GREAT TEW
Great Tew, a large parish of 3,007 a. (1,217
ha.) lies 16 miles (26 km.) north-west of Oxford
and 8 miles (13 km.) south-west of Banbury on
the edge of the north Oxfordshire uplands. (fn. 1) The
name Tew may refer to a long ridge, of which
there are several in the area, but the derivation
remains uncertain. (fn. 2) The form Cyrictiwa (Church
Tew) reflects Great Tew's importance as an early
ecclesiastical centre: Nether Worton was a
dependent chapelry until the 17th century, and
Little Tew did not become a completely separate
parish until c. 1857, though for some purposes it
was largely independent long before. (fn. 3) Duns
Tew, though geographically distinct, may
originally have formed a single estate with the
other Tews, (fn. 4) and it, too, may once have been
ecclesiastically dependent on Great Tew, since
the road running westwards out of Duns Tew
was called Churchway.
The ancient township of Great Tew, like the
modern parish, was compact in shape, bounded
on south and north by ancient roads, while its
western and eastern boundaries (with Little Tew
and Sandford St. Martin) followed contours and
small streams. The undulating terrain of the
southern half, cut through from west to east by
the river Dorn, rises to over 180 m. on the ridge
south of the village. The northern half, though
slightly lower over all, has sharper relief, cut
through from west to east by a narrow central
valley in which the village lies and by a wider
valley in the north. Between the valleys stands
the flat-topped ridge of Horse hill and Cow hill
(150–60 m.). The northern streams are fed by
numerous springs, and meet on the eastern
boundary. The southern half of the township lies
on the limestone of the Great Oolite, except for
two tongues of Upper Lias clay projecting from
the west; the northern half is on the ironstone of
the Middle Lias, cut through by streams to
Lower Lias clay in the valleys. (fn. 5) The stonebrash
south remained predominantly arable and open,
with little woodland; the 'red land' north, traditionally pastoral, became thickly wooded as a
result of 19th-century planting.
The road on the northern perimeter was the
Deddington to Chipping Norton road, turnpiked
in 1770 and disturnpiked in 1871; (fn. 6) in 1774 it
seems to have cut off much of the tip of the parish,
but had been rerouted round the boundary by
1815. (fn. 7) The southern boundary was formed by
Green Lane, known also as London way, (fn. 8) an
ancient route which was never metalled and
remained a popular drove road into the 19th
century; from the Chipping Norton area it ran
south-eastwards to the drovers' inn at Cuckold's
Holt (near the southern tip of Great Tew township) and so to Glympton and Wootton. (fn. 9)
Great Tew village formed the centre of a radial
pattern of roads which was altered to an unusual
extent from the 18th century. A way from the
village to the northern boundary apparently ran
north-eastwards from the Square to join a treelined avenue running for over a mile in a straight
line from the centre of the park to the northern
boundary. (fn. 10) The creation of the avenue, evidently
well established by the mid 18th century, (fn. 11) may
have involved the landscaping of an existing
road; the possibility that such a road was Roman
or Romanized is suggested by its straightness, its
near alignment on an important Roman site at
Beaconsfield Farm, and unconfirmed reports of
metalled surfaces discovered in the northernmost
section of the former avenue. (fn. 12) A 'street' in the
southern half of the parish was mentioned in the
13th century. (fn. 13) That the avenue road was once
used as a direct route to Banbury is suggested by
the names Banbury Road ground and Banbury
copse recorded along its route in 1774; (fn. 14) at the
boundary it joined a track through South
Newington, mentioned as the way to Tew in
1507. (fn. 15) By the late 18th century the road seems to
have lost its importance as a through route, and
soon afterwards the central section of the avenue
was destroyed by J. C. Loudon's alterations
described below. The northernmost stretch of
Loudon's new northbound road of c. 1810 marks
the line of the avenue, and a double line of trees
survived between Lodge ponds and the park
until recent times. (fn. 16)
The village was connected with Little Tew by
Churchway, (fn. 17) and with Ledwell, in Sandford St.
Martin, by Ledwell Lane in 1767, perhaps called
a lane because it was confined between old
inclosures at Beaconsfield and the park. A road
running eastward from the Square along the
north wall of the park to Nether Worton was
declared a bridleway at inclosure in 1767. (fn. 18)
Woodstock way, probably the Portway in the
south field in the 13th century, ran from the south
end of the village on a curving line to Poor Bridge
across the Dorn, and so to Cuckold's Holt; (fn. 19) it
was repaired in 1688 and 1809, but in 1818 the
section north of Poor Bridge was replaced by a
new road following the straight edges of the
Beaconsfield old inclosures. (fn. 20) The bridge, also
recorded as Fore and Wore Bridge, (fn. 21) was only a
foot bridge with a ford in the 19th century; the
road ceased to be used as a through route with the
advent of motor traffic. The Enstone road was the
13th-century Woodway, crossing the Dorn at
Woodway ford; (fn. 22) presumably it was the way to
the royal forest of Wychwood. In the 18th
century it ran south-west from the Green and
past Court Farm to cross Churchway at the
present Crossroads clump and continued northeastwards past Court Farm to the Green, but at
inclosure only the section south of the crossroads
was confirmed as a public road. (fn. 23) In 1800 the
road was turnpiked, (fn. 24) and soon afterwards a new
straight section was built from Crossroads clump
to join a road running north-westwards from the
village to the Banbury turnpike, (fn. 25) thus creating
an early bypass. The road was disturnpiked in
1877; a toll house stood on its east side near the
junction with Mill Lane. (fn. 26) Just north of the
bridge at Great Pool (Great Pondtail Beds) a road
branched off to Swerford, passing obliquely up
Chescombe hill, but in 1818 it was replaced by a
shorter link leaving the turnpike road further
north. (fn. 27) A road called Norton way ran westward
from the south end of the village, roughly on the
line of the surviving track past Crimea Yard, and
so across Little Tew fields to the Chipping
Norton road; the road fell out of use in the early
19th century. A way called Millway branched
southwards off Woodstock way to a ford at South
mill and so towards Enstone, and another minor
field road called Brylands way, between and
parallel to Millway and Woodway, also forded
the river. (fn. 28) A short driftway, apparently on the
line of the surviving lane running northwards
past Park Farm, connected the village with Cow
hill pasture; in 1774 it was known as Clinkers, but
an earlier name was Rudaway or Rodaway,
presumably 'rother way'. (fn. 29)
Prehistoric remains found in the township
include a Bronze Age barrow east of Hookerswell
Farm and a polished flint axe of that period from
French's hollow in the north. Neolithic or Bronze
Age pottery was found near Round hill. (fn. 30) A
standing stone of unknown date survives south of
Beaconsfield Farm. (fn. 31) A Roman villa discovered
at Beaconsfield Farm in the 17th century (fn. 32) was
later found to have been a large courtyard house
with tessellated pavements and a hypocaust, the
dated finds being of the 3rd and 4th centuries. (fn. 33)
Anglo-Saxon settlement of the area, perhaps
encouraged by the existence of cultivated fields
around the villa, was probably early. A group of
field names in Great and Little Tew (Ayelsbury,
Ayelspit, Alepath) refer to a certain Aegel, whose
name, whether that of a real man or a mythic
hero, seems to have been given to earthworks,
probably Roman. Another early field name refers
to an unidentified Grimsditch. (fn. 34) An Anglo-Saxon
inhumation was discovered at Beaconsfield Farm
in 1965, (fn. 35) but the site eventually chosen by early
settlers for a village was nearly a mile away from
the Roman site. Despite its large extent Great
Tew seems to have had only one centre of
settlement, in contrast to Sandford, its neighbour
on a very similar stretch of country. Except for
Beaconsfield Farm, established after a partial
inclosure by Sir Laurence Tanfield in 1622, two
other farms established on old inclosures of
unknown date in the far north, and two medieval
water mills, (fn. 36) all the outlying sites were settled
after the parliamentary inclosure of Great Tew in
1767.
In 1086 there were 53 recorded tenants at
Great Tew, and by 1279 at least 75 households. (fn. 37)
In 1377 only 165 adults were assessed for poll
tax, (fn. 38) about average for a north Oxfordshire
parish of Great Tew's size, but nevertheless
implying considerable population loss during the
14th century, presumably through plague. By the
mid 16th century the population had risen, for 64
persons were assessed for subsidy in 1544, (fn. 39) and
some 15 other Great Tew families whose
members escaped the subsidy were mentioned in
contemporary wills, receiving the traditional
bequests from the better-off to 'every poor
cottager'. (fn. 40) The Protestation oath of 1642 was
sworn by 166 adult males in Great and Little
Tew, of whom c. 80 are identifiable from wills as
residents of Great Tew, c. 30 of Little Tew, while
the rest remain uncertain. (fn. 41) In 1675 a total of 326
adults in Great and Little Tew was recorded,
suggesting that the population of the parish was
fairly stable in the 17th century. In Great Tew
itself 60 households were assessed for hearth tax
in 1662, but in 1738, 1759, and 1768 vicars
reported 95, 92, and c. 80 houses. (fn. 42) A detailed
survey in 1778, however, shows that there were
only 73 houses in the village, including the manor
house, and 6 more in the fields (2 mills and 4
farmhouses); (fn. 43) it seems more likely that the
estimates of 1738 and 1759 were too high rather
than that inclosure had sharply reduced the
housing stock. In 1801 there were said to be 72
houses, 87 families, and a total population of 402.
