Winsham is a small village 4mi SE of Chard, Somerset, on the road between Chard to the NW and Beaminster in Dorset to the SE via Broadwindsor. The older part of the settlement straddles that road as it runs down to Winsham Bridge across the river Axe which forms the border between Somerset and Dorset, SE of the village centre. Most of the village lies on Head deposits above the valley Alluvium. However, between Alluvium and Head are outcrops of Middle Lias (silts and marls); there are also thin bands of Upper Cretaceous rock― Gault (clay) and Upper Greensand― which curve up from the SW and peter out on the W side of the village high street, near the church, which lies at about 95m OD. The church of St Stephen, which is mostly of the 13thc and 15thc and built of local lias stone, consists of a nave with S porch, central axial tower, chancel and modern vestry. There are two scupltured heads on the E side of the chancel arch, one of which may be relevant to the Corpus.