[2] The church was built in the late 13th century out of flint with stone dressings, with an old tiled roof.
The church plan consists of nave, chancel, south porch and north aisle.
In the chancel wall is a 14th-century chest tomb, reused as a monument to Sir Francis Sykes, who died in 1804 and to his son.
[3] The churchyard is notable as the resting place of Jethro Tull, the 18th-century modernising farmer, whose modern gravestone can be seen there.
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