The number of houses rose slowly throughout
the 19th century to 102 in 1891; the population
during that period reached peaks of 531 and 551
in 1821 and 1851, but was usually nearer 450.
There was a shift away from the village, and in
1841, even if Court, Leys, and Park Farms are
counted as village houses, there were c. 20
families living on outlying sites. (fn. 44) From the
1890s the population fell to only 334 in 1901,
when 14 houses were vacant, and after holding its
own for some decades fell sharply after the
Second World War to 204 in 1951 and 211 in
1971. (fn. 45)
The village was built near the centre of the
parish on the north facing slope of the central
valley. The church stands alone just below the
brow of the ridge, and close by it to the northeast was the former manor house, demolished
c. 1800. (fn. 46) The imparkment which isolated the
church and manor house from the village took
place before the late 16th century; (fn. 47) though some
houses may have been absorbed when the park
was made, the lack of water on the hill top makes
it likely that much of the medieval village, as
later, occupied the lower slopes. Even so a
medieval street linking the village and church
was presumably deflected round the manor site,
the new line marked by the row of houses facing
the walled gardens. That group was probably
well established by the late 17th century, the date
of part of the vicarage house at the southern end
of the row. (fn. 48)
Until the street plan was severely altered in the
19th century the southern street continued
straight down the hill into the present main
village street (Old Road) and so to the Green. (fn. 49)
Near the present manor house a street branched
north-eastwards along a spur to the surviving
group of houses known as the Square; that street
contained houses on the west side only, the other
side occupied by the park boundary. Two tracks
linked the streets across a shallow valley,
the southernmost called Floods Lane. (fn. 50) Architectural evidence suggests that by the 17th
century the built-up area also stretched, albeit
more thinly, along lanes branching westwards
and northwards from the Green.
When M. R. Boulton, son of the engineer
Matthew Boulton of Soho, Birmingham, bought
the Great Tew estate in 1815–16 he took over as
the manor house from his predecessor, G. F.
Stratton, a small house in the fork of the two main
streets. (fn. 51) In 1818 he was authorized to close part
of the eastern street and Floods Lane, and to
provide a new straight link between the Square
and the Green. (fn. 52) The link road eventually provided was not on the agreed line, but the eastern
lane seems to have been closed and absorbed into
the Wilderness in the park by 1833. (fn. 53) In the
1850s, however, Court Farm was given a porch
'from the Wilderness' (fn. 54) which was similar to
other decorative features added to the village
houses in the 1820s, so a house or houses in that
area may have survived the closure. In 1855, to
provide space west of the manor house, M. P. W.
Boulton closed off the main south-north street,
'very precipitous, dangerous, and inconvenient',
and built a new road curving further west to enter
the Green through part of the school playground. (fn. 55) The hour-glass shape of the 18thcentury green had already been substantially
altered by the building of a new school on its
south side in 1852. (fn. 56) The result of the various
street closures was to divide the village into three
or four apparently unrelated groups of houses,
which at least one contemporary observer thought
damaging to the 'once picturesque village'. (fn. 57)

Great Tew (c.late 18th century)
Even so the village has maintained a reputation,
established by the mid 19th century, (fn. 58) for its
outstanding appearance, and even its surviving
'plan' has been admired. (fn. 59) The houses and
cottages, many of them in rows, are of the local
ironstone, roofed with thatch or stone slate; they
stand in box-hedged gardens against a background of large ornamental trees. The complete
absence of modern housing, even the dereliction
of some of the property, enhances the impression
of a 'sylvan arcadia'. (fn. 60) Some of the houses date
partly or wholly from the 17th century, but the
scale of 19th-century renovation in traditional
style or reusing old materials makes identification
uncertain: the date 1636 and the arms of the
Falklands on a cottage (no. 12) were evidently
reset during 19th-century rebuilding, and even
the date 1728 on an apparently authentic 18thcentury house (no. 6) may be one of several such
datestones reputedly placed during 19th-century
rebuilding to commemorate the birth date of
Matthew Boulton. (fn. 61) There is no reason, however,
to doubt the inscription in a cottage in the Square
(no. 51) recording its erection by John Hiorn for
John Stowe and his wife in 1680; (fn. 62) and the plan or
detail of other houses such as the Falkland Arms,
Court Farm, Leys Farm, and an L-shaped house
(no. 62) at Keale's Corner, besides parts of many
on the Green and Old Road, are clearly 17thcentury or earlier. Coursed rubble walls, stone
mullions, plain dripmoulds, and ovolo-moulded
wood mullions are common features of the early
houses.
A suggestion that Great Tew was planned and
rebuilt by the lord of the manor, Lucius Cary,
Lord Falkland (d. 1643), seems to have been
based on little more than the survival of a single
datestone of that period and the allegation that
his predecessor Sir Laurence Tanfield had
deprived the inhabitants of timber, causing the
houses to fall into disrepair. (fn. 63) Though Great
Tew was very much an estate village, probably
in single ownership by the mid 16th century,
Falkland's tenants held leases for lives (fn. 64) and
would hardly have submitted to lordly replanning without comment; it is unlikely, too, that
any charitable rebuilding would have been overlooked in the various hagiographical accounts of
Falkland's life or that of his wife, Lettice. Like
most other villages in the region Great Tew was
probably rebuilt in the 16th and 17th centuries
by individual householders.
Among the comparatively few surviving
18th-century houses is Tulip Tree cottage on
Brook Road, which has wooden mullioned and
transomed windows, and a stone slate roof with
dormers. The 19th-century rebuilding of Great
Tew in accordance with consciously 'picturesque'
designs was begun soon after M. R. Boulton's
purchase of the estate. Later he was said to have
'rebuilt the village almost entirely in a very
ornamental and singular style'. (fn. 65) The bulk of his
early expenditure (1816–18) was on the mansion
house and some of the principal farms, notably
Tracey, Beaconsfield, and probably Park Farm. (fn. 66)
The cottages began to receive attention in 1819,
when over £1,600 was spent, and probably
building continued in subsequent years for
which accounts are lacking. (fn. 67) In 1820 the
architect Thomas Rickman was engaged to work
on houses in the village and is known to have
made a number of designs, including one for a
farmhouse and another for an ornamental well; (fn. 68)
the latter was perhaps the 'Fons Tewensis' removed from Old Road in recent times, (fn. 69) although
in 1860 there was also a stone fountain at the
other end of the village. (fn. 70) Boulton was evidently
an active and inventive participant in the rebuilding, (fn. 71) and it is not certain how much of the
surviving early 19th-century work should be
attributed to Rickman alone. In 1828 the young
architect Thomas Fulljames, son of Boulton's
Great Tew agent of that name and a pupil of
Rickman, (fn. 72) was consulted over rebuilding the
vicarage; (fn. 73) he may later have contributed to work
on village houses as well as designing extensions
to the manor house. After M. R. Boulton's death
in 1842 Fulljames and Waller of Gloucester were
M. P. W. Boulton's architects. (fn. 74)
The rebuilding of Great Tew was to some
extent continuous, but much was achieved in the
first concentrated phase, not only in the village
but also over the rest of the estate. Outlying farms
such as Beaconsfield were rebuilt on a generous
scale, using ashlar and stone slate; by 1823 there
were new ranges of farm building at Cottenham
Farm, on the Beaconsfield road (Upper Park
Farm), and on the turnpike road at Horse hill
(Leys Field Barn), and by 1833 on the quarry site
west of the village. (fn. 75) Several features of the
earliest phase of cottage building may be distinguished, notably the use of sawn softwood for
floors, coppice poles for the roofs, stone mullioned windows, dripmoulds with large diamond
stops, stone door-heads, and elaborate stone
porches. In some cases it seems likely that former
outbuildings were converted and gaps between
cottages infilled to form rows, though several
rows existed before Boulton's time. (fn. 76) The planting of trees throughout the village was probably
part of the original Rickman or Boulton plan.
Thatch, though common, was not ubiquitous,
but in 1840 M. R. Boulton, when asked by his
agent to weigh the respective merits of stone slate
and expensively insured thatch, chose thatch
after characteristically detailed calculations. (fn. 77)
A tenacious myth concerning Great Tew is
that the village was landscaped by J. C. Loudon,
the Scottish agriculturalist and gardener, or that
at least his progressive ideas influenced later
rebuilding. (fn. 78) Loudon, an unabashed selfpublicist, made no such claims in his detailed
accounts of a brief association with Tew, which
was confined to laying out, at the invitation of
G. F. Stratton, an extravagant and unsuccessful
model farm in the years 1808–11. (fn. 79) The architectural aspects of that venture, which included a
paper-roofed farmhouse (Tew Lodge) on Cow
hill, (fn. 80) probably did not much impress M. R.
