


In 1866 the church was almost entirely rebuilt, but the nave, arcades and clerestory are medieval, and so is the narrow tower arch, which is unusual in having bands of flowers carved on its bases as well as on the capitals. The bowl of the font is also centuries old, but the treasure of the church is a medieval stone reredos in the north aisle. Deeply recessed, it is like an elaborately carved frame, enriched with wavy pattern and a graceful trefoil in its finely crocketed head, which has a corbel head at each side. In a corner near one of these heads are tiny figures of a man and a woman, perhaps the donors; below them hang two dainty festoons of flowers, and among more flowers strewn along the base and hood of the frame are many faces of men and women. The crucifix which surmounted the reredos now stands on a bracket within the recess.
In the vestry hangs a portrait of Payne Edmunds, who preached in the old church from 1810 till 1861.
