On the south aisle the second window from the left has carved head-stops to its hoodmould.
Good Interior: The porch retains its original barrel ceiling with moulded ribs and carved bosses and wall-plates.
Carved foliage on capitals, each one is different, the left hand one, to the north aisle, also has the face of a man, reputedly the Green Man.
The barrel ceilings to the aisles have also been restored but re-using most of the original moulded ribs, carved bosses and wall-plates which still retain some of their old colour.
C15 rood screen, Pevsner Type B, extends across nave and both aisles with Perpendicular tracery above panels divided by cinquefoil headed lights with quatrefoils below.
Circa late C15 parclose screen to north and south, both have Perpendicular tracery to lights, ogee headed doorways and battlements at the tracery to lights, ogee headed doorways and battlements at the top.
Soffit is carved with cinquefoil headed panels and pedestal has round- headed panels carved on it.
The pulpit dates from 1903.
On the floor at the front of the north aisle are 2 slate ledger-stones dated 1642 and 1712.
At the front of the south aisle is one dated 1647 and one of 1643.
Further down the south aisle is a slate ledge-stone carved with skull and cross bones and dated 1703.
On the north wall of the chancel is an elaborate slate memorial to Robert Warreying and his wife Ellinor, each name is in a circle with clasped hands joining the 2.
Dated 1654 and 1656 with a good rhyming epitaph beneath.
The only fragment of old glass survives in the most westerly window of the south aisle which bears the armorial shield of John Rowe who died in 1544 and was Lord of the Manor of Sparkwell, Kingston and Staverton, which at that time included much of Broadhempston.
The stained glass east window inside the Church of St Peter and St Paul, depicting a biblical scene in rich colour above the altar, forms a focal point of the church’s historic interior and craftsmanship.