NORTH ASTON
North Aston lies 8 miles (13 km.) north-east
of Woodstock and 2 miles (3 km.) south of
Deddington on the river Cherwell, which forms
the eastern boundary of the parish. (fn. 1) The name
Aston ('east village') (fn. 2) presumably reflects its
position, with its neighbours Middle and Steeple
Aston to the south, as the easternmost settlement
against the river. The land slopes from a height of
c. 150 m. in the south-west corner of the parish to
c. 140 m. at the village before falling away to c. 90
m. in the north and c. 75 m. at the river. The
parish comprises 1,288 a. (521.3 ha.) (fn. 3) in an area
where the limestone country to the south
merges into the north Oxfordshire claylands.
The clay in the north and east is marked by broad
fields of pasture and meadow, with smaller,
arable, fields in the west. The village is built on
a tongue of Chipping Norton limestone and
Northampton sand projecting into the clay which
predominates to the north and east. North-east of
the village is a separate outcrop of Chipping
Norton limestone and Northampton sand on
which the modern Manor Farm has been built.
Along the eastern edge of the parish is the
alluvium of the Cherwell valley, still liable to
flooding. The north part of the parish is traversed
by the parallel Dane Hill and North Aston faults,
running from the west to the north-east. Between
the faults clay is replaced by Chipping Norton
limestone, Great Oolite limestone, on which
stands Dane (or Dean) Hill Farm, and Northampton sand. (fn. 4)
The parish is regular in shape on three sides,
the eastern boundary mostly following the
meanderings of the Cherwell. The boundary
leaves the main stream of the river c. 400 m. north
of North Aston mill, probably following the line
of what was described as 'old Cherwell' in the
17th century. (fn. 5) The boundary rejoins the main
stream south of the Somerton road, but leaves it
again south of Horsemoor to follow a tributary
stream to its junction with another stream,
flowing west-east, which forms the southern
boundary as far as Middle Aston Lane. The
remaining southern boundary follows field
boundaries to Duns Tew. The boundary with
Duns Tew was marked by mere stones in the
13th century, (fn. 6) presumably as far as the road
between the villages; north of the road it is
completed by a stream and the Oxford–Banbury
road. Deddington brook, which divides North
Aston from Deddington in the north was
straightened in the north-east corner in 1974. (fn. 7)
In the mid 19th century the parish was bounded
by a ring fence. (fn. 8)
The road from Oxford to Banbury passes
through the west of the parish. It was turnpiked
in 1754–5 and disturn piked in 1875. (fn. 9) North
Aston is connected by ancient roads to Middle
and Steeple Aston, Duns Tew, and Somerton,
and there are paths to Clifton in Deddington
from the village and from North Aston mill,
crossing the stream at the northern parish
boundary by a bridge known in the 16th century
as Bamon's Bridge and later as Bowman's
Bridge. (fn. 10) Gambon's Bridge, at the mill, is first
mentioned in the 13th century. (fn. 11) The bridge
formed part of a causeway whose upkeep was the
subject of dispute between North Aston and
Somerton. (fn. 12) The whole causeway seems to have
been rebuilt by the Oxford Canal Co. at the time
of the canal's construction in 1787. The mill
bridge was adopted by the county council in
1868, and the bridge between it and Somerton in
1887, after it had collapsed. (fn. 13) As late as the 18th
century access to Bestmoor, the most important
meadow in the parish, was by ford only, maintained by the freeholders of Duns Tew who had
rights of hay there. (fn. 14) There are a number of small
foot-bridges giving access across streams to other
meadows in the east of the parish. The Oxford
canal, a small part of which lies within North
Aston, skirts the parish to the east; it was opened
in 1787. The railway line from Oxford to Banbury
was completed in 1850 and a station opened just
over the parish boundary at Somerton in 1855. (fn. 15)
In the 19th century and early 20th there was a
regular carrier service to Banbury. (fn. 16) There was
a post office by 1853. (fn. 17) North Aston was one of
the seven parishes which, in the wake of the
Swing Riots, combined to buy a fire engine in
1831. (fn. 18)
In 1086 25 inhabitants including 7 serfs were
recorded, and in 1279 27 landholders. (fn. 19) By 1377
there were only 58 persons over the age of 14,
indicating that the total population had fallen to
c. 100. (fn. 20) The population was apparently little
changed in the mid 16th century, and accusations
of depopulation of the village may have been
exaggerated. (fn. 21) Only 15 households were recorded
in 1662, but the Protestation Returns of 1642 (37
adult males) and the Compton Census of 1676
(82 adults) suggest a total population of c. 120. (fn. 22)
In 1738 there were 34 houses recorded, indicating
c. 150 people in all. (fn. 23) By 1801 there were 49
houses and a population of 220, rising to a
maximum of 308 in 1851. There was a steady
decline thereafter, despite a slight recovery in the
1880s, until by 1901 there were 207 people. The
population then changed little, and there were
199 inhabitants in 1971. (fn. 24)
The village lies along both sides of the road
from Somerton, opening out in the west onto the
village green, around which a few houses are
scattered. The church and North Aston Hall
stand in parkland to the south-east. Traces of
house platforms, hollow ways, and medieval
pottery c. 180 m. south of the church may
indicate the remains of some of the 12 houses said
to have been abandoned because of inclosure in
the later 15th century. (fn. 25) Several cottages, including the vicarage, remained there into the
19th century. (fn. 26) Apart from the church and North
Aston Manor with its fish ponds, nothing survives
of the medieval village. Some houses and farm
buildings, probably of the 17th and 18th centuries,
were demolished following the purchase of North
Aston in 1862 by William Foster-Melliar. The
most important was a large, two-storeyed, 17thcentury stone house with mullioned windows (fn. 27)
which stood next to the west wing of North Aston
Hall, north of the church; it may have served as
a farmhouse. A farmhouse and buildings at the
south-east corner of the village green were mostly
demolished, although part was remodelled as
a school in 1872 and another range remains as
a row of cottages at the top of the drive to the hall.
One or two small cottages on either side of the
village street were also removed, including, north
of the street, two parish houses for the poor. (fn. 28)
Most of the houses that remain are small oneand two-storeyed 18th- and 19th-century cottages of coursed rubble, roofed with thatch, stone
slate, or Welsh slate. A cottage on the south side
of the street below the post office contains a beam
with the date 1714. (fn. 29) Lower House, south-east of
the North Aston Hall farm buildings, was once a
farmhouse. In origin probably of the 17th century, it was extended in the 18th century and
again in the 19th to form two tenements; it was
reconverted to a single dwelling c. 1930. FosterMelliar built several pairs of semi-detached stone
houses in the village. Those east of the green were
built by 1881, as was the single-storeyed lodge at
the junction of the drive to the hall with the road
to Somerton. By 1907 there were also houses
north of the green and west of Lower House. (fn. 30)
The drinking trough at the top of the drive from
the hall to the village was built probably in the
1860s. The other major changes of the late 19th
century and early 20th were to North Aston Hall,
the manor house, and the vicarage, all of which
underwent substantial alterations. (fn. 31)
The earliest outlying farmhouse was Foxhall,
which existed by 1682. It was later the Fox inn
and was known temporarily as Park Farm in the
later 19th century. (fn. 32) The present west front of
the building is of the late 18th century, with, on
the north, additions and alterations of the 19th
century. Hendon Farm, a plain two-storeyed
building in local stone, was built in 1730 by the
tenant, Isaac Mobbs; (fn. 33) east and west wings were
added in the 19th century. Dane Hill Farm and
Coldharbour Farm are probably also of 18thcentury origin, although much altered in the 19th
century and in the 20th Manor Farm, north-east
of the village, was built c. 1930 by Capt. J. V.
Taylor. (fn. 34) North Aston mill is two-storeyed, of
coursed rubble with a stone slate roof. The mill
cottage forms a north-east wing and is of a single
storey with thatch roof.
