C15 and again in 1854 and 1878.
C14 west tower of three stages, embattled, with needle spine.
The gabled south porch, 1878, is timbered and plain tiled but the brick plinth incorporates a late Saxon cross-slab with plait work.
The south chapel is C15 of flint, pebblestone, clunch and limestone but with brick repairs west wall.
It is embattled and has a typical double splayed plinth which also incorporates, in west wall, parts of Saxon cross-slabs.
The chancel was restored in 1878, but on the north side is a lean-to north vestry, C15, with an east window of clunch, and an early C18 north wall of narrow gault brick.
The north wall of the nave retains an early C12 window above the blocked north doorway of the same period.
There is an early-C18 tablet and a number of late C18 or early C19 wall monuments on the north wall of the nave which were placed there when the chancel arch was rebuilt in 1854.
One is C13
the other C14 with ogee arched head and crocketed pinnacles and the effigy is possibly that of Sir John de Freville, d. 1308.
The south chapel contains wall monuments of C18 and C19 to members of the Ingle family. _ Pevsner: Buildings of England p.429 R.C.H.M: record card