the west tower
In the 15th century St Dubricius was a chapel of Lugwardine, a church 15 km to the North, on the opposite bank of the Wye. It appears to have been a Vicar of Lugwardine, Richard of Rotherham, who rebuilt the chancel, nave and north aisle; at the same time adding the West Tower. It has a moulded plinth and an embattled parapet and diagonal buttresses. The tower-arch is two-centred and of two wave-moulded orders, the outer continuous and the inner dying on to the responds. The west window has three cinque-foiled lights with later vertical tracery in a two-centred head. In the second stage of the tower, in both the South and West walls, is a small light with a two-centred head.
The parish's most significant secular medieval building, Gillow Manor, is also 14th century.