Boulton, who only five years later was considering retimbering the roof to take thatch, making
the windows frames fit, and reflooring with
boards from the demolished mansion house. (fn. 81)
Tew Lodge and its associated farmery, 'an
immense stack of buildings', (fn. 82) were soon replaced
by the solid, traditional, ashlar-built Cottenham
Farm; only Loudon's threshing mill survived,
and that was quickly converted to other uses. (fn. 83)
Loudon founded a short-lived 'agricultural
college' at Great Tew in 1808, but it seems to
have amounted to little more than a few pupils
staying at his house. (fn. 84) He later claimed that his
young Scottish ploughmen had rescued some of
Great Tew's natives from the alehouse by
demonstrating the virtues of milk, oatmeal, and
vegetables. Loudon's more enduring impact,
however, was on the landscape of the northern
part of the estate, where North and South Drive,
now partly overgrown, were built as farm roads,
avoiding awkward gradients by following the
contours of the northern valley; the Lodge ponds
were created to provide power to the threshing
mill, and some progress, though probably less
than Loudon claimed, was made in draining the
fields and grubbing up hedges. Above all Loudon
was responsible for tree planting, particularly on
Cow hill and along the new roads, where exotic
trees still flourish. Though Loudon's planting
programme was not completed, (fn. 85) he achieved
much in a short time. When G. F. Stratton had
taken over his father's estate in 1800 he had found
it well timbered, and Arthur Young, shortly
before Loudon's arrival, mentioned 63 a. of fine
plantations; (fn. 86) they included belts of trees round
the perimeter of much of the estate, small plantations on Cow hill and Round hill, at Conygree
wood (east of Beaconsfield Farm), and in the
park. (fn. 87) The Grove, south of the churchyard
avenue, was already established by 1767, and it
was there that the 'Tew Tree' stood, a giant
silver fir providing a landmark for much of the
19th century. (fn. 88) When Stratton sold the estate to
Boulton it contained well over 120 a. of woodland, excluding that outside the parish. (fn. 89) The
Boultons continued a vigorous planting policy
during the 19th century, (fn. 90) reinforcing the parklike appearance of much of the landscape.
Additions after the first phase of 19th-century
-rebuilding include such houses as no. 31, a tall
thatched ashlar cottage reputedly built for the
estate foreman; the school of 1851; two pairs of
'pattern book' cottages with gabled dormers and
lattice windows on the main road west of Court
Farm; (fn. 91) buildings in the estate yard (Crimea
Yard) of c. 1856, dominated by the tall chimney
of the saw-mill's engine house, which once
contained a beam engine; (fn. 92) a brickyard, long
abandoned, north-west of Hookerswell Farm,
which also dates from the mid 1850s and presumably included the pug-mill installed on the
estate at that time; (fn. 93) and large kitchen gardens
built in 1871–2 south of the road from Ledwell to
Little Tew. (fn. 94) An undated 19th-century stone and
wood structure, comprising a row of low gothic
arches, stands in the garden of nos. 36–7, near a
site known in 1767 as the Dog Kennel; it was
apparently built to house beehives. (fn. 95) The village
stocks survive in mutilated condition on the
Green.
The surviving inn, the Falkland Arms, was so
named by the 1830s. (fn. 96) A Swan inn was mentioned
in 1666; in the 18th century and until at least 1815
there were two inns, the Pole Axe and the Horse
and Groom. (fn. 97) Parish officers, careful to be evenhanded, lodged the travelling poor at both, and
organized the annual parish celebration of May
Day at one and of 'Gunpowder Treason' at the
other. The Horse and Groom, held for much of
the 18th century by the Worley family, probably
became the Falkland Arms, since in 1818 Worley
close lay just east of the surviving inn. (fn. 98)
At the beginning of the 20th century, despite
its exceptional appearance, (fn. 99) Great Tew had
much in common with its neighbours, but thereafter experienced few of the physical and social
changes that transformed other villages. Long
years in the hands of the Public Trustee after
1914 (fn. 100) saw a decline in the fortunes of the estate,
the land under-exploited, the farm buildings
sometimes neglected or abandoned, the population diminished, and vacant cottages in decay.
One pair of cottages on the lane to Park Farm was
demolished in the 1950s, and though there were
few other total losses many cottages remained
derelict in 1980. No new buildings were erected
other than eight council houses on Butcher's Hill
in the late 1940s, and a small sewage plant, built
in the 1960s, to which about half the houses were
connected; piped water was brought to the older
houses in the 1960s.
From 1962 the declared policy of the estate was
to revive agricultural prosperity and to restore
village properties for families employed locally,
thus preserving 'a rural community of rural
workers'. (fn. 101) The unusual social structure of Great
Tew, the absence of commuters, week-enders, or
a 'retired professional element', aroused com
ment as early as the 1950s, (fn. 102) but it was the
continuing decay of some of the cottages which
c. 1970 brought the local authority to question
the nature and timing of the estate's policy.
Thereafter Great Tew became the subject of
local and national controversy, in which many of
the major issues of rural planning were raised. (fn. 103)
In 1978 the village was declared a conservation
area. By 1980 several houses had been sold, but
the community was still dominated by families
working in and around the village; it retained a
flourishing primary school, and was successful in
defeating proposals that would have deprived it
of a resident vicar.
Until acquiring its modern notoriety Great
Tew was known chiefly as the home of the
'blameless' Lord Falkland (d. 1643), the subject
of a sympathetic portrait by Edward Hyde, Lord
Clarendon, who described in detail the witty and
cultured circle that gathered around Falkland at
Great Tew in the 1630s. (fn. 104) Falkland's wife Lettice
(d. 1647) probably had a more direct impact on
the life of the village through her care for poor
and sick villagers, her provision of a school, and
her policy of maintaining employment, although
'by another contrivement of her estate she might
have received more profit'. (fn. 105) While a later landlord, Francis Keck (d. 1728) acquired a similar
reputation for good works, (fn. 106) the behaviour of
Falkland's grandparents, Sir Laurence Tanfield
and his wife Elizabeth, brought Great Tew
briefly to the attention of parliament; Sir
Laurence's defence of his inclosing activities at
Great Tew is weakened by the frequency of
complaints about him elsewhere, and Elizabeth
was accused of saying that the villagers were
'more worthy to be ground to powder than to
have any favour showed them'. (fn. 107)
Manors and Other Estates.
Aelfric,
abbot of St. Albans, later bishop of Ramsbury
(from 990) and archbishop of Canterbury (995–
1005), (fn. 108) was the earliest known holder of GREAT
TEW. While abbot he had borrowed money
using land there as security, and by will he left
Tew to St. Albans abbey, subject to a life interest
in at least 7½ hides, perhaps the whole, held by
Ceolric. (fn. 109) The abbey granted further life leases,
between 1050 and 1052 to a widow, Tova, and
her son, (fn. 110) and before 1066 to a prominent thegn
Alnod of Kent (Chentisc). Some time after the
Conquest Alnod's lands were seized and given to
Odo, bishop of Bayeux. (fn. 111) A tradition survived at
St. Albans that Abbot Paul (1079–93) at length
secured the return of Tew from Odo, but was
compelled by William II to grant it to Hugh de
Envermeu, and that Abbot Richard (1097–1119)
finally abandoned the abbey's claim. (fn. 112) The story
is not unlikely, but Tew was included among
Odo's lands in 1086. Hugh de Envermeu, whose
brother succeeded Odo as bishop of Bayeux, was
a supporter of both William II and Henry I and
probably kept Tew until his death between 1111
and 1118. (fn. 113) It then reverted to the king and was in
his hands in 1130. (fn. 114) A suggestion that King
Stephen gave it to Ranulph, earl of Chester
(d. 1153), though not improbable, lacks firm
evidence. (fn. 115) Certainly the Crown lost possession
for a time, for Henry II recovered Tew in 1165,
probably as a result of a general inquiry into
alienated demesne, and retained it thereafter. (fn. 116) It
was given by Richard I to Ernulf de Mandeville,
who was on crusade with the king, but had
reverted to the Crown by 1194. Ernulf was
probably a younger son of the Mandevilles of
Kingham, descended from Geoffrey de Mandeville, earl of Essex (d. 1144). (fn. 117) In 1196 Tew was
held by William de Hundescote, possibly a
Flemish knight in royal service, (fn. 118) but before
1204, and probably during Richard I's lifetime,
it was transferred to Ranulph, earl of Chester
(d. 1232). The earl gave a portion of the manor
to Hugh de Colonces, which reverted to him in
1204 when Hugh forfeited his English lands. (fn. 119)
The other, and larger, portion of Tew was
granted by the earl c. 1206 to John des Préaux, (fn. 120)
probably one of his knights, who should be
distinguished from a namesake, probably a relative, prominent in royal service in Normandy. (fn. 121)
The grant was for the almost nominal service of ¼
knight. John des Préaux was dead by 1233 and
was succeeded by his nephew, another John des
Préaux, and c. 1241 by the latter's son Ralph. (fn. 122) In
1279 and 1284 the lord was John des Préaux, who
settled the manor in 1304 on his son Ralph
(d. 1333). (fn. 123) Out of the portion remaining to him
the earl of Chester, between 1226 and 1230, gave
land at Tew to Baldwin de Vere, forming 1/20
knight's fee; (fn. 124) and what remained in the earl's
hands at his death in 1232 was allotted to one of
his coheirs, Hugh d'Aubigny, earl of Arundel,
who by 1238 had given it in marriage with a sister
