Balscote had a Methodist chapel but this has now been converted into a private home.
Secular buildings
Much of the village is designated as a conservation area, with many of Balscote's buildings being of local Hornton Stone. Priory Farm is a 14th-century hall, extended in the 15th century and modernised in the 17th and 18th centuries. Grange Farm is a 15th- or early 16th-century house, extended and modernised in the 17th and 18th centuries. Both houses may have been built by the owners of nearby Wroxton Abbey.[5]
Balscote has a public house, The Butchers Arms,[6] which is controlled by the Hook Norton Brewery.[7] In 1996 Balscote Village Hall Trust, a registered charity, started planning and fund-raising to build a community hall.[8] Building began in October 2010[9] and was completed in 2011.[10] It is a timber building.[11]
Notable residents
Nicholas de Balscote (died 1320), Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, was born in Balscote.
Alexander Petit (died 1400), one of the dominant figures in late 14th-century Ireland, was also a native of Balscote. He held many important offices including Bishop of Ossory, Bishop of Meath and Lord Chancellor of Ireland. As was usual at the time he was more commonly referred to, not by his family name, but his birthplace, as Alexander de Balscot.[12] He may have been a relative of Nicholas de Balscote, who is known to have appointed several family members to important positions in Ireland, or they may simply have shared a birthplace.