[2] A church has been present on this site since at least the reign of Henry II when it was given by Robert de Bachepuz to the Knights Hospitallers of St John who had a preceptory here.
[3] A limited restoration was carried out in 1871 by John Douglas, who performed a more substantial scheme in 1883.
The church consists of a four-bay nave with a north aisle, a south porch and a three-bay chancel.
[3] A monument to a Mrs Wallis who died in 1848 is by T. and E. Gaffin and depicts an angel kneeling by an urn.
It consists of a square base of two steps with a socket containing a slightly tapering octagonal shaft and a cap of buff sandstone.
The base and the shaft were originally part of a cross dating from the early 15th century.