Between 1843 and 1868, Lewis Carroll's father was the rector at the church in Croft. The family arrived in the village when Carroll was just 11-years' old, and he stayed until he was 19 before he left for
Oxford. Many items inside the church have been cited as inspiration for a varying number of characters from Carroll's work; the grinning cat on the sedilla is believed to have inspired the
Cheshire Cat and the sword which John Conyers is supposed to have killed the
Sockburn Worm with used to be in the church and is presented on the occasion of a new incumbent of the
Bishop of Durham. In 2018, the sedilla was renovated as part of an £160,000 extension of the church. At the same time, a carved stone
Jabberwock, which was detailed as per an original drawing of the dragon in the 1871 version of "
Alice Through the Looking-Glass", was added to the building. The renovation, which includes Heritage Lottery Funding (HLF), will have a new visitors section with material created by pupils from
Richmond School. Due to its connection with Lewis Carroll and
Alice in Wonderland, the church attracts many visitors from overseas, notably Brazil, China and the United States. ==See also==