There are no remains of the early medieval church and only part of the chancel remains from the church built in 1334 which was dedicated on 13 July 1336 by the Bishop of Exeter, John Grandisson.
Two medieval wall paintings remain but they are both heavily restored; one portrays St George and the other a warning to breakers of the Sabbath.
[7] The Selus Stone is thought to date from the late 5th or early 6th-centuries.
Arthur Langdon (1896) recorded the existence of seven stone crosses in the parish of St Just in Penwith, including two in the vicarage garden and two at Kenidjack.
Owen, who was overwhelmed by a wave and swept into the sea, was the fifth death since the lighthouse was completed in 1873.