to Roger de Somery. (fn. 125)
Thus Tew was divided in the 13th century
between three lords. The overlordship, which
went with the earl of Arundel's portion, was
mentioned regularly until 1334; (fn. 126) before 1360 it
had been transferred to Roger Mortimer, earl of
March, possibly as a result of a settlement of
claims between the two dynasties in 1354, and it
was held by his successors. (fn. 127) Despite that descent
Ralph des Préaux in 1304 did homage to the
future Edward II as earl of Chester, and the
manor was said to be held of the honor of Chester
as late as 1427. In 1352 Edward, the Black Prince,
exercised rights of wardship over the Vere manor
and in 1365 took fealty from the heir. (fn. 128)
On the death of Ralph des Préaux in 1333 the
Crown claimed Tew as royal demesne, (fn. 129) reviving
a possible claim of 1249, (fn. 130) when a return was
made of all freeholds there, (fn. 131) which may in turn
have looked back to Henry II's recovery of Tew
in 1165. In 1341–2, after coming of age, Ralph's
son and heir William apparently vindicated his
title. (fn. 132) He may earlier have been a ward of Simon
Montacute, bishop of Ely. In 1340 he granted
Tew for their lives to Amice, relict of Simon of
Chelmscote, and her son John in return for
maintenance for himself and his wife. (fn. 133) Amice
also acquired 2 yardlands in Tew in 1345. (fn. 134) By
1398 the manor had passed to Alice, wife of John
Wilcotes, whom she had married about two years
earlier, apparently as her second husband; (fn. 135) she
was heir of the Préaux family or of the Chelmscotes, whose land in Warwickshire she and John
held. (fn. 136) On Alice's death in 1413 John married
Elizabeth, who after his death in 1422 retained a
life interest in Tew, with her husband Richard
Walkstead, until 1439 or later. Under John
Wilcotes's will the manor passed to the daughter
of his second marriage, Elizabeth, who before
1450 married Henry Rainsford. (fn. 137)
Their son William Rainsford died in possession
of the manor in 1488, and it then descended from
father to son for several generations: John, a
minor in 1487, died in 1551; (fn. 138) William, who
advanced himself in royal service and added to
his inheritance by purchasing other lands in Tew
during his father's lifetime, died in 1557; (fn. 139)
Hercules (d. 1601) (fn. 140) ran into debt and towards
the end of his life mortgaged much of his estate. (fn. 141)
His son Edward Rainsford sold Great Tew in
1611 to Sir Laurence Tanfield, Chief Baron of
the Exchequer. (fn. 142)
By then the other estates in the parish had
merged with the principal manor. The fee created
before 1230 for Baldwin de Vere was held in 1249
by Baldwin le Fleming (probably the same
person) and in 1279 by John de Vere of his
brother Baldwin. (fn. 143) In 1303 John's son Robert de
Vere of Soulbury (Bucks.) mortgaged his Tew
estate, (fn. 144) and probably as a result it was held in
1336 of Ranulph de Vere by a London citizen,
Roger Chaunteclere; (fn. 145) he sold it in 1338 to the
judge William Shareshull, from whom it passed
by an exchange in 1339 to Thomas Purcel. (fn. 146)
Thomas was dead by 1352, and his heir John, son
of John Purcel, had seisin on coming of age in
1365. (fn. 147) Richard Purcel was recorded as lord of
PURCEL'S manor in 1428 and in 1491–2
Thomas Purcel sold it to Richard Hall of Swerford (d. 1508). (fn. 148) It passed to Richard's son
Edmund, a lunatic, and in 1536 was acquired by
William Rainsford. (fn. 149)
The SOMERY manor passed in 1273 to the
four daughters of Roger de Somery, who were
recorded as holding 2½ ploughlands in 1279. (fn. 150)
One purparty came to the Lestrange family of
Knockin (Salop.), and is represented by 10s. rent
in Tew held by Roger Lestrange in 1349. (fn. 151) The
rent was probably attached to the Lestrange
manor in Bicester, and in 1597 a yardland in Tew
was parcel of that manor. (fn. 152) Other portions of the
Somery manor, including that belonging to
Henry of Erdington in 1302, (fn. 153) probably formed
the basis of a larger holding which took shape in
the early 14th century: (fn. 154) in 1328 Rose, widow of
John de Rivers, was suing Roger, son of Alan le
Blount of Cottisford, for dower in 3 ploughlands
in Tew. (fn. 155) In 1368 a third of a Tew manor was
conveyed to Roger of Cottisford by John Lodewode and Eleanor his wife; (fn. 156) Roger was a bachelor
of the Black Prince, who in 1352 gave him
wardship of the Purcel lands in Tew. (fn. 157) In 1404
Thomas Cottisford conveyed three houses and
other property in Tew to John Wilcotes, who
may have acquired the rest of the Cottisford
manor at about that time. (fn. 158)
A large freehold was created before 1249 by
John des Préaux, who gave 8 yardlands in
marriage with a daughter, Sibyl, to Thomas
Appleton. In 1261 Thomas and Sibyl gave the
estate to William of Chalgrove for a term of years,
later extended to a grant in fee. William held it in
1279. (fn. 159) In 1313 it was purchased from Thomas of
Whelton for Godstow abbey, (fn. 160) which retained it
until the Dissolution. In 1541 it was purchased
from the Crown by William Rainsford. (fn. 161)
Thereafter the lords of the manor owned most
of the land in the parish, and by the mid 18th
century the few remaining small freeholds had
been absorbed. (fn. 162) Sir Laurence Tanfield's heir
was his only daughter Elizabeth, wife of Henry
Cary, Viscount Falkland, but in 1625 Tanfield
settled the succession after his own and his wife's
death upon his daughter's children, (fn. 163) perhaps
because of his daughter's conversion to Roman
Catholicism or because she allowed her husband
to mortgage her jointure. (fn. 164) After Tanfield's death
in 1626 and that of his wife Elizabeth in 1629
Great Tew therefore passed to Lucius Cary, later
Viscount Falkland. (fn. 165) After Falkland was killed at
the battle of Newbury in 1643 his wife Lettice
held the manor until her death in 1647, (fn. 166) and she
was followed by their sons Lucius (d. 1649) and
Henry (d. 1663), and by Henry's son Anthony
(d. 1694), who had no surviving children. (fn. 167) The
estate was purchased in 1698 with money left by
Sir Anthony Keck (d. 1695), to be settled on his
only son Francis. (fn. 168)
Francis died in 1728 and his son John and
daughter Mary Dutton both died childless the
following year; under Francis's will Tew passed
to his nephew John Tracy in tail male with the
proviso that the Tracys should take the name of
Keck. (fn. 169) John Tracy's son Anthony Keck was a
keen racing man and a minor political figure,
thrown into some prominence by the Oxfordshire
election of 1754 and the political activities of his
wife, Lady Susan Hamilton. (fn. 170) His children were
daughters, so after his death at Epsom races in
1767 (fn. 171) he was succeded by his brothers, Thomas
and John. In 1774 the male line failed and the
estate reverted to the descendants of Francis
Keck's numerous sisters. Under a Chancery
decree confirmed by a private Act in 1778 it was
sold, to avoid a complex partition between six
claimants. (fn. 172) In 1779 Thomas Edward Freeman,
one of the coheirs, agreed to buy the whole
estate, (fn. 173) but by 1780 the manor and much of the
land (c. 2,000 a.) had been acquired by George
Stratton, who in 1793 bought the remainder. (fn. 174)
Stratton had made his fortune in the East India
Company. (fn. 175) Though buried at Tew in 1800 he
may not have lived there much, for in 1783 the
park and part of the mansion house were offered
for lease as a working farm, and in 1794 the house
was recorded as the seat of George Mackay, one
of Stratton's Madras associates. (fn. 176) Stratton's son,
G. F. Stratton, however, was a resident, improving landlord. In 1815–16, under pressure partly
because of his costly agricultural experiments, (fn. 177)
he sold the estate to Matthew Robinson Boulton,
son of the engineer and industrialist Matthew
Boulton. (fn. 178) M. R. Boulton died in 1842 and was
succeeded by his son M. P. W. Boulton (d. 1894)
and grandson M. E. Boulton, who died unmarried in 1914. (fn. 179) Thereafter the estate was
administered by the Public Trustee, with M. E.
Boulton's sisters Clara Gertrude (d. 1958) and
Margaret having successive life interests. In 1962
Major Eustace Robb, grandson of M. P. W.
Boulton's sister Mary Ann, inherited the estate;
he had been living at the manor house since 1952. (fn. 180)

Great Tew, 1774
Until c. 1800 the manor house stood at the
north end of a large court flanked by the surviving
17th-century walled gardens on the west, the
churchyard on the east, and the churchyard
avenue on the south. (fn. 181) The house, taxed on 40
hearths in 1662, (fn. 182) was a large E-shaped building of
the early 17th century or before, with the main
front to the south; there was a two-storeyed
porch of c. 1600 with the main rooms to the east.
The west wing was extended southwards to eight
bays, perhaps in the later 17th century, and had
its principal rooms on the upper floor. Some of
the main rooms in the older part of the house
were refenestrated in the 18th century. The
surviving stable block and octagonal dovecot lay
to the north west, but the grand wrought iron
gates and limestone piers, probably built by
Francis Keck c. 1700, (fn. 183) may have been moved
to their present position when the house was
demolished.
By the late 16th century there was a large park
east of the house, (fn. 184) which in the 18th century was a
deer park. (fn. 185) By 1767, and probably from the time
of Francis Keck (d. 1728), it contained the
southern end of an avenue which ran for more
than a mile to the northern boundary of the
parish; (fn. 186) another avenue ran eastwards from the
house for half a mile, crossing the end of the
north-south avenue. The avenues may have been
part of an unfulfilled plan to build a new house
near their intersection, on the lofty levelled
platform near the Warren.
During the confusion over the succession
to the Keck estate the house was probably
neglected, and it was demolished by G. F.
