The church is constructed of yellow stock brick with stone dressings and is designed in a plain
Classical style. Its plan consists of a six-bay
nave with
aisles, a
sanctuary, and an east-end tower surmounted by a spire. The building also closes the western perspective of
Church Row. The principal entrance is located at the base of the east tower and features a moulded stone doorcase with a console-bracketed
pediment, beneath which is a plaque dated 1745 reused from the former west end. The doorway has an overlight and panelled doors. Additional entrances flank the tower, each with moulded stone doorcases,
cornices, and panelled doors. At first-floor level, the tower façade contains three round-arched,
architraved windows with
keystones, lugs, bracketed sills, and small-paned glazing. A stone
dentil cornice surmounts the tower and continues across the aisle
gable, rising to form a pediment. Above this, the tower incorporates a circular lugged clock and round-arched
belfry openings with architraved heads, keystones, and continuous impost and sill bands. It is crowned by a battlemented
parapet and a spire with a
weathervane. The aisles are lit by similar round-arched windows, while the west end has three comparable windows with an
oculus above the central one. The
cast iron gates and railings surrounding the old churchward came from Cannons, the Duke of Chandos’ home. 59ft of railings and two 9ft gates were purchased at a cost of £62.17s.0d and altered to fit the front of the church. The interior is articulated by tall, unfluted
Ionic columns supporting arches that intersect the tunnel-vaulted ceiling, with galleries occupying the bays between the columns. The north-western Chapel of St Mary and St John, created in 1912, is domed and illuminated by a circular lantern. Chancel decoration dating from around 1883 was executed by
T. G. Jackson, who designed the pavement, the Willis organ case, inlaid choir stalls, panelling, chandelier, and railings, along with an extensive intertwined double-gold decorative scheme that extends across much of the church. The east end of the church on the rear gallery wall holds The Commandment Boards carved by Thomas Ady for the new church. They were restored in 1979, having been concealed for many years under paintings. They are described as some of the best in England. The stained glass in the west windows was designed by Professor Ellis Wooldridge and executed by Powell. Much of the remaining stained glass was designed, executed, and donated by Alfred Bell of Clayton & Bell, who also designed the marble font supported by Ionic columns. The
font incorporates the bowl of the 1745 font, the stem being removed to form the
piscina in the chapel. A gallery window dedicated to
Sir George Gilbert Scott, Bell’s tutor, is also his work. The
Lady Chapel window is by
Joan Fulleylove and is dedicated to a soldier of the 1st World War. Fulleylove studied at The Slade between 1907-08; it is said to be her first window. The mid-eighteenth-century pulpit was reduced to its present size during
F. P. Cockerell’s reordering in 1878. The church contains numerous memorials, including monuments to the Revd Thomas Ainger by Sir
George Gilbert Scott, as well as to
John Keats,
Joanna Baillie,
J. H. Merivale,
Frances Erskine, T. N. Longman,
Henry Cort, and others. The oldest surviving tomb is that of James Rixton, who was buried in the earlier church in 1658. The large
prie-deux in the chapel were given in memory of Mildred Aline Bell who died on the Matterhorn in 1901 and who is buried in the Churchyard. ==Music==