The war memorial on the Green commemorates the dead of the last two wars, perhaps Culworth men fought at nearby Danesmoor or Edgecote in the Wars of the Roses? Most likely they were there at Edgehill, for Danvers supported King Charles I. Tradition has it that Prince Charles (later Charles II) and Prince Rupert spent the night before battle at Culworth Manor.
There are still a number of working farms in the parish and several small businesses. From the 12th century there used to be a market in Culworth, and the auctioneers seat still sits on the Green, moved from its original position on the market cross base when the War memorial was erected, although the market is long gone. Nearby is Culworth Forge – often a thing of the past in villages, but here traditions of the past are combined with those of the present.
The Danvers family endowed Culworth Church of England School in 1789. A bell turret tops the stone house, which contained a schoolroom and lodgings for the teacher, and is still part of the school. The school serves children from surrounding villages, where pupils partake of old traditions such as dancing around the Maypole for May Day.