Modern development has mostly been south
of the green. The widespread use of stone or
reconstituted stone betokens an attempt to match
existing materials, if not styles. Two cottages
were built west of the school cottages c. 1920 and
four cottages west of them c. 1950. Behind them
several detached houses were built in 1966. (fn. 35) By
1980 a large new stone house had been built in
Folly Field, south-east of the hall. Most of the
older houses in the village were renovated in the
1950s by Lt.-Col. A. D. Taylor. Thatched roofs,
until then almost universal, had become ruinous
and were replaced by tiles, and mains water was
supplied to the houses for the first time. The
village green, which remains the focal point of the
village, was formerly well wooded and in the late
17th century bore several walnut trees planted by
Basil Brooke, lord of the manor, 'for the boys in
the parish . . . to gather the walnuts without any
interruption'. Many trees blew down in storms in
1916. (fn. 36)
The green retained traces of ridge and furrow
in 1980 and was probably larger at one time: part
of it was inclosed by the lord of the manor in the
early 16th century. (fn. 37)
The first recorded licensed victualler in the
parish was Joseph Rose in 1695; a licence was still
held by the Rose family in 1754. The Fox inn was
licensed from 1701 to c. 1914. Held initially by
the Fox family, it passed by 1753 to Richard
Weston, who held it until 1800. Another inn, the
Fox and Crown, was held by Job Swetman in the
later 18th century; its location has not been
discovered. (fn. 38) In the mid 19th century the vicarage
was for a short time licensed as a beer shop. (fn. 39)

North Aston, 1843
In 1644 two soldiers wounded in a skirmish
between Clifton, in Deddington parish, and
North Aston were buried at North Aston. (fn. 40) In
the First World War refugees from Belgium
stayed in the village, as did c. 10 evacuees from
London in 1940. (fn. 41) Timothy Kendall (b. c. 1550),
son of William and Alice Kendall, owners of the
rectorial estate, was the author of Flowers of
Epigrams (1577). (fn. 42) Bernard Gates (1685–1773),
choirmaster of the Chapel Royal and friend and
patron of Handel, bought North Aston Manor in
the mid 18th century, retiring there in 1758.
He was buried in Westminster Abbey, and
a memorial was erected in North Aston church
by his pupil and successor at North Aston,
Thomas Dupuis (1733–96), organist and composer to the Chapel Royal. (fn. 43) At North Aston Hall
Oldfield Bowles (d. 1810), 'painter, musician,
botanist, and scientific farmer', was a prominent
figure in the artistic world. The painting 'Miss
Jane Bowles' by Reynolds is of one of Bowles's
daughters. (fn. 44) In 1774 he built a small theatre for
performances given by him and his friends. (fn. 45)
The site of the theatre has not been discovered; it
may have been among the buildings near the hall
which were later demolished by Foster-Melliar.
The latter was long remembered as an eccentric
squire. His tombstone in the churchyard with the
inscription 'Here Endeth the First Lesson'
alludes to his extraordinary readings in North
Aston church. He used to ride to the hunt in his
carriage, alternately consulting the Bible and
Jorrocks's Jaunts. (fn. 46) The frequent leasing of North
Aston Hall in the 19th and 20th centuries brought
there several members of the Irish peerage in
search of an English seat in good hunting
country. (fn. 47)
North Aston was one of the last parishes in the
Cherwell valley to retain mixed ownership of
meadow land. The annual mowing by men from
neighbouring parishes and the subsequent freefor-all at dusk were a highlight of the parish
year. (fn. 48)
Manors and other Estates.
In 1086
NORTH ASTON, comprising 9 hides, formed
part of the extensive estates held by Edward of
Salisbury in southern and western England. (fn. 49)
With Steeple Aston and Middle Aston it may
earlier have formed part of a single 20-hide
estate. (fn. 50) The overlordship of North Aston, held
of the manor of Amesbury (Wilts.), passed to
Edward's son Walter and grandson Patrick, earl
of Salisbury (d. 1168), descending eventually to
Margaret Longespée, great granddaughter and
heir of Ela, countess of Salisbury (d. 1261).
Margaret's husband Henry de Lacy, earl of
Lincoln, held North Aston in right of his wife;
at his death in 1311 he was said to be chief lord
of 1 knight's fee there, held of the manor of
Amesbury, of his honor of Pontefract (Yorks.). (fn. 51)
The overlordship passed to Margaret's daughter
and heir Alice, wife of Thomas of Lancaster.
After Thomas's execution in 1322 his enemy
Hugh le Despenser the younger obtained 2½
knights' fees in North Aston. Following the fall
of the Despensers in 1326 the manor seems not
to have been regranted to Alice and her second
husband Sir Ebles Lestrange (d. 1335); it was not
mentioned among her possessions at her death in
1348 and may have been granted by the Crown,
with the earldom of Salisbury, to William de
Montagu. It was still held of the earls of Salisbury
as of their manor of Amesbury in 1389. (fn. 52) In the
late 14th century and early 15th a single knight's
fee in North Aston, part of the barony of Clifford
castle (Herefs.), was held by the earls of March. (fn. 53)
The association of North Aston with Clifford
presumably began with the inheritance of the
barony by Margaret Longespée, heiress not only
of the earldom of Salisbury but also, through her
grandfather Walter de Clifford (d. 1263), of the
barony of Clifford. (fn. 54) The barony was confirmed
to Margaret's daughter Alice in 1331. (fn. 55) After her
death in 1348 it was probably granted by the
Crown to Roger Mortimer, earl of March, who
had possession before 1356. (fn. 56)
Edward of Salisbury's tenant in 1086 was
Anketil de Gray who held much land in the
county. By 1151 the manor had passed to William
of Aston whose grandson, also William, granted
a life-tenancy in 1202 to Robert of Aston and his
wife Alice de Chesney. (fn. 57) In 1205 Robert was said
to be overseas in the service of the chief lord of
the manor, William Longespée, earl of Salisbury. (fn. 58) Robert still held the manor in 1242–3, but
by 1279 the demesne lordship had passed to
William Trivet of Chilton (Som.). (fn. 59) Chilton, like
North Aston, had previously been held by
Anketil de Gray. (fn. 60) In 1316 the manor was held by
Thomas Trivet, passing by 1327 to John, who
was granted free warren there in 1353, (fn. 61) and by
1372 to Sir Thomas Trivet, who died in 1388
leaving as co-heiressess his daughters Anne and
Joan. In 1422 his widow Elizabeth held it, (fn. 62) but
by the mid 15th century it had passed to the Anne
family. (fn. 63) It seems likely that John Anne (d. 1441),
second son of Sir William Anne of Frickley
(Yorks.), was the first of the family to hold North
Aston and that he was succeeded by his son
William (I) who died without issue in 1451, his
younger son John (I) (fl. 1485), and grandson
William (II) (d. 1508). William (II)'s son John
(II) died in 1554 and the manor was conveyed by
his son William (III) to Sir Robert Brooke of
Madeley (Salop.), Lord Chief Justice of the
Common Pleas, (fn. 64) perhaps by settlement on the
betrothal of Grace, the only surviving child of
Edward Anne, William's son, to Sir Robert's son
John. (fn. 65)
John Brooke held the manor at his death
in 1598, when it passed to his son Sir Basil
(d. 1646). (fn. 66) Sir Basil's son Thomas, though
a Royalist, managed to protect his estates for
a time by leasing them to relatives and friends,
but in 1653 North Aston was sequestrated and
sold to Major John Wildman, a speculator in
forfeited lands. (fn. 67) The manor may have been
recovered as early as 1655, following Wildman's
imprisonment for conspiracy: Thomas Brooke's
sister Frances was married at North Aston in
1656, and his proxies presented to the living there
in 1663. (fn. 68) Thomas's grandson and heir Basil
succeeded to the estate by 1687, dying in 1700.
