This little thatched church is located on the busy A1088 church. Well hidden behind trees, if you don’t know it is there you will never spot it. Which would be a shame because this is a lovely little place, although you will need to contact a keyholder in advance if you want to be sure to get in!
With a thatched roof that covers both nave and chancel and an odd little wooden bell tower, it is charmingly rustic. You would be hard-pressed to date the building. Its simple south door, however, suggests an eleventh century date. But how much of it is of that period? There are no Norman windows to give us a clue. Windows on the south side are in a vaguely Decorated style. the north side of the chancel has a couple of lancet windows so I am inclined to think that the chancel came maybe a century or more after the nave. There are the shoulders of what could have been a very small rood screen or even of the original east end but it is impossible to know.
There is a brick-built south porch, apparently sixteenth century Tudor and very much in the vein of churches over the border in Essex. It could look incongruous, but somehow it doesn’t. The little west tower also has a brick base and is of the same period. The superstructure is weather-boarded.
In fact it is impossible to know much about this place, architecturally and in any that is not the point of coming here. You come here for the mediaeval
|