It was restored in 1882 and also in 1907 at a cost of £400 (equivalent to £53,400 in 2023)[4] when the eastern portion of the church floor was lowered, the walls underpinned and the pillars were straightened.
There is a fine collection of modern carved woodwork, including the choir stalls, the benches in the nave and a memorial to an officer who served in India.
Other features of interest are the tomb of Philip Maiowe in the chancel, a monument to Walter Langdon (died 1676) and his wife in one of the aisles and a memorial tablet to Jonathan Toup, a notable Greek scholar,[7] who was rector of this parish and also vicar of St Merryn.
The inscription on a round brass plate beneath the tablet records that the cost was defrayed by the delegates of the Oxford University Press.
[9] The tower currently has six bells cast in 1882 by John Taylor & Co.[10] Until 1845 the ecclesiastical parish included East Looe where there was a chapel of St Mary.