His widow Winifred died in 1716 and left North
Aston to her niece Henrietta Fermor, sister of
James Fermor of Tusmore. (fn. 69)
The Brooke family resided irregularly at North
Aston. They seem to have rebuilt North Aston
Hall, apparently using it in the later 17th century
as a dower house. Henrietta Fermor sold the
manor soon after 1716 to Anthony Rowe of
Muswell Hill, in Hornsey (Mdx.), Clerk of the
Green Cloth, whose daughter and coheir Mary
took North Aston to her second husband Trevor
Hill, Viscount Hillsborough. (fn. 70) The estate was
leased to Catherine, widow of Sir Robert Howard
of Ashtead (Surr.), and her husband Dr. John
Martin, rector of Somerton. (fn. 71) They presumably
left when Dr. Martin resigned Somerton in 1719,
for Lady Hillsborough was living at North Aston
in the 1720s. (fn. 72) Her husband sold the estate
shortly after 1733 to Charles Oldfield, a Jamaica
merchant who gave it at his death c. 1740 to his
friend Charles Bowles. (fn. 73) Bowles was succeeded
at his own death in 1780 by his son Oldfield
(d. 1810) whose son Charles Oldfield Bowles,
faced with the need to provide for 8 sisters,
rented North Aston Hall to a succession of
tenants. Among them were Welbore Agar, earl of
Normanton (d. 1868), and Richard Chetwynd,
Viscount Chetwynd (d. 1879) whose mother
Charlotte was the daughter of Thomas Cartwright of Aynho (Northants.), the owner of large
estates in the area. Thomas Scott, earl of Clonmell, died at North Aston in 1838. Bowles
returned to live at North Aston but sold the estate
shortly before his death in 1862 to William
Foster-Melliar. (fn. 74)
After the death of Foster-Melliar in 1906
North Aston, which included an estate of 990 a.,
was purchased by Capt. John Taylor of Grovelands, Southgate (Mdx.). Manorial rights were
said to extend over c. 1,280 a. but there is no
indication that they had been exercised for some
time. In 1911 Capt. Taylor sold North Aston
Hall, 200 a., and part of the village to Thomas
Pakenham, earl of Longford, moving his own
residence to North Aston Manor. The hall was
sold to W. L. Hichens, chairman of Cammell
Laird & Co., shipbuilders, in 1929 and remained
in his family's possession in 1980. (fn. 75)
It is not clear which of the two main houses in
North Aston occupies the site of the original
manor house. There are indications, and a local
tradition, that it was the house at the eastern end
of the village street, called North Aston Manor
since the 19th century. References in 1574 and
1720 to the arms of Anne and Giffard displayed
in 'the ancient house of Anne' seem to refer to
North Aston Manor since North Aston Hall was
probably rebuilt in the 17th century. In that case
the Brooke family presumably transferred to the
hall in the late 16th or early 17th century. (fn. 76) It is
possible, however, that North Aston Hall, in
a more important position adjacent to the church,
was the original North Aston manor house and
that North Aston Manor was the manor house of
Bradenstoke priory. (fn. 77)
There was presumably a substantial house
occupying the eastern end of the site of North
Aston Hall in the 15th century, when its presence
restricted the building of the church tower, and
the house was assessed for taxation in 1662 on 27
hearths. (fn. 78) It is unlikely that any surviving part
of the house is earlier than the 17th century. To
that date may belong the underlying plan, which
is of double depth with a thick spine wall. The
house appears to have been remodelled in the late
18th century, probably by John Yenn, when
a small single-storeyed extension was added on
the north and an imposing Classical porch on the
south. The house was a plain stone building of
three storeys, with 10 bays on the south front,
and a stone-slated, hipped roof. The main, south,
front was remodelled c. 1867 in late-16th-century
style, an entrance porch was added on the west,
and the 18th-century addition on the north was
enlarged and carried up to the full height of the
house. (fn. 79) The outbuildings include a substantial
coach-house and farm buildings of the early 19th
century. A small grove and pond known as the
Folly were placed c. 400 m. south-east of the hall
in a field later called Folly field, probably by
a member of the Bowles family in the later 18th
century. There may have been an eye-catcher
there, but nothing remains. In the later 19th
century an ice-house was built c. 200 m. northwest of the hall. (fn. 80)
In the mid 12th century William of Aston gave
to Bradenstoke priory (Wilts.) 50 a. land in North
Aston and the advowson of the church. (fn. 81) The
priory had been founded by Walter of Salisbury,
and under the patronage of successive earls of
Salisbury a valuable estate was acquired in North
Aston. (fn. 82) In the 15th century BRADENSTOKE
manor, said to comprise 340 a., (fn. 83) was leased by
the priory to the Anne family, lords of North
Aston manor. During a dispute in the early 16th
century John Anne denied that the estate was
properly a manor. The priory had been given the
right to hold its own court baron in the early 13th
century, however, and still exacted manorial dues
from its tenants in the late 15th. Confusion may
have arisen because the priory mistakenly thought
for a time that it was lord of North Aston
manor. (fn. 84) Following the dissolution of Bradenstoke priory in 1539 the manor was sold by the
Crown in 1540 to Richard Ingram of Wolford
(Warws.). (fn. 85) By 1550 it had passed to William
Kendall of North Aston. (fn. 86) Kendall seems to have
held it at the time of his death in 1570, but by
1572 it was owned by Henry Sheppard, probably
a relative. (fn. 87) Sheppard soon disposed of the manor,
selling it in 1574 to John Brooke by whom the two
manors were united. (fn. 88)
The rectorial estate, in the hands of Bradenstoke priory, was said in the 13th century to be
worth £5, derived partly from lands and partly
from the great tithes. (fn. 89) The land, perhaps comprising 4 yardlands, was leased out. (fn. 90) The great
tithes were usually, although not invariably,
retained. Those from Nethercote, in Middle
Aston, were settled upon North Aston vicarage.
In 1229 Bradenstoke and Merton priory agreed
to share hay tithes from meadows in North Aston
forming part of the fee of Duns Tew. (fn. 91) The
rectorial estate was said to be worth £8 a year
c. 1540. (fn. 92) By then the tithes were completely
secularized, and the land gradually became
merged with the dissolved priory's secular estate.
The tithe award of 1843 reported four holders of
impropriate tithes in the parish. The greater part
was held by the lord of the manor, Charles
Oldfield Bowles, who merged them with the
manorial freehold. Sir George Dashwood, as
chief landowner in Duns Tew, owned half the
hay tithes arising from Bestmoor. The tithes
from two other small pieces of meadow belonged
to estates in the neighbouring parish of Somerton. The tithes were commuted for rent charges
totalling £51. (fn. 93) Shortly after his acquisition of
the manor in 1862 William Foster-Melliar
bought out the other recipients and restored all
the rent charges to the church. (fn. 94)
The identity of Bradenstoke priory's manor
house in North Aston is, as has been indicated
above, uncertain. It was leased from the late 15th
century to the 17th with the rectorial estate as the
parsonage. (fn. 95) In the 16th century the house was
presumably occupied by the Kendall and
Sheppard families, owners of the rectory and
Bradenstoke manor. By the mid 17th century the
house was that later known as North Aston
Manor, leased to tenants until it was purchased
by Bernard Gates in the mid 18th century. After
the death in 1796 of Gates's heir, Thomas
Dupuis, the house was bought by Oldfield
Bowles and leased to tenant farmers, notably the
Hill family who held it until c. 1851. (fn. 96) The
Taylor family lived in the house from 1911 to
1977. The central range of North Aston Manor (fn. 97)
was built as an open hall in the late medieval
period. At its south end a contemporary cross
wing and staircase turret survive, with an
additional room of the 17th century to the east.
There is a 15th-century doorway on the west
front, probably to the screens passage, and
another inside the hall to the south. A first floor
was installed c. 1600. At the north end the
original service rooms were removed, perhaps in
the early or mid 18th century when a new
principal room and cross wing added. There
were further extensions between 1843 and 1881, (fn. 98)
and in 1911–12 a north wing was added. (fn. 99)
In 1639 Sir Basil Brooke sold c. 100 a. in the
north of the parish to Sir Robert Dormer of
Rousham. (fn. 100) In 1776 the land was given to the
vicar of Rousham as glebe. By 1843 the estate,
leased to tenants, had been increased to 146 a. (fn. 101)
The estate, later known as Coldharbour farm,
was sold in 1921 to Mr. B. Deeley, and bought in
1963 by Lt.-Col. A. D. Taylor. (fn. 102)
In 1681 86 a. in the south of the parish
adjoining Middle Aston and 17 a. south of
Coldharbour farm were bought by the executors
of the will of Robert Daniel of Hendon (Mdx.) to
endow his almshouse at Hendon. The farm was
sold by the Hendon charity trustees in 1960 to
Mr. A. Hichens, who later exchanged with Lt.Col. Taylor the 17 a. inclosure adjoining Coldharbour farm for a field of similar size adjoining
Hendon farm. (fn. 103)
Economic History.