Stratton in the early 19th century, though parts
evidently remained in 1815. (fn. 187) The main demolition may have been accomplished by 1803 when
Humphrey Repton was invited to prepare plans
for a replacement: he offered alternative classical
or Elizabethan designs for a house to be built
close to the intersection of the avenues, and
proposed opening up vistas and creating a lake in
the valley bottom. (fn. 188) Repton's proposals were not
carried out and Stratton continued to live in a
small, apparently early 18th-century, house on
the village street close to the present stables; (fn. 189) it
was sometimes referred to as a 'dower house', and
was also reputedly occupied by 18th-century
vicars, (fn. 190) but evidence is lacking. In 1815 it was
one of two 'most gentlemanly cottage villas'
regarded as suitable for occupation while a new
mansion was building in the park; (fn. 191) the other was
Loudon's farmhouse, Tew Lodge, evidently rejected by M. R. Boulton who spent much in the
years 1816–19 in restoring Stratton's house. (fn. 192) In
1834 a Gothic library was added on the east, (fn. 193) its
design apparently influenced by Toddington
Manor (Glos.), which had apparently impressed
Boulton; the library's architect was Thomas
Fulljames. (fn. 194) M. R. Boulton seems hardly to have
lived at Tew (fn. 195) and the house was probably altered
little until M. P. W. Boulton took up residence
there. In 1856, after he had created space west of
the house by diverting the village street, (fn. 196) work
began on a large Tudor extension by Fulljames
and Waller of Gloucester. (fn. 197) There was also heavy
expenditure at Tew Park in the period 1868–72,
when additions included the large kitchen garden
south of the village. (fn. 198)
Economic History.
In the 13th century
the arable was divided for two-course cultivation
but located in four fields of unequal size. A
yardland (1232 x 1241) comprised 9¼ a. in South
field, 3 a. in West field, 7 a. and 2 butts in North
field. A holding of 7 a. (1280 x 1295) comprised
1¾ a. in North, 1¾ a. in West, 2½ a. in South, and 1
a. in East field. A single acre was half in West, half
in South field. (fn. 199) West and North fields seem to
have been cultivated together, and South with
East. South field was apparently the largest, and
some of its medieval furlongs may be located:
Cletilond was the post-inclosure Clatelands in
the patch of Upper Lias clay north of Beaconsfield
Farm, Bernhull was later Burn hill, north of
Tracy Farm, and some of the furlongs adjoined
Portway, the lane running south from the village
towards Poor Bridge. West field included Nettucke, later Nattock, on the western boundary
north of the Chipping Norton road, Merwelle,
probably the stream dividing Great from Little
Tew in that area, (fn. 200) and Hollewellehull, perhaps
the later Hollow Way hill, south of the Little Tew
road and west of the Enstone road. It included
land near the pond (Great Pool) but probably did
not extend further north. North and East fields
probably touched in the area north of the park
where the land slopes down to the streams; the
area was known in the 17th century as 'North
alias Nast field' and in the 18th as 'the two North
fields'. (fn. 201) The medieval North and East fields
both included land in Wolmarsham, but presumably stretched away from there in different
directions. None of their furlongs have been
identified, but it seems likely that North field
included the potentially good arable on Horse
hill, Chescombe hill, and Round hill, and perhaps
some of the northernmost valley since its furlongs
included two names ending in 'cliff' and one in
'combe'. East field, probably the smallest field as
it was linked with the largest, presumably lay in
the area of the later park. The demesne arable is
likely to have been intermixed with the peasant
holdings, and was said to be liable to common
grazing when fallow. (fn. 202)
The 101 a. of pasture recorded in 1086 was
probably on Cow hill and its slopes, later a large
cow pasture. Post-inclosure fields named from
Cow hill contained 156 a., a possible guide to its
size. (fn. 203) The 288 a. of meadow recorded in 1086
included demesne meadow in Little Tew. In the
early 13th century John des Préaux gave away
48 a., which was all he held there: John held only
two thirds of the demesne, and the meadow
holding of the other two lords is presumably
identifiable as the 25 a. in Little Tew disposed of
in the inclosure award of Great Tew in 1767. (fn. 204)
There was therefore some 215 a. of meadow in
Great Tew, some of it along the river Dorn where
post-inclosure field names suggest use of land for
meadow, but the bulk of it in the two northern
valleys and east of Cow hill on clay lands similar
to those that accounted for the large Domesday
meadows in Sandford and Nether Worton.
Except for the glebe, however, later holdings
seem to have had comparatively little meadow; an
early 13th-century yardland included only ¼ a.
of meadow, and in 1333 Ralph des Préaux
owned only 6 a. worth 12s. (fn. 205) Presumably
much of the Domesday meadow, which may
not have been valuable, had been encroached
upon: there are 13th-century references to arable
at 'Wolmarsham in the mead'. (fn. 206) A meadow called
Cotman mead in 1622 (later Cottenham), comprising 12 a. near the junction of the two northern
streams, (fn. 207) may once have been allotted to the
cottars; an illegible name that could be read
'Tunmidus welle' (fn. 208) might indicate a Town mead
to set beside the Cotman mead. No reference to
lot meadow has been found. In several instances
meadow was held in multiples of 12 a., and if, as
seems likely, there were originally 300 a. of
meadow, (fn. 209) those units may recall an earlier
division of meadow among 25 hides.
In 1086 and 1130 Great Tew was assessed at
only 16 hides, (fn. 210) but in 1624 the demesne comprised 36 yardlands, exempt from rates for the
church and poor. (fn. 211) Late though that evidence is,
it may point to the existence of 9 hides of inland
which, because exempt from geld, escaped the
attentions of the Domesday commissioners. An
original assessment of Great Tew at 25 hides
would correspond more closely to the other
Domesday figures (land for 26 ploughteams and
22 teams in use), and with the division of the
fields into 100 yardlands reported in 1624; (fn. 212) it
would also mean that the three Tews made up a
unit of 50 hides. (fn. 213)
The only known medieval yardland (19¼ a. and
2 butts) (fn. 214) suggests a theoretical 20 field acres to
each, a figure supported by later evidence. When
land was inclosed in 1622 c. 23½ a. were given for
each yardland, or c. 21½ a. if common pasture
is taken into account, and at inclosure in 1767
c. 20½ a. were awarded for a yardland without
pasture. (fn. 215) Those figures are gross, including fieldways and any common meadow there may have
been, but are in stature acres, probably somewhat
larger than the field acres of medieval yardlands.
The relationship of occupied yardlands to fiscal
units seems to have varied, for by 1279 there were
more than 100 yardlands, (fn. 216) but late medieval
contraction may have allowed fiscal and occupied
yardlands to become identical.
In 1238 the sheriff was ordered to delimit the
bounds between John des Préaux's land called 'la
Dun' and that of the two other lords called 'la
Cohay', perhaps following an attempt by John to
approve some of the pasture. (fn. 217) In 1268 and 1288
the lords of Little Tew protested against the des
Préaux practice of making an 'inhook' or hitch
crop on the furlong called Costowe (later Costers,
on the Dorn near the boundary with Little Tew),
which interfered with their right to pasture on
the fallow of Great Tew west of the Woodway. (fn. 218)
The practice was abandoned, but probably continued elsewhere in the field. By the end of the
13th century the fields were probably fully developed: in 1279 there were 85 recorded yardlands, (fn. 219) to which should be added 4 yardlands of
glebe, 6 ploughlands of demesne, and some
cottage holdings, a possible total of over 2,300 a.
under the plough, probably near the maximum
possible.
In 1341 it was claimed that part of the land was
uncultivated, (fn. 220) and there was probably further
contraction after the Black Death, encouraging
some early inclosure of which the date and extent
are uncertain. By the end of the 16th century the
park had been created, divided into Inner,
Middle, and Outer Parks, (fn. 221) and probably already
covering much of its later area, some 133 a.
between the village and the eastern parish
boundary. In 1604 Edward Rainsford said that
apart from the park he only had pasture some
distance from the manor house, (fn. 222) perhaps a
reference to old inclosures in the northernmost
valley and on the high ground to the north of it,
comprising over 400 a. The existence of old
inclosures there may be inferred from later
evidence. Though it is not impossible that they
were made later than those of 1622, whose extent
is known, it is more likely that they represent an
area of late medieval contraction, and were too
long established to merit a reference during the
controversies of the early 17th century. (fn. 223)
In 1622 Sir Laurence Tanfield, having begun
by putting large sheep flocks on Cow hill, after
much difficulty secured an agreement that he
might withdraw from the common field 21½
yardlands that were in his hands. Arbitrators
chosen half by Tanfield and half by the tenants
awarded to him, in place of his scattered strips,
two blocks of land on the eastern side of the
parish, comprising c. 125 a. north of the park up
to Banbury copse and c. 380 a. south of the park,
the area known later as Beaconsfield. Tanfield
then inclosed, but his fences were broken by John
Hiorn and seven other tenants, including some
substantial farmers. They probably had a good
case over Tanfield's treatment of Cow hill, but
over the inclosure itself produced only vague
allegations and small points of detail against
Tanfield's claim that he had treated tenants for
lives or years with as much consideration as if
they had been freeholders. (fn. 224) The new inclosures
stayed, and thereafter the inclosed land formed a
continuous swathe round the north and east sides
of the parish. There was also a small inclosure of
c. 18 a. on the southern boundary, of unknown
date but probably ancient; it was called the Parks
and gave the adjacent area of open field the name
of Park hill. (fn. 225)
The earlier inclosures may have been for sheep
farming, though in 1675 John Poulton, tenant of
Gascoigne's grounds and Pease lands (probably
part of the northernmost inclosures), (fn. 226) owned
£150 worth of corn as well as 13 horses, 29 cattle,
and 240 sheep. (fn. 227) Another tenant of inclosed land
was probably William Saunders, who in 1598 had
250 sheep and 11 cattle. (fn. 228) Portions of the park
were sometimes let and occasionally ploughed, (fn. 229)
and the surviving ridge and furrow may be of
relatively late date.
