Lockington Hall is a late 17th Century house with projecting wings connected by a Tuscan colonnade. It is the seat of the Curzon family, though no member is now in residence. It was partly rebuilt and added to in the 19th Century and is set in 50 acres of woodland. During WW11 it was used as a maternity home for evacuees from the South Eastern counties. Today a private business is operating from the Hall and it is not open to the public.
The Church of St Nicholas is an ancient stone edifice in the Early English and Decorated styles dating from the 13th and 14th Centuries. Above the chancel screen is an elaborate tympanum which dates from 1704 and bears the Royal Arms of Queen Anne. Other features of interest are some fragments of heraldic stained glass, several alabaster monuments, Jacobean box pews, an 18th century two-decker pulpit and a Georgian baluster font.