North Aston's
medieval field system was probably a conventional one of two fields; grants and sales of land to
Bradenstoke priory in the 13th century invariably
refer to a north and a south field. (fn. 104) Mention of
an east field in the early 13th century (fn. 105) may be
a mistake, since the place mentioned, near the
modern Coldharbour farm, is in the north of the
parish and more to the west than the east. There
seems, however, to have been a third field by the
late 15th century when the north and south fields
comprised 300 a. and 400 a. respectively. (fn. 106)
The road from Duns Tew would have formed
a convenient boundary between north and south
fields, a third field presumably comprising the
land between North Aston village and the
Cherwell. (fn. 107)
In the 13th century Bradenstoke priory appropriated by agreement a small part of the south
field for a walled inclosure, perhaps a sheepfold,
but extensive inclosure was begun in the 15th
century by John Anne and his son William
(d. 1508), owners of the manorial estate and
lessees of the priory estate. It was claimed in 1509
that the whole of the north and south fields had
been ditched and inclosed; although the Annes
disputed the amount of inclosure it is clear that
they were following a policy of conversion to
pasture. (fn. 108) The process was continued by their
successors the Brookes, culminating c. 1650 in
the inclosure and redistribution of 14 yardlands. (fn. 109)
Part of the open field arable was converted to
leys, probably for additional hay as well as
pasture; (fn. 110) North Aston's meadows gave plentiful
hay, but the largest and richest of them along the
Cherwell were subject to the rights of neighbouring parishes. In 1086 there were said to be 30 a.
meadow; that figure may be an underestimate,
for part of North Aston's meadow is possibly
included in the 54 a. meadow assigned to Duns
Tew. (fn. 111) Certainly by the early 13th century it was
established custom for the tenants of the fee of
Duns Tew to take most of the hay crop from the
largest meadow in North Aston, Bestmoor, in the
north-east of the parish. The origin of the custom
remains obscure. The traditional explanation in
the 18th century was that the right to take hay had
been exchanged for land in Duns Tew. In the
early 13th century there had been a tithe dispute
over an area on the boundary between the
parishes, but it is not known that the disagreement derived from an earlier exchange of land. (fn. 112)
Bestmoor was reckoned to contain meadow for 63
yardlands, 42 for Duns Tew and 21 for North
Aston. It was divided by two base lines into three
'sets', in each of which blocks of 42 poles for
Duns Tew alternated with blocks of 21 for North
Aston; a yardland's share was a pole in every
group of 42 or 21. Names such as the Crown,
Millrind, Snipe, and Rabbit, given to groupings
of poles, perhaps evoke a time when lots were
drawn using counters marked with those symbols,
but the divisions seem usually to have followed
a fixed order. The pole used to measure out
the meadow was modelled on a mead pole of
13 ft. 8 in. kept at North Aston manor house. Two
men, carrying the pole on their hips, trod a track
through the grass from the base line to the edge of
the meadow, or, in the case of the middle 'set', to
the other base line. Parallel strips could be made
with ease by one man walking along the track
made by his partner for the previous strip.
Awkward corners of the meadow had special
uses, Meter's Hook given to the measurers, the
Hull held in turn by the three lords of Duns Tew,
whose duty it was to oversee the meadow.
Mowing, strictly regulated, had to be completed
in a single day in July. The rights of the lord of
North Aston were safeguarded by a system of
fines for breach of the bye-laws regulating use of
the meadow, and the commoners of North Aston
had the right of after-grass. (fn. 113) In 1864 almost all
the mowing rights were bought up by William
Foster-Melliar, lord of North Aston manor. (fn. 114)
Two other meadows, Ney, or Neigh, Meadow
and Ladyham, were subject to mixed ownership,
between North Aston and estates in the neighbouring parish of Somerton. (fn. 115)
There was a common cow pasture, possibly the
inclosure known as the Common in the northeast of the parish, on the western edge of Bestmoor. There was a common for horses at
Horsemoor, south-east of the village. The stint
seems to have been three cows to a yardland,
although by the late 16th century common rights
could be sold independently of land. The
allowance for horse-commons was approximately
the same as for cattle. Cows and horses were
turned onto the meadows at Lammas, after the
hay had been mown. Cow-commons were usually
fully exploited, horse-commons less so. In the
13th century the lord of the manor seems to have
had his own pastures for his oxen, cattle, and
sheep; William of Aston allowed Bradenstoke's
plough beasts and 200 sheep to graze with his
provided that the priory kept them at other times
in its own sheepfold. There were also the usual
rights of common for sheep, although the stint is
not known. The village green was used in the
17th century for commoning sheep and pigs.
Fuel on the commons was divided according to
the number of cow commons held. (fn. 116)
North Aston, rated at 9 hides in 1086, (fn. 117) must
have been cleared extensively for arable, for there
was enough land for 20 ploughs. The parish was
seriously understocked in 1086, containing only
8 ploughs. There were 3 ploughteams and 7 serfs
on the demesne; the other 5 ploughs were held
by 6 villeins with 2 Frenchmen and 10 bordars.
Despite its underexploitation North Aston's
value had increased from £10 to £12. There was
a valuable mill and fishery worth 30s. a year.
In the Middle Ages the demesne of both North
Aston manor and Bradenstoke priory was scattered among the common fields. In the early 13th
century the priory was given licence to divert
streams to irrigate its strips. There were 3
ploughlands of manorial demesne in 1279 and 10
villeins held 1 yardland each at a rent of 4s.,
paying aid and working on the demesne at will.
Since the mid 12th century Bradenstoke priory
had acquired a large estate at North Aston, said in
1279 to comprise 2 hides. (fn. 118) The services owed to
the priory were the same as those of the 'serfs' of
William Trivet, lord of the manor, a reference to
his 10 villein yardlanders. Since 1086 a diverse
group of freeholds had become established in the
parish. The most important freeholder family
was the Talenant family, active in land transactions in North Aston in the 13th century and
landholders in Middle Aston. In 1279 Richard
Talenant held 2½ yardlands himself and rented
a further ½ yardland and a smallholding to other
tenants. There were 9 other free tenancies in
1279: one, of ½ hide, was held at a rent of ¾ lb.
pepper; 5 were of a single yardland each, held at
rents varying from 3d. to 6s. 8d.; another yardland
was held by 4 tenants; there was a single holding
of ½ yardland; the mill and its holding of 1½
yardland paid rent of 3½ marks. (fn. 119)
The subsidy return of 1316, (fn. 120) with two contributions of 4s. 3d., and most of the remaining
15 contributions ranging from 2s. to 4s. indicates
a fairly even distribution of wealth in a relatively
prosperous community. Eleven years later North
Aston was still prosperous, but the community
was more sharply divided. One man, Roger
Chaunteclere, was assessed at 28s., by far the
highest assessment. He may have been the
wealthy merchant and London citizen of that
name whose financial interests in Oxfordshire
included a rent in Great Tew. At North Aston he
rented the dower land of the widow of the former
lord of the manor. The three men next to him in
wealth, including John Trivet, lord of the manor,
were assessed at only a fifth or sixth of his figure.
Three others were assessed at 3s. and the remaining 11 at 1s. 10d. or less. (fn. 121) The apparent consolidation into a few large estates was to be the
pattern in North Aston, particularly under the
Anne family, who succeeded to the manorial
estate in the mid 15th century. (fn. 122) Apart from an
estate of c. 70 a. belonging to the Somerton
family (fn. 123) the Annes and Bradenstoke priory were
virtually the only landowners in the parish by the
late 15th century. In 1484 John Anne obtained
a 30-year lease of the priory's lands and shortly
afterwards began to inclose much of the parish
for pasture. Bradenstoke repeatedly complained
about the inclosure of its land and asserted in
1509 that in the parish as a whole 12 houses had
been made ruinous and 7 ploughs taken out of
use, so that c. 700 a. in all had been converted to
pasture. (fn. 124) The reply, that the inclosures had
taken place well before the Statute of Inclosures, (fn. 125)
a contention supported by the absence of any
reference to North Aston in the Domesday of
Inclosures of 1517, did not dispute the growing
dependence on a pastoral economy. The priory
estate was not given over completely to pasture.
