Structure The new church was designed by George Cheesman in the
Early English style, to include a rectangular
aisled nave with no
arcading, a short chancel, and a short
embattled tower with castellated octagonal turrets, and constructed in
knapped flint with red brick dressings. An
apse was a later addition. Because of the limitations of the site, it was built on a north–south rather than the usual east–west orientation, and lies to the south of the original building. Though the local newspaper found the new construction "convenient and well-arranged", others were less impressed.
Mark Antony Lower, founder of the
Sussex Archaeological Society, called it a "modern brick structure, which we cannot commend, as it is a kind of hybrid between a castle and a barn", while the 1868 edition of Murray's
Handbook for Travellers in Kent and Sussex was blunter, calling it "modern, and ugly".
Furniture and fittings Internally,
cast iron posts support galleries with painted panelled fronts which extend for the full length of the nave on each side. The ceiling is barrel-shaped, with pine trusses, and is painted orange and brown. The apse has stained glass windows designed by
Henry Holiday and made by
James Powell and Sons, and windows in the aisles include three produced by Savell in the latter part of the 19th century, and one by Walter Tower of
Kempe & Co., dated 1910, which honours
Prebendary Arthur Perfect. The two-
manual organ, built by Bishop in 1882 and rebuilt by Morgan & Smith of
Brighton in 1927, stands in a chamber in the apse. When first opened, worshippers sat in
box pews. Unusually for the time, more than half the seats in the church were free, i.e. no pew rents were charged, and many such free seats were in central positions in the nave. The
parish registers exist from 1602. ==External features==