In 1286, the Bishop of Kamień, Hermann von Gleichen, handed over the patronage over it to the St. Mary's Collegiate Church in Szczecin. The temple at that time was burnt down in 1480 by the Brandenburg army, and a few years later, the existing church was erected in its place, thanks to the efforts of the local population. Situated on a rectangular plan with dimensions of 15 × 9.4 m, the hall structure is made of granite stones. It is covered with a gable roof. In the southern façade there is an ogival entrance portal. The original ogival windows in the 17th century were enlarged and changed to sectional ones. In the 1890s, a brick tower covered with a tower roof was added to the nave, and the eastern façade was rebuilt with a neo-Gothic, triangular gable crowning it. A bell, cast in 1855 by the Szczecin bell-founder C. Voss, hangs on the tower.
The church was not damaged during World War II and on April 18, 1946 it was consecrated as a Roman Catholic temple dedicated to Our Lady of the Rosary.
The interior of the church is covered with a flat, wooden ceiling. The old furnishings of the temple include a neo-Renaissance organ front, a hanging candlestick, a cast-iron altar cross, a 19th-century sculpture depicting the crucified Jesus [3] and a C.F. Voelkner, Op. 148. After 1945, however, the pulpit altar with the coats of arms of the von Ramin and von Rohr families, the sculpture of a baptismal angel, two baptismal bowls (from the 15th century and 1757) and plaques dedicated to soldiers killed in the wars of 1813 and 1871 were lost without a trace.