Waterstock village is on a minor road north of the A418 and is surrounded by open farming land.
[2] It was most likely on the same site as the current mill, which is a 15th-century building on a small island in the River Thame.
The mill a two-storey L-shaped building, with a timber frame filled in with brick nogging.
[citation needed] Waterstock's oldest buildings are the two thatched cottages, one thought to date from late in the 13th or early in the 14th century and the other from the 16th.
The village's single street is flanked by cottages built of stone or local brick, some retaining the small buildings in the gardens, originally privies or pig-sties.
[citation needed] At one end of the village, Home Farm is a 17th-century timber-framed house with its thatched barn and 17th-century granary.
Richard Ellis the Californian astronomer lived in the Old School House while a graduate student at Oxford from 1971 to 1974.
This window, together with monuments in the church, records the families of local squirearchy who inhabited the manor house and retained its patronage until 1957.
[6] The Oxfordshire Way traverses the parish and crosses the River Thame by Bow Bridge near Waterstock Mill.