The small stained glass window in the North wall.

Is a relic of a 12th century Window. This is very special. Many windows in old English churches were purposely smashed during the times of Henry VIII or Cromwell, but this one escaped desecration. It was restored in Victorian times, but using the original glass, and it is believed to be England's oldest complete Norman window still in its original setting with light falling through.

The ladder or staircase

The  wooden ladder up to the bell chamber is very rare, and on account of its size and age is almost unique in England. Carbon dating suggested that the felling of the timber was between AD 1345 & AD 1380. The ladder is constructed from one long length of oak tree-trunk, split in two, with the 30 treads cut from smaller branches in a triangular section and kept in place with wooden pegs. All the original wood is believed to be from one tree and though much of this remains, many treads were damaged by deathwatch beetle and had to be replaced in 1936.