Stockton is a small village and civil parish in the Wylye Valley in Wiltshire, England, about 8 miles (13 km) southeast of Warminster.
When the civil parish of Fisherton Delamere was extinguished in 1934, the portion south of the Wylye (1,174 acres) was transferred to Stockton.
Stockton also has two cottages some three miles from the main village street at a remote spot called Great Bottom.
[3] From the late Iron Age there was a settlement on a ridge in Stockton Wood, in the south of the present parish, which continued to be occupied in the Romano-British period until the 4th century.
[10] Unusually, there is a solid wall between nave and chancel, pierced by a central doorway and two squints; in 1910 an almost full-height carved oak screen designed by Bodley & Garner was installed against it.
19th-century additions include a service and nursery wing, and a square water tower; work in 1877–1882 was designed by E. B. Ferrey under the ownership of Major-General A. G. Yeatman-Biggs, and on his death in 1898 the estate was inherited by his brother, Huyshe Wolcott Yeatman.
[6] In 2014, Stockton House was bought by Nick Jenkins, founder of the Moonpig greetings card company, who carried out renovations.
[17] Long Hall, a Grade II* listed house near the church in the east end of the village, dates from the 15th century and has a five-bay 18th-century brick front.
[21] Like several other villages, Stockton is within the catchment area of the Wylye Valley Church of England Primary School, on a site some two miles away at Cherry Orchard, Codford.