After 1622 the open fields comprised 79 yardlands until the parliamentary inclosure of 1767,
which disposed of 1,779 a. (fn. 230) Tanfield's tenants in
1624 alleged that they had pasture for 200 horses,
220 beasts, and 2,000 sheep, probably representing a stint of 2 horses, 20 sheep, and 2 beasts to a
yardland, with perhaps 20 cottages with a cow
common each. (fn. 231) There had been considerable
expansion of the grassland acreage in the open
fields by that date. In 1622, when the land was
valued for inclosure, that in the North field,
Horse hill, Cotman mead, and Cow hill was to be
valued as grass or 'sward ground', that in the
south as arable; (fn. 232) the Oolite and Lias soils were
being turned to different uses, the arable on the
Lias being laid down to grass, as at the Leys
(north of Ley Farm, where ridge and furrow
survives), Chescombe and Horse hills, and in the
two North fields—in all c. 225 a. In the 18th
century some 157 a. of the greensward, including
the 'hangings' on slopes of Chescombe and Horse
hills, were in three divisions, of which one was
thrown open each year to be grazed by the
common herd in addition to the permanent
pasture at Cow hill. When not so used the
divisions presumably reverted to individual use
by owners of strips for mowing or tied grazing.
The top of Chescombe hill was on occasion sown
with grass seeds and grazed by the sheep, but
whether that was regular practice is not clear. (fn. 233)
Perhaps because of the availability of private
grazing the commons attached to an open-field
yardland on the eve of inclosure were low for the
region, only 2 cows, 1 horse, and 16 sheep. (fn. 234)
The management of the open fields remained
in some ways conservative. In the 17th century,
as in the 13th, it was possible to speak of dividing
a holding by taking the sunny side, and hides
were treated as known units in the field. In 1621
a yardland was described as 'some part in Goodsons hide, some part in Welles hide', referring to
contemporary tenants in Tew who may have held
part of those hides. (fn. 235) In 1759 the repair of a hedge
along the river Dorn was the responsibility of
owners of lands abutting on it, but where strips
ran parallel to the stream repairs were to be done
by 'the two outside hides'. (fn. 236) The arable in the
later period of open-field farming lay south and
west of the road from Great Pool to the village,
taking in the whole south-western portion of the
parish, in all c. 1,350 a. In April 1692 it was
agreed to have a winter corn field all down the
west side of Woodway, and as that area comprised about a quarter of the arable it seems likely
that the rotation was one of three crops and a
fallow. A 'horse hitch' was ordered, every yardland contributing a land, and commons being
allowed for c. 80 horses; in 1692 the hitch was
fairly close to the village at Great Pool, but in
another year it was far away at Cuckold's Holt.
There was a Sainfoin hill in 1692, and in 1756
sainfoin of two different sowings was mentioned.
In 1761 the arable divided into nine sections
under an elaborate eight-year rotation of turnips,
barley with grass seed, hay, sheepwalk, oats,
fallow, wheat, and peas; the sections were each
perhaps 100 to 150 a. (fn. 237) By then the medieval
system of open-field husbandry had changed
beyond recognition.
The tenurial development of Great Tew was
one of increasing complexity, as the original
single manor became divided. In 1086 the manor
had 6 ploughteams on the demesne worked by
14 servi, while another 16 teams were in use by
the tenants, 31 villeins and 8 bordars. Its value,
perhaps because of the forceful administration of
Odo, had increased from £20 to £40, twice the
average value per ploughland in Oxfordshire,
and a level reached by few other manors. (fn. 238) In
1130 the manor was farmed by men of the vill for
£36, but from 1168 the sheriff had to answer for
the Domesday value of £40 after several years at
lower farms. (fn. 239) Rents were low, for in 1194 the
assised rent at Michaelmas amounted to only
18s. 9d.; (fn. 240) the maintenance of the farm depended
therefore on successful demesne cultivation. In
the period 1167–70 purchases included 680 sheep,
20 cows, 2 bulls, and 20 beehives; much seed corn
was bought, and money was spent on manorial
buildings including housing for the ploughmen
(bovarii). (fn. 241) In 1196 allowances were made from
the farm because stock was lacking, including 800
sheep, 20 cows, 20 sows, 20 beehives, and 5
ploughteams; since 24 oxen (enough for three
ploughs) had been purchased the previous year,
it seems likely that the number of demesne
ploughs normally working had increased to
eight. (fn. 242)
By 1279 (fn. 243) there were three manors in Great
Tew, each with a demesne and tenants, and an
8-yardland freeholding of William of Chalgrove
with villein tenants only, but the outlines of the
earlier single manor could still be discerned. The
Vere and Somery demesnes were said to be 1
ploughland each in 1249 (fn. 244) and 1279, but the
Préaux demesne, said to be 4 ploughlands in 1249
and 1333, (fn. 245) was only 3 in 1279. There were 10
cottages or cotlands on the three manors, several
with 4 a. in the field, perhaps the original
standard endowment of the bordars of 1086; the
rent was 2s. or 2s. 6d., and by 1279 two had come
into the hands of free tenants. A smith had 6 a. of
land and 3 a. of meadow by service of supplying
ironwork for the demesne ploughs (which had
cost as much as 18s. in 1168), (fn. 246) or he could be
asked to do the service of a yardland. Another
6-a. holding was known as 'revelond', presumably
once the reeve's allotment, and there was a
'mulelond' for the miller, perhaps of the same
size. The 'service' holdings perhaps ranked next
above them. There were then 44 villeins, 20
holding 2 yardlands each and 24 (including the
tenants of the Chalgrove freehold) holding 1
yardland. Their services were the same on all
three manors; the tenant of 2 yardlands paid 3s.
rent, and provided one man 5 days a week from
24 June to 1 August, then three men one day a
week until 29 September. In addition there were
two harvest boonworks (with all the man's household except his wife and shepherd) and three
ploughing works and two carting services during
the year. Other burdens were the obligation to
malt 2 qr. of grain, and to pay toll on ale brewed,
pannage of pigs, merchet, and aid. Single yardlands owed half that service. The services on a
yardland were valued at 2s. 6d., which with the
rent of 1s. 6d. came to 4s., presumably an old
customary valuation; the villeins of the Chalgrove
freehold paid 7s. 4d. or 8s. 4d. a yardland for all
services except merchet. On the Vere manor
there were two tenants in socage of ½ hide each,
paying 10s. rent and doing occasional services, in
all 8 days' work a year. They were each entitled to
have 10 oxen in the lord's pasture, (fn. 247) and their
freedom of marriage was expressed dramatically:
a socager with a marriageable daughter must give
the lord's sergeant a spear or 4d. to escort her to
her wedding for up to 20 leagues. Such tenures
had perhaps evolved from those of a superior
class of pre-Conquest peasantry.
Nearly all the freeholds in the 13th century
were held of the Préaux manor, but, except for
that of William of Chalgrove, (fn. 248) little is known of
their creation. In 1279, besides William, there
were 11 free tenants with a total of 17½ yardlands,
a mill, 2 cotlands, and 2 of the service holdings.
In 1249 there had been only 6 free tenants with 11
yardlands, a mill, and a cotland; (fn. 249) at both dates
there were a couple of holdings held for life or
lives. The apparent increase in freeholds during
the 13th century is due largely to the appearance
by 1279 of a 4-yardland tenement which may
simply have been omitted from the 1249 survey.
Its rent (2s. a yardland, half the standard villein
obligation) was that of about half the freeholds of
1279, which perhaps all belonged to a single
period. No freeholds seem to have been created
under royal lordship in the 12th century: none
were reflected in allowances against the farm. (fn. 250)
Some, perhaps most, freeholds were enfeoffments
by the earl of Chester before his grant to John des
Préaux. Certainly he gave ½ hide to Roger
Jugelet (fn. 251) and probably also the ½ hide owned in
1279 by the Coventry family, who bore the same
name as the earl's steward. (fn. 252) Some temporary
grants may have become permanent, such as that
of a mill of which the earl claimed the freehold
against Thomas of Coventry in 1226, but which
later was again the freehold of the Coventry
family. (fn. 253) By contrast in 1247 the heirs of Gerald
Musket failed to establish their right to 6 yardlands which Gerald had held partly of the Vere
manor and partly of the Somery manor, (fn. 254) a
freehold which presumably predated the earl's
creation of the Vere manor in the early 13th
century. Some freeholds may have arisen by the
promotion of socage tenants like the two survivors
of 1279: certainly in 1249–50 the relict of Alan
Franklin claimed custody of his land and heir
from Ralph des Préaux on the grounds that the
tenure was socage, but the outcome is unknown. (fn. 255)
The Préaux family, after the initial extravagance
of giving away 8 yardlands with a daughter, seem
to have created few holdings even for their
younger sons, of whom several were prominent
in Great Tew in the later 13th century but with
only modest endowments. (fn. 256)
The early freeholds were of regular size (mostly
1 or 2 yardlands in 1249) (fn. 257) but in the later 13th
century odd acres were being sold, enabling such
men as John at the Lake, a villein, to build up a
freehold of 15¾ a. by small acquisitions from the
Jugelet and Franklin families. (fn. 258) By 1333 free
rents on the Préaux manor totalled £4 12s. 8d.
compared with only c. £1 18s. in 1279, and the
number of villein yardlands had declined from 38
to 33. (fn. 259) By 1422, however, the process seems to
have been reversed, for John Wilcotes, successor
to the Préaux lords, had only 6 free tenants,
holding 10 yardlands and a mill for a total rent of
c. £1 8s.; at most 3 free tenants were of peasant
status. (fn. 260)
For the subsidies of 1307, 1316, and 1327 the
numbers taxed were 41, 56, and 47, but the
average value of movables assessed rose from
c. 38s. to 63s., while the share paid by Ralph des
Préaux fell from a fifth of the whole to about a
fifteenth. (fn. 261) Though there was heavy depopulation in the 14th century (fn. 262) its impact is not
documented. By the 16th century the population
had probably recovered to 13th-century levels,
and the distribution of wealth revealed by
subsidy payments was not unusual. In 1524 the
Rainsfords, father and son, were taxed on lands
worth a total of £42 a year, but their contribution
was overshadowed by that of Richard Busby,
assessed on goods worth £230, who paid about
two thirds of the tax on the parish. (fn. 263) Busby was
presumably the heir of William Busby (d. 1513),
who is commemorated by a brass in the church.
