iginally there was no chancel in the building, just a great long nave filled with box pews enclosed by doors a step up from the centre aisle. At the east wall was a small communion table without cross or candlesticks set belowthe sill of a three - light Gothic window, enclosed by a rail, and flanked on either side by a pulpit. In the Gallery there were more box pews and a small wooden organ, the smashed remnants of which are still in the Church loft. The walls were probably white, and the woodwork was in a pewter colour. Overhead from end to end ran the fine, gently-rounded, plaster and lath ceiling. About 1888, during the incumbency of the Rever¬ end C.P. Lowe , the present chancel was constructed inside the Church, the doors were removed from the pews, and the seats were lowered to the level of the floor of the aisle. At the same time the orig¬ inal tops of the pew-ends were removed, and scroll¬ like arm-rests added. Two parishoners who failed to agree with the others on the design of these arm rests had their own seats remodelled according to their own fancy. The result may be seen in two non¬ conformist designs on the north side of the nave. In 1923 a "rood screen" was placed across the chancel arch as a memorial to William and Isabella Hunt. By this time the choir and organ had been brought down from the Gallery and installed in the chancel. The total effect was to separate the con¬ gregation from the choir, to the detriment of con¬ gregational participation in the singing. In 1950 other changes were made which almost completely obscured the original character of the building. Rooms were constructed under the Gallery from plywood. An old stairway leading to the Gall¬ ery, with a finely wrought baluster-rail, was part¬ itioned off and the baluster dismantled, and the whole of the Church entry in which it was located, sheathed in plywood. The floors were in poor con¬ dition, and so a fine hardwood floor was installed