In 1469 in the
Wars of the Roses the
Battle of Edgecote Moor was fought near Wardington. In 1644 in the
English Civil War the
Battle of Cropredy Bridge was fought across the parishes of Bourton,
Cropredy, Prescote and Wardington. The site is now on the Register of Historic Battlefields. Williamscot House is
Elizabethan, built for Walter Calcott in about 1568. A
Queene Anne style wing was added in 1704 and extended in
Georgian style in 1777. The Elizabethan part of the house is now Grade II* listed. The Free School was closed in 1857 but the building survives. By 1833 a school had been established at Wardington itself. This became a
National School and acquired its own purpose-built premises in 1845. After 1947 it became a primary school, with children older than 11 being schooled in Banbury. The school was closed in 1991 and is now a private house. In 1753 Wardington had three
public houses: the Green Man, the Hare and Hounds and the Wheatsheaf, also called the White Swan and the White Lion. The Green Man seems to have ceased trading by 1787. In 1966 Upper Wardington had two public houses: the Plough and the Red Lion. Today only the Hare and Hounds remains in business, as the others have been converted into private homes. In 1900 the
Great Central Railway's branch line between and was built through the southern edge of Wardington parish. In 1911 the railway opened more than a mile south of the village on Wardington Road.
British Railways closed the halt in 1956 and the line in 1966. Wardington Memorial Hall was built in 1920 as a monument to members of the village who were killed serving in the
First World War. ==Amenities==