The
Church of St Mary is a small edifice in the
Gothic style, with a square tower. It has a date of 1735 on the chancel, but is mostly
Victorian, although Wade and Wade in their 1929 book
Somerset suggest “The church is of 14th-cent. workmanship, but the chancel and S. porch respectively bear the dates 1793 and 1735 (probably referring to repairs)”. It is a Grade II
listed building. A church has existed on this site for over 800 years. The medieval tower at the Western end has a staircase, turret and six bells, the oldest of which dates to 1617. A strange
weathervane tops the tower. It is a gilded dragon erected in 1757 and is known locally as The Dando Bird. A clock whose mechanism is dated in the early 1800s faces the village. The church was substantially changed during the 1700s and 1800s. Inside the church is a Norman font, probably a replica, a memorial to the Branch Family dated 1732, and a large board dedicated to Jerome Harvey, a local benefactor, dated 1637. At the back of the Nave is a Norman
ledger-stone found in the churchyard with an inscription ‘Roger the Norman lies here’. A board shows the list of Rectors beginning with Richard Cumin in 1198. The building comprises a Tower, a Nave, a Chancel which was enlarged in the early 1900s, a
Vestry added in 1840, a North Aisle rebuilt in 1820, and the South Porch which has a date of 1793. The organ, from a chapel in Exeter Cathedral, was installed in the mid 1800s. There is a magnificent millennium cross carved by local craftsmen, and a great East Window based on a passage from the
Book of Revelation which was installed in 1962. Until 1996, built into the buttress on the North East corner of the church was a pagan Roman Altar stone, which is now in the Roman Baths in the city of
Bath. A display board in the church tells visitors all about it. Some mild reordering has taken place but the oak pews are still in place. == Manor House ==