The parish coveres much of Ashdown Forest. C19 chapels, at Fairwarp and Nutley, were built in two outlying parts and later became parish churches. The village is at the southern end of the parish where two turnpikes meet - part of the churchyard was taken in 1772 to build one(WSRO Ep II/27/16).
The earliest part of the church is the aisleless nave of sandstone rubble. The north doorway and a small south window are round-headed, but the mouldings of the latter look late C12. In the C13 the chancel was extended or rebuilt. The chancel arch of this date is now reset at the entrance to the C19 north transept; its double-chamfered head and semi-octagonal responds appear later C13. There were the outlines of lancets in the former north wall (Hussey p256)and a plain one has been reset.
The church was altered in the C14. In the chancel work included two ogee-headed north lancets (Adelaide Tracy (1852) IV p28) and a reticulated east window, now reset as the south window of the C19 transept. Square-headed windows, longer than usual, were placed in both sides of the nave, with a trefoiled south lancet. Though much restored, the traceried sides of the timber north porch are also of this date.
Many small C12 churches lacked a tower and the C15 one that was added here is built of ashlar with diagonal buttresses, battlements and a low cap. The tall tower arch, noticeably off-centre, is of standard type with a double chamfered head and semi-octagonal responds. The west doorway with a square hoodmould and blank shields in the spandrels is renewed and so is most of the panelled tracery of the west window. Establishing a closer dating within the century is thus problematic, though the best indicator is the ogee-heads of the double bell-openings, which look to belong to the early C15. Meads suggests a similarity to the Pelham towers that are further east in the county, but this is only generic. The nave roof, which has tiebeams and turned crownposts, is likely to be contemporary as are, probably, the corbels for the roodbeam west of the C19 or reset arches to the transepts - these mark the position of the chancel arch before that time (see below).
The Sharpe Collection drawing (1802) shows the north side and tower unchanged, but soon afterwards a west gallery was built, lit by plain square windows in the north wall, as Adelaide Tracy (ibid) shows. Wall paintings uncovered in 1838 (1 p142) included decorative work around the C14 windows, so they were no earlier, but everything was covered up again (ibid p143). J O Scott (BN 33 p420) restored the church in 1875-79, one of several he did in the district. He renewed mostdetail of the tower and nave and rebuilt the chancel in C14 style with transepts, thereby extending the nave to the east. His work is competent, but too elaborate for a village church, e g the mouldings and shafts of the chancel arch and the large traceried round window in the north transept. The sedilia and piscina in the chancel are by him. In 1890 he designed an organ case (BAL/MSS ScJO/2/2), but little else has changed.
“If anybody would like to expand to this series please do, I would just ask that you could let Sadexploration know first so he can keep track of the Church numbers and names to avoid duplication. There is also a Church Micro Stats & Information page found via the Bookmark list”