[3] The north aisle was added in 1864 and other extensions and restorations were carried out by the Lancaster architect E. G. Paley.
[4] At that time an Anglo-Saxon doorway was moved and rebuilt in the churchyard, and two galleries which had served as private pews with their own entrances were taken down.
It appears to be red sandstone and measures over six feet long, around a foot wide, and in the middle about 2 ft tall.
Ewing (2003) reports a variety of interpretations of the images, including H. C. March's that the carvings are a representation of the poem Völuspá and the victory of Christianity over paganism.
[12] Also in the churchyard is the lower part of the decorated shaft of an Anglo-Saxon cross on a modern sandstone base.