Though he had important interests at King's
Sutton (Northants.) and elsewhere he seems to
have lived at Tew, as farmer of the impropriate
rectory and possibly as lessee of some of the
demesne; he was evidently a considerable sheep
farmer, and his ownership of property in
Uxbridge (Mdx.) suggests he may have been a
merchant. (fn. 264) A further 49 men were taxed in 1524,
5 on goods worth £11 to £8, 10 on goods worth
£7 to £3, 15 on goods worth £2, and 19 on wages
of at least £1 a year. (fn. 265) For the subsidy of
1544, though none were taxed on wages, the
minimum value of taxable goods was £1, and 64
persons were assessed. The Busby fortune had
gone elsewhere; John Rainsford paid on land
worth £20, 6 paid on goods worth £10 to £6,
30 on goods worth £5 to £2, and 27 on goods
worth £1. (fn. 266)
Assessments for the hearth tax of 1662 confirm
the impression of a community of small farmers
under a single powerful landlord. Lord Falkland,
was assessed on 40 hearths, four men on 4 or 5
hearths, five on 3, and the remaining fifty on 1 or
2 hearths. (fn. 267) The late medieval trend towards the
elimination of freeholds had continued in the
16th century under the Rainsfords, and by the
17th century Great Tew was almost all in single
ownership. It was a much admired estate, and it
was said of Francis Keck (d. 1728) that he was
'the richest man and had the best estate . . . in
Oxfordshire'. (fn. 268)
References to copyhold occur in the 16th
century but not later. Tenants' long leases for
years or lives were sometimes valued in their
probate inventories, (fn. 269) but a man who in 1557 left
3 yardlands to his son 'if it should please my
master to be good unto me as was his promise'
was evidently without any settled copy or lease. (fn. 270)
Though some wills show Great Tew farmers
content to divide their holdings, (fn. 271) it was probably
more usual to make arrangements like those of
John Rimell in 1615, who left 2½ yardlands to
two sons 'without severance', the survivor to
have the whole, (fn. 272) or like Nicholas Cross in 1670
to leave the main holding (3 yardlands) to the
eldest son, a close to a second son, small legacies
to two others, and blacksmith's tools to the
youngest. (fn. 273) The size of holdings may be deduced
from scattered references in some 48 Great Tew
wills from the period 1557–1736, involving c. 100
yardlands in all. About 19 per cent concerned
holdings of between ¼ and ¾ yardland, c. 27 per
cent between 1 and 1¾ yardland, and c. 44 per
cent between 2 and 3½ yardlands; the last group
accounting for over half the land mentioned; 10
per cent of the holdings were between 4 and 7
yardlands.
Assessments for land tax in 1762, shortly
before parliamentary inclosure, reveal a different
structure. Anthony Keck's assessment of £136
probably included the inclosed lands as well as
his rents; the remaining £72 was paid by 40
landholders. A standard assessment of 15s. 8d. a
yardland for open-field land may be discerned,
though few holdings were exact yardlands. The
small tenements of between ¼ and ¾ yardland now
amounted to c. 40 per cent of the holdings, those
of between 1 and 1¾ yardland to c. 24 per cent, the
2 and 3 yardland holdings to a mere 6 per cent,
and the larger holdings of 4 to 9 yardlands to 30
per cent, the last group accounting for three
quarters of the land (excluding Keck's holding). (fn. 274)
The evidence from wills greatly underrepresents the smaller landholders, and that from
land tax assessments should also be regarded as
approximate only, but the polarization into large
and small holdings is marked. It seems likely,
too, that long leases ceased to be renewed during
the earlier 18th century, particularly for the
larger holdings; only one long lease granted by
Francis Keck is known, and that was for a pair of
cottages. (fn. 275) In 1766 only 18¼ yardlands were held
on leases for lives, and a year later only 14¾ out of
a total of 79. (fn. 276)
The land tax assessments suggest that Keck's
old inclosed land was valued some three times as
highly per acre as the open-field land, (fn. 277) a strong
incentive to proceed with inclosure. The award
of 1767 gave the 12 life-lessees and 2 owners of
cow commons a total of 262 a. The landowners of
Little Tew received 19 a. for their common rights
in Great Tew, and the only other allottee was
Anthony Keck, who was awarded 288 a. for tithes
and 1,169 a. for open-field lands. (fn. 278) Under the Act
of 1766 all leases under 21 years and for rack rent
had been cancelled, accounting for the 64¼ yardlands which Keck technically had in hand. By
1778 only three life leases remained, of 75 a.,
28 a., and 8 a.; the newly inclosed land, held at
rack rent, was divided into five holdings of under
100 a., four of 100–200 a., and three others (211 a.,
233 a., and 408 a.). The last was an amalgamation
of Tracey farm (255 a.) and two smaller holdings
that were soon separated, and probably had been
so in the past. (fn. 279)
In the later 18th century there were thus c. 14
farms on the newly inclosed land, enough to have
provided for the dozen tenants of 2 yardlands or
more detectable in the tax of 1762. John Busby,
one of the larger farmers in 1762, was represented
in 1788 by his widow Elizabeth with 192 a., later
Leys farm, which remained in the family for
many years. (fn. 280) James Neville, prominent in 1762,
held a life lease of 75 a. in 1778, and his family
continued to farm there after that lease expired.
Continuity in other cases seems to have been
broken, though some of the new names of 1778
may represent undertenants not mentioned in
1762. One result of inclosure was to remove
almost entirely the small holdings that in the mid
18th century and earlier had sustained numerous
cottagers and craftsmen. The old inclosed land in
1778 was divided into four farms, two in the
north (220 a. and 215 a.), both held by the Ryman
family, and two in the Beaconsfield area (250 a.
and 130 a.), the first, presumably an old established farm, held with 210 a. of adjoining new
inclosure, the other, known as Sturche's in the
early 19th century, worked from a farmhouse on
the site of the surviving Beggar's Lodge. (fn. 281) Most of
the newly inclosed farms were still run from the
village in 1778, though there was one new farm in
the south, Tracey Farm, and shortly afterwards
another called Timms', later Hookerswell Farm; (fn. 282)
Tracey Farm was presumably so named because
it formed part of the jointure of Mary Tracy,
relict of Thomas Keck. (fn. 283)
In 1800, when G. F. Stratton took over the
estate from his father, it was regarded as 'one of
the finest' in the county; (fn. 284) its buildings were in
repair, the land free from incumbrances and
surrounded by ring fences. Its 16 farms (including those in adjoining parishes) were let on
12-year leases to allow a 6-year rotation in
which fodder crops played an important part.
About 1,500 a. of the 3,700 a. of farmland were
permanent pasture, mostly in the north part of
the estate, providing grazing for over 2,000
sheep. Inclosure had led to an increase in rents,
the arable fetching between 15s. and 26s. an acre,
the pasture between 28s. and 40s.; (fn. 285) the total
rental including the village houses was c. £4,000,
and there were also some valuable plantations.
Spurred on, however, by financial losses and
Arthur Young's opinion that the estate was
under-exploited, Stratton became involved in a
short-lived and largely unsuccessful agricultural
experiment. J. C. Loudon persuaded him that by
adopting the Scottish system of convertible
husbandry the estate's value could be more than
doubled. Most of the existing tenants were
bought out or leases were not renewed, with the
intention of forming the estate (by 1814) into two
large holdings, one of c. 1,800 a. for Loudon
himself, the other of c. 1,500 a. let to Capt.
