It is not clear whether this chapelry, within the liberties of the City of Chester, even survived the Reformation. Its one appearance, in the 1733 visitation, when it was described as 'ruined', probably follows its uncovering by Gastrell's antiquarian researches. His materials give no evidence of it as active beyond the fifteenth century, and record that it was described as 'ruined' in 1643 and 'demolished' in 1672 (the latter by Sir Peter Leycester). In 1722 the chapel yard still survived, and was used as a burial ground. Gastrell, Notitia Cestrienses, I, 117-8.