The bells for the church are housed in the large west tower, and the current peal of six bells is the 9th heaviest peal of six bells hung for
change ringing in the world. The present ring of six have a long history, the oldest surviving bell being the present fourth of the ring, dating from 1528 by an unidentified founder. The fifth bell is the next oldest, cast by John Wallis of
Salisbury in 1618. By 1752, there were six bells, as
Thomas Bilbie I cast the present treble and third bells. The tenor bell, originally dating from 1528 like the fourth, was recast in 1846 by
Charles and George Mears of Whitechapel. Restoration of the tower occurred in 1910, when all six bells were rehung by Llewellins & James of Bristol in a new metal frame, which still holds the bells to this day. In 1930, the tenor bell was recast again by
John Taylor & Co of
Loughborough and it is this bell that crowns the ring today. It is 52 inches (132 cm) in diameter and weighs 25 and three quarter
long hundredweight (1309 kg). It strikes the note D. There is also a sanctus bell, weighing approximately 1 and a half hundredweight (75 kg), cast by Thomas Bilbie I in 1749, that hangs above the six ringing bells. ==Burials==