Sited attractively on a wooded hillside above the Calder Valley, this neo-Gothic church was built in 1861-65 for woollen mill workers and faces the model village built by Col. Edward Akroyd for his factory employees.
It is an early example of the work of the local architect W H Crossland, a pupil of Sir Gilbert Scott - tall and narrow with a polygonal apse and a bell-cote over the east nave gable: an original building in a French inspired Gothic style.
Most of Crossland’s fittings and decoration survive, as does the noteworthy sequence of stained glass in the apse by Hardman.