Church of St. James the Apostle from 1765-67. Built from the foundation of Konkordia Żychlińska-Ruszkowska of the Brzesko-Kujawy sub-district. Built by carpenter Antoni Willer (signature under the choir) by adding to the brick chapel of the Blessed Virgin Mary from 1669. In the 19th century, a wooden chapel of St. Joseph was added. In 1996, the church was planned to be moved to the open-air museum in Dziekanowice. The residents of the city did not give their consent. Restored in 2000-01.
Construction and equipment. Wooden church, three-nave, log construction. Oriented. A smaller chancel from the nave, closed on three sides with two side sacristies and a crucifix outside with a sculpture of Christ, made by Józef Kulczak from the 1960s. Two chapels on the sides of the nave, wooden and brick, closed rectangularly. A double-ridge roof, covered with sheet metal with a quadrangular turret for a bell tower. Topped with a cupola with a lantern and a cross. Inside, two rows of profiled columns dividing the nave into three parts. A false barrel vault in the nave with polychrome from the 20th century. A rood beam with the date "1766" and a Renaissance crucifix from the end of the 16th century. A choir. A Baroque main altar and a Rococo pulpit. Two late Baroque side altars from the 19th century. A Baroque-Rococo altar in the chapel. A wooden, open belfry, covered with a multi-pitched sheet metal roof.