[2] In 1643 during the Siege of Gloucester in the Civil War the spire suffered a direct hit by cannon fire.
From the first to the fifth bay of the nave is the north aisle, and at its east end is a wider chapel, forming a transept.
Above all these windows and bell openings are crocketed ogee gablets flanked by pinnacles; they all contain Perpendicular tracery.
At the top of the tower is a battlemented parapet with pierced tracery panels, and pinnacles at the corners.
On the south side of the tower, between the bottom and middle stages is a clock carried on a bracket.
Inside the porch is a 12th-century arched doorway over which is a tympanum containing a carving depicting the Agnus Dei and foliage.
At the east end of the south aisle is the former timber front of the west gallery, which had been installed there in 1621 and moved to this position in 1924.
The memorials include a chest tomb with coloured effigies of Alderman John Walton, who died in 1636, and his wife.
[2] The two-manual organ was built in 1831 by Gray and Davison, but was moved to St Mary de Lode Church, Gloucester in 1972.
The other bells are one cast in 1608 by John Baker, two in 1636 by Roger I Purdue, and one in 1725 by Abraham II Rudhall.