The church was built in the second half of the 13th century, the first mention comes from 1337 in the land book of the Margrave of Brandenburg, Louis the Elder[2]. In the 14th century, the tower was added and the southern porch was built. In 1529, the owner of the estate, Peter von der Marwitz, brought in a pastor, and from 1538, Lutheranism became the obligatory religion in New March - the church became Evangelical. In 1716 (or 1726[3]) the tower received a new baroque finial. The Marwitz family's burial chapel was adjacent to the church from the presbytery side.
In 1858, the owner of the estate, Karl Wilhelm von Sydow, donated an organ to the church. In 1886, under the supervision of architect Prufer from Berlin, the decoration of the medieval interior was changed, giving it a neo-Gothic shape; the nave space was illuminated with larger window openings. The costs of renovation works covered from the church treasury amounted to 5,100 marks. Karl Wilhelm von Sydow donated an altar, a baptismal font and a pulpit - made of Silesian sandstone, two galleries and Gothic windows with cathedral glass. In 1905, the church plot was surrounded by a stone and brick wall.