Originally Anglo-Saxon, the church is now mainly 17th and 19th century following restoration in those two centuries. Some of its origins can be seen in its carved stone Anglo-Saxon font, and in two stone cross shafts in the churchyard.
Arthur Mee records that the church was
restored in the 19th century by Sir
Gilbert Scott, with three chapels, but "still has the 13th century base of its tower, and a wall of the same age. Its most ancient jewel is the wonderful font, so old that it is Saxon or Norman, the round bowl carved with humans and dragons." This font is thought to depict a scene from the legend of Saint
Beorhthelm of Stafford. It is in the Chapel of St Bertram, built in 1618 by the Meverell, Port and Hurt families, that the remains and shrine of the
St Bertram (or Bertelin) can be found. St Bertram was an 8th-century son of a
Mercian king who renounced his royal heritage for prayer and meditation after his wife and child were killed by wolves. He is said to have converted many to Christianity, and his shrine became a point of pilgrimage in the Middle Ages, it being reputed to be able to work miraculous cures. The chapel contains the Meverell Monument of two reclining figures, above is a memorial for their daughter. In the David Pike Watts Memorial Chapel, built in 1831, is a large sculpture by
Sir Francis Chantrey. The Memorial Window to Josephine Dora Granville is by
Ward and Hughes (1884), depicting the presentation of Jesus in the Temple.
Wingfield Cromwell, 2nd Earl of Ardglass (1624 – 1668) is buried there. == Dovedale House ==