[2] On 22 June 1639, an inspection of the church found that its rectory was intact, and its chancel was undergoing repairs.
[3] Despite this attempt, John Rogerson Cotter, an Anglican rector, was appointed on 20 June 1818 by Letter Patent of 13 May which stated that "in His Majesty's Disposal, Thomas Rochfort being a papist and therefore incapacitated.
[8] The church, built in the Early English style,[9] has a three-stage crenellated square tower on the west side of the building.
[10] The church is a two-bay hall, featuring wide, twin-light Gothic windows, the tracery of which dates to the mid 20th century.
[8] There is a stained-glass depiction of Christ as the light of the world on a lancet window in the chancel which dates from ~1900.