Under William Kendall, its owner in 1550, it
comprised 200 a. each of arable and pasture, and
40 a. meadow. (fn. 126) In the parish as a whole,
however, pasture predominated. South field, for
example, held by William Sheppard of Steeple
Barton c. 1550, was completely pasture, with 800
sheep and 10 cattle feeding upon it. (fn. 127)
On the death of John Anne in 1554 his son
William granted 61-year leases of Mill field,
apparently containing much of the land in the
east of the parish, South field, and the remaining
land in the south of the parish to a creditor,
Henry Duncombe of Tiscot (Herts.). The lease
of Mill field was sold soon after and resold in 1594
to William Denton of Blackthorn. Denton seems
not to have lived at North Aston although his son
John did until the 1640s, possibly renting the
manor house from Sir Basil Brooke. (fn. 128) The land
in the south of the parish was rented from
Duncombe in the late 1550s and 1560s by
Edward Busby in trust for William Sheppard's
son John. (fn. 129) In the later 16th century the land was
divided among Duncombe's family, the farming
of the land apparently being left in the main to
branches of the family, the Moores and their
recent relatives the Sheppards. In 1616 the
farming of the whole of the land was taken over
by Francis Gregory. In 1620 the lease was bought
by Richard Bull, a London fishmonger, for £620.
It was a sound investment, for Bull was able to
charge Gregory a rent of £158. (fn. 130)
Sir Robert Brooke had therefore in 1556
purchased an estate of which perhaps two-thirds
was let out on long leases still with their full term
to run. Sir Robert's son John made further long
leases, of land in the north of the parish. (fn. 131) John
Brooke's successors, in response to financial
pressures, began to sell land as the leases fell in.
Some freeholds thus formed became the basis of
modern farms, notably Coldharbour farm in the
north of the parish and Hendon farm in the
south. (fn. 132) The largest purchase seems to have been
that made in the late 17th century by William
Cartwright of Aynho (Northants.) who obtained
two farms comprising c. 300 a. in all in the south
and south-west of the parish, straddling the road
from Oxford to Banbury. The farms had been in
the occupation of the Wing family since the 16th
century. By 1714 the two farms were managed as
one. (fn. 133) In the mid 18th century much of the farm,
apart from some rights in Bestmoor, passed to
James Lovesey, who was by 1753 the largest
landowner in the parish. Another large estate,
including the house later known as North Aston
Manor, was acquired by 1754 by Bernard Gates,
master of the children of the Chapel Royal. (fn. 134)
In the later 18th century the lords of the
manor, Charles Bowles and his son Oldfield,
recovered much of the land alienated by their
predecessors. The Lovesey estate was probably
acquired at the death of James Lovesey in 1773, (fn. 135)
and the Gates estate in 1796. (fn. 136) Foxhall and its
farm of c. 100 a., held by a local yeoman family,
the Foxes, probably since the 16th century, later
formed part of the estate of Sir Francis Page of
Middle Aston and was bought at auction in 1804
by Oldfield Bowles. (fn. 137) In 1787 Bowles owned
approximately a third of the land in the parish; by
1843 his son owned almost three quarters. (fn. 138)
In 1843 there were six farms in the parish:
Manor farm (158 a.), based on the former Gates
estate, Dane Hill farm (164 a.), Fox inn farm
(121 a.), Home farm (367 a.), formerly Lovesey's,
worked from a house south-west of the junction
of the road from Duns Tew and the drive to
North Aston Hall, Coldharbour farm (146 a.),
and Hendon farm (110 a.). (fn. 139) William FosterMelliar seems to have broken up Home farm
soon after he arrived at North Aston, dividing it
between Fox inn farm, known thereafter as Park
farm, Manor farm, and Dane Hill farm. (fn. 140) In 1907
most land in the parish except Coldharbour
farm and Hendon farm was bought by Capt.
J. V. Taylor. He sold North Aston Hall and
c. 200 a. to the south in 1911 to Thomas
Pakenham, earl of Longford, from whom they
were bought in 1929 by Mr. W. L. Hichens.
Hendon farm, adjoining on the south, was bought
by Mr. A. Hichens in 1960, since when it and
North Aston Hall farm have been farmed together. Coldharbour farm was bought by Lt.Col. A. D. Taylor in 1963, so that it, Park farm,
Dane Hill farm, and Manor farm were brought
for the first time into single ownership. In 1980
Mr. J. Taylor farmed them together from Coldharbour. North Aston Manor and the Fox inn
were sold as private residences, and Dane Hill
farmhouse and Coldharbour farmhouse kept as
part of the estate, which comprised 920 a. in all. (fn. 141)
In the 17th century there were sporadic
attempts by some leaseholders, resisted by the
Brookes, to reconvert pasture to arable. (fn. 142) Arable
land seems usually to have been about a quarter
of the total land in the parish. Wheat, barley,
oats, peas, and beans were grown, and, in the
18th century, sainfoin, clover, turnips, and
potatoes. Fields were of 10–20 a. (fn. 143) In the 1660s
Col. Edward Vernon, then living at North Aston
Hall, grew safflower, drying it and selling it for
use as a red dye. (fn. 144) Oldfield Bowles, widely
respected in the late 18th century as a progressive
farmer, tried out a variety of ploughs for corn
and leguminous plants, and experimented with
crop rotation. (fn. 145) North Aston was remarkable
for the number of its orchards; there were 15
on the manorial estate in the 16th century, and
in the 17th an orchard formed a large part of
the vicarage glebe. (fn. 146) An apple from Normandy,
the Nonpareil, was established at North Aston
c. 1600. It was intensively cultivated by Col.
Vernon and disseminated throughout England as
the North Aston apple. (fn. 147) Pasture, however,
remained predominant. In the late 18th century
Manor farm was three-quarters pasture and
meadow, and new inclosures were still taking
place. Hendon farm and Coldharbour farm were
entirely pasture and meadow. In 1801 the parish
contained 910 a. of grass and only 261 a. of
arable. (fn. 148) Oldfield Bowles was associated with
the experimental breeding methods of Robert
Bakewell of Leicestershire and his disciple
Edmund Creek, a near neighbour of Bowles at
Rousham. Bowles was also particularly interested
in the use of different grasses on new pastures,
acquiring a personal collection of more than 100
specimens. (fn. 149)
An increasing amount of land was ploughed in
the later 19th century, but in 1914 permanent
pasture, 66 per cent of the cultivated area, was
one of the highest in the area. The importance of
dairy farming was demonstrated by the fairly
high number of cattle, 22 for 100 a. cultivated
land; the number of sheep, double that of cattle,
was about average for the area. Barley was the
most important crop, almost a quarter of the
arable given over to it, and wheat, oats, and root
crops were grown. (fn. 150) In the later 20th century the
Taylors' land in the north and west of the parish
has been given over more to arable, the Hichens's
land in the low-lying areas to the south-east being
used mostly for dairy farming, with a small
amount of arable.
The concentration of land, after the break-up
of the Anne and Bradenstoke estates, in the hands
of outsiders who did not settle permanently in the
parish made it difficult for a settled class of
wealthy farmers to emerge from local families.
Those of longest standing were the Wings, part
of a family well established in the area, who
farmed at North Aston from the 16th century to
the 18th. Beginning in the early 16th century
with a smallholding of 1¼ yardlands the family
were by the end of the 17th century also tenants
of the two Cartwright farms in North Aston. (fn. 151)
The North Aston Wings, however, seem never to
have been very wealthy. The Churchill family
achieved greater wealth but showed less durability. Better known elsewhere, they were
prominent in North Aston in the early 17th
century but of little significance thereafter.
Henry Churchill was tenant of the manor house
and farm, and at his death in 1628 his estate,
which lay mostly in sheep and cattle, was worth
c. £200. (fn. 152)
In the late 18th century Edward Mobbs was
tenant of the Hendon charity trustees at Hendon
farm, his descendants continuing there until the
mid 19th century. A branch of the family held
Dane Hill farm from the early 19th century,
adding the tenancy of Coldharbour farm in the
early 20th and remaining in the parish until 1920.
