Saint-Léger church was probably rebuilt from 1830 onwards, as the tender was awarded in December 1829. An initial project dated 6 December 1827 had been drawn up by the architect Aimé Battonot, but it was not accepted. A second and third design, neither dated nor signed, were also unsuccessful. On the other hand, it is known (but no plans have been preserved) that the Chaumont architect Antoine Chaussier was chosen. This church is a fairly faithful replica of the one built by the same architect at Roches-sur-Rognon in 1829 and prefigures the one at Audeloncourt built in 1836. In 1855, Jacquier, a decorative painter and sculptor from Mailley (Haute-Saône), painted the choir's cul-de-four.
The seven-bay, three-vessel nave is preceded by a bell tower-porch crowned by a slate pavilion roof. It is flanked by two chapels. The central nave is barrel-vaulted and the side aisles have ceilings. The nave vessels have individual roofs. The choir consists of a straight barrel-vaulted bay followed by a semicircular apse with a cul-de-four vault with painted and gilded coffering. The right-hand bay is framed by two sacristies built in the continuation of the aisles. The main entrance is preceded by a small neo-classical porch with columns and a triangular pediment. The west facade, bell tower, bays and quoins are made of sandstone ashlar, while the rest of the building is rendered.
Eglise Saint-Léger d’Enfonvelle