[citation needed] An unusual building in the village is the converted barn in Meeting House Lane, built in 1701.
[4] The Grade I listed Anglican parish church of St Helen,[5] which Pevsner describes as having "one of the most elegant spires of Lincolnshire".
[6] Although restored between 1873 and 1876, it retains its 170 ft. high spire, an Early English nave, arcades and chancel arch, and Perpendicular vaulted porches and clerestory.
[7] The theologian William Warburton, later the Bishop of Gloucester, lived in Brant Broughton for eighteen years.
During this time, Warburton's research resulted in his treatises Alliance between Church and State (1736) and Divine Legation of Moses (2 vols., 1737–41).