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The register of baptisms since June 1964 is held at the church and may be viewed on appointment with the vicar. Earlier records of baptisms and marriages are held at the County Record Office.
The churchyard is quite small and has been unused since the mid-19th century. There are few visible gravestones and many of those which survive are wholly or largely illegible. The most notable grave is that of Sir William Crotch, first principal of the Royal College of Music.
Inside the church there are a number of memorials, including two particularly fine ones relating to the Farewell family, notably the effigy to George Farewell in the chancel. When the floor in the centre of the nave was replaced, two old tombs were found. The oldest legible tombstone under the floor of the nave was Richard Mark's who died in 1635 aged 41.
The Roll of Honour lists the men who served in the war of 1914-1918.
Some early ministers and inhabitants of Bishop's Hull are mentioned in the records of ecclesiastical courts. |