tower and north aisle are C15
The chancel may contain some C14 fabric but none is evident.
Carved Beerstone gargoyle water spouts survive on 3 corners.
it may be C17 or C18.
Most of the south side of the nave was probably rebuilt in the C19 although the large dressed quoins at the left end and the projecting rood stair turret, at the right end are probably C15 work The 3 windows are all C19 Bathstone 2-lights with ogee heads, Perpendicular-style tracery and moulded hoods.
The south porch, left of centre, is also C19 but reuses some medieval material.
To left is an early C16 Beerstone square-headed 2-light window.
The east end has C19 corner diagonal buttresses of red conglomerate ashlar, contemporary Bathstone kneelers, coping and apex Latin cross and a Bathstone 3-light window with Perpendicular tracery, moulded hood and large carved oak-leaf labels.
The south door is restored C15 work of Beerstone and red sandstone
The door is probably C17
Here is a ceiled wagon roof of 2 main bays, each sub-divided into a series of square panels with carved oak or moulded plaster bosses and a delicate open crestwork wall plate.
Because the roof is painted it is impossible to see if any medieval carpentry survives.
The piers are moulded (Pevsner's type B) with carved foliate capitals and the cap of the eastern respond includes and angel holding a shield.
The west side is mutilated by a squint cut through from a now- disused rood stair rising in the thickness of the chancel wall from the aisle where there is a Beerstone segmental-headed doorway with a rebated surround and carved foliage in the spandrels.
The flag floor includes some C17 and C18 grave slabs but most are fragmentary.
C19 oak reredos and altar both carved in Gothic style.
C19 oak altar rail, Gothic style softwood stalls with poppyhead finials, plain lectern and plain deal benches.
The pulpit is a C19 refurbishment of an C18 octagonal drum pulpit with fielded panel sides and the front panel enriched with an inlaid marquetry sunburst.
its panelled front richly decorate with chip-carving and inscribed with the initials MW.
The mural monuments are all late C18 and Cl9.
Plain plaques nearby to the Carwithen family and the Marker family On the north side is another marble monument with Beerstone Tudor Gothic style frame in memory of Henry and Margaretta Marker It is flanked by early C20 memorials to the Bruton family, both white marble with alabaster frames and similar to the First World War memorial in the nave and the Ruth Loram memorial in the aisle Other marble plaques in memory of the Stoke family of Minchen Court , Henry and Mary Pitt , Hugh Bennet of Rosamondford , Samuel and Sarah Walker Some of glass in the north aisle windows maybe C18 and some fragments of coloured glass in the tracery maybe earlier.
Good C19 stained glass in east window and 2 late C19 stained and hammered glass on south side.