The most prominent feature is the tower, built in four stages with angle buttresses and terminating in an embattled parapet with pinnacles at the corners and also in the middle of each side.
In the west wall of the nave is a very large window filled with a circle of intricate flowing tracery.
The transepts have large windows with a transom: each has a different design in the tracery but in both cases based on a circle.
In the apse of the Lady chapel is a piscina with credence shelf that also came from the previous church.
[2] The numerous monuments, many of outstanding quality by monumental masons such as Thomas Adye, John Hickey, John Flaxman, Sir Frances Chantrey, Henry Weekes and Gaffin, were transferred from the old church to the new, as was the church plate.
William, Lord Auckland has his memorial within the church and was buried in the churchyard, which features a number of good eighteenth-century gravestones.