Radley Vicarage is a pre-Tudor, oak-framed, wattle-and-daub building, said to date from the 13th century, with alterations made in the 15th century. It has a claim to be the oldest building in the country to have been in continuous use as the home of a church’s incumbent.
The Radley History Club publication, Radley Vicarage (now out-of-print), gives details of the structure and an outline of its history. There is more about the history of the vicarage in the Club’s book about the Church, The Story of a Village Church: St James the Great, Radley.