Exterior St Clement's Church is constructed in stone with a
slate roof. Its plan consists of a seven-
bay nave and a
chancel with a shallow
canted apse at the east end. Along the sides of the church are
lancet windows between
buttresses; at the corners the buttresses are
gabled. At the west end of the church is a further projecting bay, narrower than the rest of the church, and with a steeper roof. This contains north and south doors, and the stairs leading up to the gallery. The west face contains three stepped lancet windows. On the summit is an octagonal bell
turret with gabled openings, surmounted by a short spire with a
finial. Projecting from this bay is a porch with a pointed entrance and gabled buttresses. At the east end of the church the apse has a
hipped roof and a triple lancet window.
Interior Inside the church there are galleries on three sides, with the organ at the west end. The galleries are carried on
cast iron columns. A screen has been inserted under the west gallery to provide a separate enclosed area. At the east end the altar is placed in a shallow polygonal recess. Flanking the communion table are boards inscribed with the
Ten Commandments. The chancel arch is plain, and bears an inscription. The pulpit is a two-decker with an integral reading desk. Its upper deck is carried on four iron columns, and is reached by a spiral staircase. The pews are
box pews, some of which have been removed around the pulpit. The ceiling is a plaster
vault painted with stars. Pollard and
Pevsner in the
Buildings of England series say of the interior: "This is a rare survival of an all but complete pre-Ecclesiological Victorian church". ==See also==