"An interesting church, now rarely used and in poor repair, at the opposite end of the long village street of Laughton en le Morthen to the parish church of All Saints. The north, south and east walls of the nave, only 2 ft 2 ins wide, survive from an aisleless church of Pre Conquest or Overlap date, enlarged by the addition of aisles and the rebuilding of the chancel c.1200. The arcades now terminate in half arches at their west ends, suggesting that the original nave was truncated when the present Perpendicular west tower was built. In 1709 the chancel was completely rebuilt and the south porch added, and the building was further interfered with by the Victorians. Some interesting sculptural monuments, notably an ornate cross slab in high relief, and a good cross slab floor stone of the early 15th century with, unusually, its inscription in English rather than Latin.