Built to the design of
William Willmer Pocock with local sandstone rubble dressed with
Bath stone and partly built with brick at the rear with slate roofs and crested ridge tiles, the
nave was built with aisles, transepts, a
chancel with a tower at the north-west corner. The design is
Gothic Revival enhanced with
Early English,
Decorated and
Perpendicular features. The main west window is Early English in style. The organ was installed in 1906 while the choir stalls and lectern were fitted after the
Methodist Union of 1932 when the building had to accommodate a larger congregation after the smaller Primitive Methodist
Rotunda chapel on Victoria Road in the town closed and its congregation moved to the Wesleyan buildings on Grosvenor Road and Ash Road. is dedicated to Frances Penelope Wharton Middleton The
nave is supported by columns of cast iron capped with
Bath stone. The preserved
reredos behind the now removed altar was created in mosaic and tiles and showed the Ten Commandments and the Lord's Prayer. The reredos is in memory of Frances Penelope Wharton Middleton, the daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Lewis Watson who fought at the
Battle of Waterloo in 1815 as a Major in the
69th Regiment. She is further commemorated on a brass plaque dated 1882 placed at the bottom of the reredos by her husband Richard Wharton Middleton of Leasingham Hall in
Leasingham in
Lincolnshire; he had also fought at Waterloo as an
Ensign. ==The Methodist Union and after==