Apart from the Rose family at the mill, no other
tenant families remained in the parish for as long.
The Hill family, successful graziers, leased closes
of meadow and pasture in the east of the parish in
the later 18th century, and held Manor farm from
c. 1796 until the 1850s but seem to have left soon
after. (fn. 153)
The bulk of the population always worked as
day labourers. A fuller was mentioned in 1590
and there were from the 16th to the 18th centuries
several shepherds, graziers, and masons; local
masons were responsible for repairs to the church
throughout the 18th century and there is a
notable collection of 17th- and 18th-century
gravestones in the churchyard. In the mid 18th
century there were two shoemakers, a tailor, and
a maltster. There were still extensive commons in
the parish, although they were being inclosed by
the late 18th century, and many villagers kept
a few sheep or cattle. (fn. 154) The villagers were, on the
whole, reckoned to be poor, describing themselves in 1762 as 'few in number and almost all
tenants . . . burdened with a numerous poor'. (fn. 155)
Neither the Oxford-Banbury road nor the Oxford
canal, completed in 1790, brought much commercial benefit to the parish. The chief beneficiary was probably the Fox inn, used regularly
throughout the late 18th century for meetings
of the trustees of the Kidlington-Deddington
turnpike, and occasionally used by the canal
company. (fn. 156)
In the 19th century and early 20th the overwhelming majority of men were still employed as
agricultural labourers. One or two masons continued to work in the village, but other normal
village occupations such as shoemakers, grocers,
bakers, and publicans were thinly represented.
A small limekiln west of the Oxford-Banbury
road was worked by a family living in the cottage
east of the road. There were also two or three
quarries, used irregularly. The Goodman family,
maltsters from at least the mid 18th century until
c. 1871, worked at premises at the north-east end
of the village street, south-west of North Aston
Manor. There was almost no employment for
women other than domestic service at North
Aston Hall and casual labouring jobs. Glovemaking or dressmaking seems to have provided
work only for the occasional individual. (fn. 157) In the
later 20th century the village has increasingly
housed people whose jobs lay elsewhere, most
notably at the nearby airforce base at Upper
Heyford.
A mill was recorded at North Aston in 1086. (fn. 158)
It stood at the eastern edge of the parish, on a cut
taken from the river Cherwell; it was held for
most of the 13th century by the Gambon family,
and retained the name Gambon's mill in the late
18th century. (fn. 159) In 1227 Simon Gambon was said
to hold two mills but only one was recorded in
1279; the earlier reference may have been to
a mill with two water-races and wheels. (fn. 160) A
double mill seems to have been in use from the
later 16th century to the early 18th, sometimes
with separate tenants. (fn. 161) One mill was said to be
worthless to the tenant because it was let at rack
rent, but families continued to hold it for long
periods and in 1618 John Fitchett left an estate
valued at £86. (fn. 162) The other mill was held by the
Sleamaker family in the 17th and early 18th
centuries, and may have been more valuable for
a time, John Sleamaker's estate being worth £105
at his death in 1663. (fn. 163) The double mill was last
mentioned in 1733. (fn. 164) The Rose family were
millers from the mid 17th century until c. 1938. (fn. 165)
By 1955 the mill had been converted to private
use, although restored machinery remained in
1980. (fn. 166)
Local Government.
Bradenstoke priory
and the lords of North Aston held manorial
courts for their tenants, but no reference to their
operation later than 1484 has been found. (fn. 167)
There were the usual parish officers. The
churchwardens, whose accounts survive from
1751, were concerned with routine matters
of church maintenance. Money was raised by
a parish rate varying from 1d. to 3d. in the pound.
The highest expenditure was £45 spent on
church repairs in 1858, but average annual
expenditure ranged from c. £5 in the mid 18th
century to c. £20 in the late 19th century. (fn. 168)
In 1702 the parish built a cottage for a destitute
family who had become a charge on the rates. (fn. 169)
By the later 18th century there were four such
cottages, two of which, on the north side of the
village street, remained in 1843. In the 1770s the
vicarage was rented by the overseers for the use of
the poor, and aged or disabled parishioners were
occasionally sent to the Banbury workhouse. (fn. 170)
Relief was more usually given at home, however,
and in 1775 regular relief was given to eight
women and one man. By the early 19th century
the number of adults on permanent relief had
risen to c. 12. (fn. 171) The roundsman system was in use
by 1775 when two or three labourers were so
employed; by 1800 the number had risen to 18. (fn. 172)
In 1835 North Aston was cited as an example of
the abuse to which the roundsman system was
open: a man working for the brother of an
overseer was paid only 10d. by his employer and
9s. by the parish. (fn. 173)
In 1776 expenditure on the poor was £79. As
elsewhere expenditure grew rapidly in the late
18th century, reaching £235 in 1803, a cost of £1
1s. per head of population. (fn. 174) Expenditure in
North Aston, unlike other parishes in the area,
fell back in the period immediately following the
Napoleonic Wars; by 1819 it had fallen to c. 13s. a
head, a total of £199. In 1820, however, expenditure leaped to c. 23s. a head (£342). It
remained high thereafter, reaching a peak of
£1 16s. a head (£583) in 1832, relatively one of
the highest figures for the area. (fn. 175)
In 1834 North Aston became part of the
Woodstock poor law union. In 1894 the parish
was included in Woodstock rural district, in 1932
in Banbury rural district, and in 1974 in Cherwell
district. (fn. 176)
Church.
The church existed by the mid 12th
century when William of Aston (fl. 1151) gave it
to Bradenstoke priory. (fn. 177) Appropriation took place
in 1227 when a vicarage was ordained. (fn. 178) The
advowson of the vicarage and the appropriated
rectory descended with Bradenstoke manor (fn. 179)
until the 17th century when, because of their
recusancy, the Brooke family exercised their
patronage through proxies. Thus Daniel Bitterton, presented in 1618 by William Elliots of
Madeley Court (Salop.), referred to Sir Basil
Brooke as 'my worthy patron'. (fn. 180) On Bitterton's
death in 1637 a presentation was made by John
Southby of Carswell (Berks.), but his nominee
was never inducted and the presentation then and
in 1643 was by Richard Colchester of Gray's
Inn. (fn. 181) Presentations in 1663 and 1678 were made
by Basil Fitzherbert of Norbury (Derb.) and
John Purcell of Madeley, close associates of the
Brooke family; the presentation in 1687 was by
Fitzherbert, Purcell, and Basil Brooke. (fn. 182) In 1693
and 1702 presentations were made by the Crown
following the lapse of the living. (fn. 183) Presentation in
1711 was by Nathaniel Pigott, probably on behalf
of Lady Winifred Brooke. (fn. 184) In 1729 Charles
Bowles arranged with the patron of Fritwell for
the livings to be held by a single incumbent, to be
presented by them alternately. That informal
arrangement lasted until 1833. (fn. 185) Thereafter the
advowson passed with the manor until 1932,
when, under an order in council of 1921, the
benefice was united with that of Duns Tew; the
patron of North Aston was to present two times
in every three. That union was dissolved in 1977
when the benefice of North Aston was united
with those of Steeple Aston and Tackley. The
joint patrons were Brasenose College, St. John's
College, and Lt.-Col. A. D. Taylor. (fn. 186)
At the time of appropriation the vicarage was
worth 5 marks, derived from altar-dues, a house,
6 a., the tithes of two mills, all the small tithes of
North Aston, and half the tithes of Nethercote in
Middle Aston. (fn. 187) Bradenstoke priory was in effect
endowing the vicarage with those revenues which
it had most difficulty in collecting; the tithes of
the mills and of Nethercote were the subject of
prolonged litigation. (fn. 188) The settlement of those
disputes may be indicated by the doubling in
value of the vicarage by 1291 to £6 13s. 4d., which
remained its value until the 16th century. (fn. 189) In
1526 the value was said to be £8, but that may be
a reference to the rectory, and in 1536 the
vicarage was once more assessed at £6 13s. 4d. (fn. 190)
In the later 16th century the small tithes were
commuted for money payments, perhaps explaining the increase in value of the vicarage to
£50 at the beginning of the 17th century. (fn. 191) By the
early 18th century, however, the value had fallen
to £40, of which £6 derived from glebe. (fn. 192) The
glebe comprised a house and orchard, a close of
4–5 a., 1½ a. in Middle Aston, presumably in
exchange for the Nethercote tithes, and as much
hay from Cross Meadow as could be drawn in one
load by four horses. (fn. 193) By 1806 the glebe had been
reduced to the house and garden, a close of 3 a.,
and two cow commons, worth £12. Small tithes
were valued at £98. (fn. 194) In 1850 the house and
glebe, which lay east of the church, were exchanged for a house and land north of the
junction of the roads from Duns Tew and Middle
Aston. (fn. 195) The old vicarage house was a simple
cottage. In 1618 the incoming vicar bought from
his predecessor's widow not only all the glass in
the house but also the wood used recently to build
a loft over the kitchen. (fn. 196) In the mid 19th century
the house was used as a beer shop, and was
demolished soon after the exchange of 1850. (fn. 197)
The new vicarage house, a plain 2-storeyed
ironstone building of c. 1800 with a smaller range
at its east end, was considerably extended in the
later 19th century. The house and glebe were
sold in 1975. (fn. 198) The 1½ a. in Middle Aston were
not mentioned at the inclosure of Middle Aston
in 1756, and although they were acknowledged in
1841 no one knew where they lay. (fn. 199) In 1843 the
vicar was awarded £187 for small tithes. William
Foster-Melliar restored the great tithes, valued at
£51 in 1843, to the church c. 1863. (fn. 200) In 1907 the
gross value of the living was said to be £237; in
1914 a grant from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and a private benefaction increased
the net value to £214. (fn. 201)
In 1548 there was an endowment of lands
worth 1s. 8d. a year for a light in the church; its
origin had long been forgotten. (fn. 202)
The living at North Aston was not prosperous
enough to attract those with influence at Bradenstoke and the priory often appointed local men.
