Within Staplecross, defined by East Sussex County Council>s village entry road signs, are fifteen Grade II listed buildings and structures.On Bodliam Road is a two-storey, weatherboarded and hipped-roof cottage dating to the 18th century or earlier; the early 19th-century two-storey ;[ the two-storey of red brick with hipped roof from the early 18th century, also its adjacent outbuilding of red brick below, weatherboarding above, and hipped roof, coupled with a conical oast house with cowl and fantail, from the late 18th or early 19th century; , a red brick former mill building with 1815 datestone; , a two-storied and weatherboarded house from the early 19th century; and three two-storey 18th-century cottages of white-painted brick and half-hipped roofs.The second, adjacent to and south from the Londis store, is the early 19th-century two-storey , of three bays and weatherboarded, with sash windows, a hipped slate roof and a gabled central porch.The third, in the second plot down from Edgell Cottage and just inside the village, is the 15-century two-storey s Garden>, timber-framed with infill of plaster set on a ground floor red brick plinth; the roof is thatched and hipped.Solomon>s Garden cottage At the junction of Northiam Road, Bodiam Road and Forge Lane, is Staplecross War Memorial to the memory of those killed in the First and Second World Wars; unveiled in 1921, it is 9 feet (3 m) high, of Portland stone, and surmounted by a reclining lion.Opposite is the , the northern part of which is listed, being two-storey and L-shaped of two wings.