a collection of Thomas Hardy’s manuscripts to raise the funding.