In the second half of the 15th century, a church was built in Biała (German: Ball), Stargard district, located in the countryside of the village. It was built of field stone and brick. The building was founded on a rectangular plan. In the 19th century, the church was extended by 7 meters from the west.
At the beginning of the 20th century, a free-standing belfry was built, erected on a rectangular plan, which was covered with a gable roof. In 1925, a bronze bell with a diameter of 0.88 m with the trademark of the Ulrich brothers from Apolda was hung on it.
The equipment included a wooden pulpit, decorated on the sides with small receptions, set on a cornice with a full-arched arcade. The baptismal font, in the Mannerist style, is wooden, closely connected with the pulpit, on the sides there are consoles covered with floral decorations.
The Evangelical church cemetery was established along with the construction of the church, on a quadrilateral plan, with an area of 0.8 ha, fenced with a stone wall.
In front of the church Monument, fenced off by a road, commemorating those who died in the First World War from the Biała church commune, a block preserved in its entirety, originally topped with an eagle, unveiled in May 1920.