The nave is Saxon, and it incorporates an arcade from about 1200. The chancel and north aisle date from the early 14th century, the west tower from the 15th–16th century, and the north chapel and vestry were added in the 19th century. The church is built in sandstone and the nave has a tile roof. The tower is in Perpendicular style, and has three stages, diagonal buttresses, a round-arched west doorway with a chamfered surround and a hood mould, a three-light west window, clock faces, and an embattledparapet with crocketed corner pinnacles.[2][3]
The farmhouse and attached farm buildings are in stone, largely rendered, with quoins, and roofs of Welsh slate and stone slate, with copedgables and kneelers. The farmhouse has a chamferedplinth, three storeys, three bays, and a rear wing. Steps lead up to a central doorway that has a moulded surround, a cabled frieze, and a moulded hood. The windows are a mix of sashes and casements. The farm buildings consist of a cowshed with a hayloft above, and there are external steps leading to an upper floor doorway.[4]
A threshing barn and attached cart shed, they are in stone, and have roofs of Welsh slate and stone slate with copedgables and moulded kneelers. The barn has double threshing doors, a hay loft opening and vents. The cart shed has a single storey, and an open front with two iron columns.[5]
The war memorial commemorates the old boys of Bolton-upon-Dearne Board School who were lost in the First World War. It incorporates a former inglenook fireplace, which is roofed, and it contains a central square plinth in the form of a Roman altar. The memorial is in sandstone and red brick, with a roof of red tiles, and has an inscribed lintel with the names of those lost in the war.[7]