Most incumbents resigned North Aston for
better livings; an exception was William Thomas,
who died of the plague in 1349. (fn. 203) William Felton
(1462–70) was a master of grammar at Oxford
and rented the scola philosophiae naturalis there in
1455–6. (fn. 204) In the early 16th century two successive
vicars employed curates, apparently to the detriment of the parish. (fn. 205) Matters improved under
Nicholas Pye (1538–59), William Best (1569–72),
and Edward Giles (1585–1617), who were all
resident at North Aston and appear to have
served the parish conscientiously. (fn. 206) Giles married
a local woman and the daughter of his successor,
Daniel Bitterton (1617–37), married a member of
the Wing family. (fn. 207) The patrons of the living from
1574, the Brookes, were Roman Catholics, but
there is no evidence of any attempt to install
crypto-Catholic clergy. In 1650 the vicar was
probably ejected in favour of a Parliament appointee, the subject of hostile comment in the
parish register: 'Mr. Allbright, the minister of
North Aston as he says himself, but the townsmen doth not take him to be so'. (fn. 208) From the later
17th century non-residence was usual. Nicholas
Profett (1661–4) and Richard Byfield (1664–78)
were fellows of Magdalen College for whom the
parish was simply a source of income. (fn. 209) The
reason for the connexion with Magdalen is not
clear, but it continued in 1678 with the presentation of John Hough, later bishop of Worcester.
Hough was in the same year appointed domestic
chaplain to James Butler, duke of Ormonde, and
his preferment to both posts was probably due to
the close association between the duke and Col.
Edward Vernon, stepfather of Basil Brooke;
Vernon was living at North Aston at that time. (fn. 210)
Hough's distinguished career kept him permanently away from North Aston until his
resignation in 1687, and it is perhaps significant
that his incumbency there is almost totally
ignored by his biographers. (fn. 211)
Hough's successor, Nathaniel Bevan (1694–
1702), fellow of Jesus College, was another nonresident. He experienced extreme difficulty in
obtaining any income from the benefice, despite
serving the parish himself from Oxford. (fn. 212) In an
attempt to solve the financial problems at no cost
to himself, the patron of the living, Charles
Bowles, agreed with the patron of Fritwell in
1729 that the two parishes should be held together. William Vaughan (1711–40) was the first
incumbent of the joint benefice. He was succeeded by his son, also William Vaughan (1740–
63), James Hakewill (1763–99), and Henry
Linton (1799–1841), who resigned Fritwell in
1831. (fn. 213) The scheme may have improved the
financial position of the clergy but it did little to
reorganize and enhance church life at North
Aston. The Vaughans and Hakewill all lived at
Fritwell, although serving North Aston personally. There was usually one service on Sundays, occasional catechism, and three or four
communion services a year attended by only c. 20
communicants. (fn. 214) The minimal fulfilment of their
obligation by the vicars did not necessarily stem
from laziness. Hakewill, for example, was also
vicar of Chesterton, Weston-on-the-Green, and
Cumnor (Berks.), and rector of Tusmore. He was
remembered in the 19th century as riding busily
about the countryside on a Sunday, trying to
cram in as many services as possible. (fn. 215)
Henry Linton neither lived in nor took much
interest in North Aston, staying permanently on
his other living at Dinton (Wilts.). North Aston
was served by a string of curates, one of whom,
John Mavor of Lincoln College, caused considerable scandal in his later career and died in
Oxford gaol. (fn. 216) During Linton's long incumbency there was never more than one service on
Sundays. The situation improved with the appointment of Robert Brown as curate in 1839. He
was forbidden by Linton to hold more than one
Sunday service lest future curates should ask for
an increased stipend, but he reintroduced morning prayer. (fn. 217) Brown succeeded Linton as vicar in
1841 with, in the bishop's words, 'nothing in his
favour', neither decent income nor house. (fn. 218)
Nevertheless he held no other benefices and,
serving the parish from his home at Kidlington,
increased the number of services on Sunday to
two and stimulated larger attendances. (fn. 219) The
revival continued under his successor, Charles
Rede Clifton (1847–1901), who introduced daily
services in Advent and Lent, and fortnightly
communion services. In the later 19th century
the congregation increased to 80–90 people. (fn. 220)
The revival was enthusiastically encouraged by
William Foster-Melliar, who restored the great
tithes to the living, provided a house, and extensively restored the church. The south chapel
in the church was converted to a Lady chapel,
and North Aston was known into the 20th
century for its High Church inclinations. (fn. 221)
The church of ST. MARY is narrowly separated from the east end of North Aston Hall. The
church was first mentioned in the mid 12th
century, but the present building dates from the
14th. It comprises chancel, nave, south and north
aisles and chapels, south porch, and a narrow
embattled tower at the west end. (fn. 222) The chancel
of three bays is, unusually, longer than the
two-bayed nave and perhaps represents the
non-functional application of monastic practice
to a parish church by its owners, Bradenstoke
priory.
In the late 14th century the south aisle was
extended to form a chapel adjoining the chancel.
The wall between chancel and chapel was pierced
towards its western end by a squint. (fn. 223) Stone used
for the church c. 1484 and allegedly stolen by
John Anne from buildings belonging to Bradenstoke priory (fn. 224) was perhaps used for the tower.
The tower was built partially inset into the nave,
presumably because development westwards was
restricted by the proximity of the house. The
clerestory was perhaps added at the same time.
An arch was made between the chancel and the
east end of the south chapel to accommodate the
Anne tomb, and the chapel was given a new east
window. A new window was also inserted in the
north aisle, presumably at the east end. The
church contained a rood screen but the dates of
its construction and removal are unknown.
Extensive restoration was carried out c. 1711 (fn. 225)
by Lady Catherine Howard, lessee of North
Aston Hall. The chancel was paved and a roundheaded single-light east window inserted. A low
plaster ceiling was installed in the chancel, blocking the top of the chancel arch. The chancel was
wainscotted, pews were introduced, and the altar
railed in. A painted Grecian screen and a new
pulpit and reading desk were installed. The south
chapel was also ceiled, the church roof painted,
and the walls whitewashed. (fn. 226)
A major restoration took place in 1866–7 under
the supervision of G. G. Scott and at the expense
of William Foster-Melliar. The plaster ceilings
were removed and new wooden roofs installed,
although some older beams appear to have been
retained. In the south aisle a matching arch was
built west of the earlier one between the south
chapel and the chancel. The north aisle was
extended to match the south aisle and chapel, the
extension incorporating an organ chamber and
vestry. The north aisle was linked to the chancel
by two arches, necessitating the removal of two
windows, one of which appears to have been reused in the vestry. The remaining north window
of the chancel was replaced or heavily restored.
