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A church was recorded in Dyserth in the Domesday Book of 1086, but the exact date of any foundation is unknown and very little is known of the saints to whom the church is dedicated. The name Dyserth itself is said to mean ‘the place of a hermit’s cell’.
The original structure of the church would have been of wood and has long since disappeared. The earliest parts of the current building date from the 13th century but it has been repaired and renovated many times over the centuries, most notably by Sir George Gilbert Scott in the 1870s.
Scott rebuilt parts of the south, north & west walls. He replaced the porch on the south side and added a north transept and a north aisle off the chancel for the organ and vestry. He removed a gallery at the western end, replaced pews with open benches and introduced a new pulpit and prayer desk. Scott filled-in some graves on the north side before the construction of the new transept and organ chamber.
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