Description: A photograph taken from inside the church gates prior to World War One. In 1921 an obelisk was erected inside the wall - the old wall on the left pulled down or lowered and a wooden roofed lynchgate erected where the iron gate is shown. The war memorial was paid for by public subscription and the lynchgate by Mr Bramwell. The iron gates went to the vicarage. The house on the right opposite took in weekend visitors - the parlour was used as a cafe for cyclists being CTC recommended. The building on the far right was knocked down in 1935 and the present dwelling 'Croftside' built in 1938. An old pigcote behind was used for slaughtering domestic pigs during World War Two. Remains of a smithy where the demolished building stood, suggests that given proximity to the Star Inn, it could have been the one built by the Turnpike Trustees - the building to the left of the church hall was a barn attached to the Star Inn.