The east end of the vestry contains a re-used
15th-century window; it seems too large to have
come from the original east end of the north
aisle (fn. 227) and may have been taken from the west
wall of the tower, where a new, larger window in
15th-century style was inserted. The east window
of the chancel was replaced by a pointed window
of three lights. The upper doorway of the roodstairs was restored and blocked. The altar railings,
pulpit, and chancel screen were replaced and
a matching screen placed between the north aisle
and chancel. The church was repewed, although
some bench ends survive. On the outside of the
church the angle buttresses at the east end of
the chancel, the pinnacles on the tower, and the
elaborate rainwater heads are part of the same
restoration.
There is a 14th-century piscina in the south
chapel. The font is possibly also of the same
period. (fn. 228) There are fragments of late 15thcentury stained glass depicting the arms of the
Anne and Giffard families in the east and southeast windows of the south chapel. (fn. 229) Between the
chapel and the chancel is an alabaster tomb
supporting the figures of a knight in armour and
a lady. Around the tomb are 14 monks, and three
angels support armorial shields. An inscription,
now lost, bore the names of John Anne and Alice
his wife, and the date 1416. That date cannot be
correct, because of the tomb's style and because
the Anne family were not at North Aston by that
date. Armorial and documentary evidence suggests that it was for John Anne (fl. 1485) and
Alice Giffard. (fn. 230) Among other monuments are
floor slabs and wall plaques to members of the
Brooke, Bowles, Foster-Melliar, and Taylor
families, to a servant of the Bowles family, to
Richard Wootton (d. 1667), and to Bernard
Gates (d. 1773). There is a notable collection of
17th- and 18th-century gravestones in the
churchyard. The plate includes a silver chalice
and paten cover of 1583, a silver paten given by
Lady Catherine Howard in 1719, and a pewter
plate. (fn. 231) In the early 18th century there were three
bells, melted down in 1741 to make two new
bells. Two further bells were given in 1866 by
William Foster-Melliar. (fn. 232) In 1979 one of the
18th-century bells was recast, two new bells were
added, and a bell-ringing floor built at the
expense of Col. A. Taylor. (fn. 233) A single-handed
clock, given by Lady Howard, was replaced in
1867. (fn. 234)
Nonconformity.
From the mid 16th
century to the early 18th North Aston was in the
hands of leading Catholic families, the Annes and
the Brookes. (fn. 235) In 1676 there were 14 Catholics in
the parish, almost a sixth of the adult population. (fn. 236) That high figure was doubtless due to the
residence there of Elizabeth Brooke. In the late
17th century and early 18th the number of
Catholics remained high and in 1706 it was
reported that a priest said Mass in the parish
on most Sundays. (fn. 237) In 1716 North Aston passed
to Henrietta Fermor of Tusmore, a member
of a strongly Catholic family related to the
Brookes. (fn. 238) The Fermors, however, took little
part in North Aston life and the number of
Catholics there dwindled to a single family by
1738; in 1780 there was one Catholic in the
village. (fn. 239) In 1817 four North Aston Catholics
travelled to Tusmore to worship (fn. 240) but thereafter
the once strong Catholic tradition in the parish
seems to have died away completely.
The opinion expressed by the churchwarden
Thomas Burton in the 1650s that the intruded
minister, Mr. Allbright, was unacceptable to the
parish may not have been unanimous; Allbright's
successor, Robert Lytler, a Presbyterian, had
little difficulty in replacing Burton when he
resigned in 1658. (fn. 241) The religious views of the new
churchwarden, William Baseley, are not recorded, but his descendants who lived at Coldharbour farm for much of the 18th century were
Presbyterian. (fn. 242) In the early 19th century there
was a strong contrast between the sluggish life of
the Church of England in North Aston and a
flourishing community of c. 20 Methodists. (fn. 243)
Many of the Methodists also attended the parish
church, but they had a meeting house of their
own, which in 1834 was the house of a shopkeeper in the village, visited by a teacher on
Sunday afternoons. (fn. 244) There were c. 30 nonconformists in 1860, but they no longer had their
own place of worship. (fn. 245) In the later 19th century
North Aston formed part of the Deddington
circuit of the Wesley an Reform Union. Services
were held possibly at the house of Jesse French,
treasurer of the circuit and North Aston postmaster. (fn. 246)
Education.
In 1759 a voluntary charity
school failed for lack of support. (fn. 247) By 1815 there
were two mixed schools in the village; one,
established c. 1785, had 18 pupils, the other,
established c. 1799, had twelve. In both the
teachers were paid by parents, although some
children were taught at the expense of the earl of
Normanton, lessee of North Aston Hall; other
children attended the National Society school at
Deddington. (fn. 248) There were still two day schools
in 1834, one for 20 children taught at their
parents' expense, the other for 10 girls supported
by Henrietta-Louisa Scott, countess of Clonmell,
then living at North Aston Hall. A Sunday school
recently established by the curate received wider
assistance than the day schools, and was supported by the vicar, the lord of the manor, and
local farmers. (fn. 249)
A new school was built in 1844, but standards
at that time were low and 'sitting still was the
chief thing taught'. (fn. 250) The school was placed
under diocesan inspection and, supported by
Col. Charles Oldfield Bowles who had returned
to live at North Aston Hall, there was a marked
improvement. In 1854 it was attended by c. 40
children. There was also a small private school.
A Sunday school for girls was held at North
Aston Hall; the boys had a small building of their
own. The vicar tried unsuccessfully to run an
evening school for adults, and it had failed by
1878 for lack of support. (fn. 251)
In the 1860s there were twice as many girls as
boys at the school, partly because girls stayed on
until the age of 13 whereas boys left at ten. (fn. 252) In
1872 a row of cottages on the south side of the
village green was converted into new school
buildings by William Foster-Melliar, lord of the
manor. In 1875 the school was attended by 14
boys, 19 girls, 20 infants. Some children went to
school at Steeple Aston. (fn. 253) Annual government
grants were received from 1876, and thereafter
the school was financed by grants, fees, and
subscriptions. (fn. 254)
In 1902 there were 48 pupils, but the numbers
declined thereafter. (fn. 255) In 1923 the school became
a junior school only, with 19 pupils. Seniors went
to Steeple Aston. The school had an excellent
reputation, but the declining number of children
in the village led to its closure in 1955, when the
remaining pupils were transferred to Steeple
Aston. (fn. 256) The school building reverted to private
accommodation.
Charities.
William Kendall by deed of 1570
gave a rent of 6s. 8d. from 1 a. of meadow, later
known as Poor's Plot, for distribution among the
poor of the parish, the remaining income from
the land to be used for the payment of any taxes
due from the poor. By 1706 the rent had risen to
18s.; 6s. 8d. was still distributed to the poor, but
the remainder was regularly misappropriated by
the trustees. (fn. 257) For most of the 18th century the
land was let to the highest bidder and the whole
rent, usually c. £2, was devoted to the poor. By
the late 18th century the rent was fixed at £2
10s. (fn. 258) The income from Poor's Plot was amalgamated with that from another charity, known
as Poor's Stock. The latter derived from a gift of
£10, later invested in stock, made by Henry
Churchill (d. 1628). (fn. 259) Interest of 10s., combined
with the Poor's Plot money, was distributed at
Christmas in the form of firewood, a loaf, and
1 lb. of beef to every poor family. In the 19th
century coal or blankets were dispensed. (fn. 260) By
1890 the £3 had become a rent charge on North
Aston Hall. (fn. 261)
Robert Brown (d. 1847), vicar of North Aston,
by will left £40 to be invested in stock, the
interest to be divided among the aged poor of the
parish; those named Robert or Mary (his wife's
name) were to receive a double portion. (fn. 262) Interest
was 18s. in 1890 and £1 in 1979. (fn. 263) In the later
20th century Poor's Plot and Stock, and the
Brown charity were administered by the parish
council and the funds spent on ecclesiastical
purposes. (fn. 264)