The Domesday Book of 1086 records a windmill that stood next to the grove at the top of Bodicote. Sor Brook, which forms the boundary between Adderbury and Bodicote parishes, has a watermill.
Bodicote was made a separate civil and Church of England parish in 1855, until which time it was part of the parish of nearby village Adderbury.[4]
The chancel arch is 13th-century.[3] The building has north and south aisles linked to the nave by 14th century arcades of three bays each.[3] There used to be a bell tower over the north aisle.
In 1844 the architects John Plowman and H.J. Underwood effected an almost complete rebuilding of St John's that included demolishing the old tower and replacing it with the current west tower.[3] The tower has a ring of eight bells, all from the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.[6] Thomas II Mears cast a ring of five bells (the present fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and tenor bells) in 1843.[7] The present treble, second and third bells were cast and hung in 1974, increasing the ring to eight.[6] The tower has an iron-framed turret clock that was made by John Wise of London in 1700. The clock was renewed and modified in 1843, likely by Thomas Strange of Banbury.[7]
The village has two pubs: the Horse and Jockey and the Plough. It has also the Spice Room Indian restaurant, which used to be the Baker's Arms pub. It was built in 1702[9] and latterly was controlled by Mitchells & Butlers brewery.
Bodicote has a convenience store, a Londis with sub-Post Office, in Molyneux Drive. There is a garden centre, Cotefield Nursery, with a café. There is also a hairdressing salon on the High Street. Playing fields and a cricket pavilion are located on White Post Road. Bodicote Cricket Club plays in the South Northants Cricket League.[10]
The Bodfest Village Festival has been held by a group of volunteers annually since the year 2000, originally held on King's Field. The festival typically takes place in late July/early August and includes live bands, a pig roast and a barn dance. A plastic duck race and raffle are held each spring on the Sor Brook to raise funds for the festival.[11]
A large firework display on King's Field is held annually on the fifth of November, to mark Guy Fawkes Night.
Expansion
In the early 2000s the District Council's planning department put forward in its Local Plan plans to build the new Longford Park housing estate, east of Bodicote village and south of the Cherwell Heights housing estate of Banbury. In February 2006 Cherwell District Council approved the plans to meet a housing target despite a 20,000 signature petition against it. About 1,070 houses are being built along with local shops, a public house, church, restaurant, primary school and other local services. Currently in November 2022 there is only a Primary School and a Community Centre in the building originally earmarked for a doctors’ surgery.[12][13]
Public transport
Stagecoach in Oxfordshire bus route B3 runs half-hourly, Mondays to Saturdays, between Bodicote village and Hardwick Hill via Banbury town centre. There is no evening, Sunday or bank holiday service.[14] Stagecoach in Oxfordshire route S4 serves the A4260 main road along the eastern edge of Bodicote village. It runs hourly, Mondays to Fridays, between Banbury and Oxford.[15]
^"4 Housing sites". Banbury and North Cherwell Site Allocations Development Plan Document. Cherwell District Council. Archived from the original on 13 August 2011.
^"The Masterplan"(PDF). College Fields, Banbury Design Code. Cherwell District Council. Archived from the original(PDF) on 22 July 2011.