The 14th-century St Mary’s lies down a pretty wooded lane near the river Biss, on one of the many walking paths to the Westbury White Horse.
This delightful little church is approached through a railway arch that opens out onto a simple churchyard, revealing an unusual church squat yet pretty, with a tiny stone spire like an inverted ice-cream cone.
Inside, little has changed since the 18th century and is crowded with plain, bleached box pews, some built on the original Medieval benches, a three-decker pulpit, family pews and two small galleries.
The gallery north of the chancel was once used as a schoolroom and contains a fireplace.