Stenhouse Wood, presumably a man introduced
by Loudon, though later the two quarrelled. (fn. 286)
Loudon began farming some 639 a. on a 22-year
lease at Michaelmas 1808, and acquired another
220 a. the following year; Wood's lease of nearly
1,100 a. began at Michaelmas 1809. The new
tenants offered rents approaching £3 an acre,
which, if the scheme had worked, would have
raised the total rental to £10,250. Stratton reported enthusiastically on progress in March
1810, but in early 1811 Loudon departed, bought
out by his landlord for what he later claimed was
'our mutual satisfaction and advantage'. (fn. 287) Wood
stayed longer, but both he and Loudon's replacement, William Orson, an Irishman of whose
methods Loudon strongly disapproved, had
gone by 1814, Orson apparently clandestinely. (fn. 288)
In 1815 Stratton put the whole estate on the
market. (fn. 289)
It seems certain that Stratton lost heavily
by the experiment, which even Loudon later
admitted would be remembered in the county as
'a ruinous project of wild adventurers'; he
reckoned, however, that Stratton retained a 'very
handsome fortune', having sold the estate for
twice what had been asked in 1807, though only
half what would have been paid (but for problems
over the title) by a purchaser in 1809. (fn. 290) The
failure owed much to over-ambition by both
landlord and tenants. (fn. 291) The tenants offered
too much rent in the hope of recouping by
advantageous subletting; though Wood sublet all
his estate and Loudon some of his, apparently to
other Scottish farmers, the arrangements were
short-lived and in 1814 the vicar reported that 13
farms were vacant. (fn. 292) The landlord invested great
sums in improvements at a time when prices were
beginning to fall. The Scottish system of alternate
arable and leys grazing, with its heavy emphasis
on fodder crops and intensive stock rearing, was
presumably introduced fairly easily on Wood's
holding in the south of the estate, which was
already mostly arable land in large fields; but
Loudon's farm, on the 'red land' in the north,
was mostly ancient pasture in small irregular
fields. His description of the Great Tew experiment, though hardly explicit, hints that the
difficulty of converting such land may have been
decisive. (fn. 293)
Stratton's expenditure on Wood's holding,
limited by the terms of the lease to £2,000, may
have amounted to little more than building two
threshing mills at Beaconsfield and Tracey
Farms. (fn. 294) On Loudon's portion, however, the
intention was to create, at the landlord's expense,
a 'ferme ornée' with large, regular fields linked by
a new road system to an elaborate farmery and
threshing mill, overlooked by Loudon's own
house in its park of ornamental trees, with
terraced walks, orchards, and nurseries. (fn. 295) The
house and pleasure grounds (Tew Lodge), the
farmery, the mill (whose power came from a large
lake created by diverting existing streams), and
much of the projected road plan were completed.
Many hedges were grubbed up and new quicksets planted, though the larger trees were left
standing. At times 132 men were working on the
improvements in 1809–10. Loudon's estimate
for the improvements was £4,000, but by 1810
£11,600 had been spent, and another £5,600 on
Wood's farm and on buying out leases; Loudon
reckoned that c. £13,500 had been spent on his
farm alone. There had been an unexpected rise in
the cost of timber and labour; stone for the roads
had to be carted from the south of the estate, since
no suitable stone could be found in the north; the
mill site was so low that the provision of an outfall
involved costly excavations; the mill itself was
'larger than was required' and Loudon's house
and farmery, though lightly constructed and
roofed with treated paper, proved expensive. (fn. 296)
Loudon apparently offered to pay all costs over
£7,000, but in the event he seems to have paid
only £1,750 for the house and garden. Though
the effects of his experiment may still be discerned in the landscape, the farmery seems to
have gone by 1823, replaced by the nearby
Cottenham Farm, (fn. 297) and Loudon's house probably disappeared soon afterwards. The mill
survived for many years, in altered form. (fn. 298)
The break in continuity caused by the eviction
of local farmers was only temporary and several
of the chief farms were held for much of the 19th
century by long-established local families such as
the Barlows at Park farm, the Nevilles at Court
farm, and the Kimbers at Tracey farm. (fn. 299) In 1815
the farmland of Great Tew (c. 2,800 a. excluding
the village and its closes) was put up for sale as 14
farms and a few small lots; there were 7 farms of
between 300 a. and 200 a. and 5 others over 100 a.
Over three-quarters of the land was arable, and of
the c. 690 a. of pasture as much as 570 a. lay north
of the lane from Ledwell to Little Tew; much of
it lay in the park and on Carter's (later Park) farm
immediately north of it. By contrast Giles's farm
(named after an 18th-century farmer, Giles
Ryman), which had been the principal site of
Loudon's ploughing operations, contained no
pasture. The other 'red land' farms, Tew Lodge
(189 a.) and Checkley's farm (208 a. in the northwest), were only two-thirds arable. (fn. 300) There was
some amalgamation of farms during the 19th
century and in 1861 the principal ones were Park
(460 a.), Cottenham (450 a.), Court (300 a.), and
Ley farm (300 a.), and in the south Tracey
(620 a.), Beaconsfield (430 a.), and Hookerswell
farm (250 a.). Together the farms employed 76
men and 44 boys, and, as in 1851, there was a
marked contrast between the high labour requirements of the largely arable southern farms and
Cottenham farm in the pastoral north. (fn. 301)
In 1877 Great Tew was described as 'one of the
best farmed parishes in the Midland counties'. (fn. 302)
The cultivated area was usually c. 2,650 a.; the
proportion of permanent grass increased from
roughly a third in 1869 to nearly a half in 1911,
and there was always about a tenth under rotation
grass. The acreage of wheat fell in the same
period from over 400 a. to less than 250 a.; barley
varied only slightly from the 350 a. reported in
1869, while oats rose from 120 a. to over 300 a.
and turnips (or swedes) fell from 350 a. to only
160 a. Cattle, pigs, and horses all increased in
number, but sheep were reduced from 2,800 to
1,800, still a fairly high density for the region. (fn. 303)
In 1914 the chief crops were wheat (23 per cent of
the arable), barley (19 per cent), oats (11 per
cent), and swedes (10 per cent). (fn. 304)
During the 20th century farming on the estate
seems to have declined until a recovery in the
1960s. Several farms are now kept in hand, and a
number of outlying sites have become redundant.
Farming remains mixed, with grain crops, sheep,
and cattle still important and no specialist
developments such as market gardening. The
contrast between the arable south and pastoral
north continues.
The relatively large and concentrated population provided a living for numerous craftsmen,
particularly carpenters, masons, blacksmiths, and
tailors. George Stowe, carpenter, in 1556 left his
tools to a nephew, and several other members of
the family were recorded as carpenters in the
17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 305) Masons of the Hiorn
family regularly made wills, (fn. 306) and several blacksmiths of the Barnes family were recorded. (fn. 307)
Three tailors made wills between 1611 and
1625. (fn. 308) A chapman in 1591 left a stock of ribbons,
silks, and gloves; later there was a mercer, John
Hiorn (d. 1662), probably followed by Alice
Hiorn, spinster, whose cottage in 1668 included a
shop with tape, thread, treacle, and nails. (fn. 309) In the
same period there were bakers, shoemakers, a
weaver, and a fuller. (fn. 310) John Alexander (d. 1673),
a baker, issued a tradesman's token. (fn. 311)
Censuses of the earlier 19th century record
between 13 and 21 families engaged in crafts and
trades compared with 70 or more supported by
agriculture. (fn. 312) In 1841 the craftsmen and tradesmen included 3 smiths, 3 tailors, 3 carpenters, 2
sawyers, 2 saddlers, 2 grocers, 2 butchers, 2
bakers, 2 masons, a painter, a carrier, and a
publican. (fn. 313) By 1871 the building trades were
more prominent, with 7 masons and 4 carpenters,
a painter, a stonelayer, a brickmaker, and a
bricklayer; most other trades had fewer representatives than in 1841, and there was only
1 smith, 1 butcher, and a combined grocer's,
butcher's, and baker's shop employing 4 assistants. (fn. 314) In 1939 three shops were recorded,
including the present post office and the butcher's
shop. (fn. 315) In the 1950s the principal employment
other than agricultural work was building and
contracting, occupying 16 adults; there were 2
small agricultural engineering concerns, 2 saw
mills, and a lime pit. (fn. 316) The estate's policy ensured
that the traditional occupational structure survived into the 1980s.
Mills. There were two watermills in Great
Tew by the 13th century. In 1226 the later
southern mill was claimed by Ranulph, earl of
Chester, as his freehold against Thomas of
Coventry, who was said to hold it only by a lease.
In 1230, however, the Vere manor recently
created by the earl included a freehold mill, and it
was that mill which Alice of Coventry held in
1249 and was still a freehold of the Vere manor in
1279. (fn. 317) In 1339 the mill was held with 7 a. of land
and 15 a. of meadow. (fn. 318) The Préaux manor in
1279 included a demesne mill, as in 1333. (fn. 319) Both
mills presumably passed with their manors to the
Rainsfords, and in the 18th century both were
held of the Kecks. In 1778 the northern mill was
held on lease by John Goffe for £13 and the
southern mill by Thomas Baldwin for £12; both
were corn mills. (fn. 320) By 1815 the southern mill had
ceased working and the northern mill was held on
a new 21-year lease for £25 a year. (fn. 321) That mill
was probably abandoned in the 1830s, for in 1837
M. R. Boulton was investigating leaks in the
watercourse at 'Old Mill' and in 1841 it was
occupied by a farm labourer. (fn. 322) The foundations
of the mill and remains of the leats which
provided water for an overshot wheel survive in
Mill Lane. (fn. 323)
Both ancient mills may have been victims of
the new 'farm' mills built c. 1810. At Tew Lodge
Loudon built a costly threshing mill, (fn. 324) which
Boulton was considering adapting as a grinding
mill as early as 1820 and was used for crushing
bone for fertilizer by the 1830s. (fn. 325) It was still in
use in 1852 but was marked as a disused corn mill
on a map of 1881. There are some remains south
of Cottenham Farm. (fn. 326) Two other small waterpowered threshing mills were built on farms in
the south, one at Tracey Farm which was used for
grinding corn into the 20th century, and whose
machinery partially survives, and another shortlived mill at Beaconsfield Farm. (fn. 327) A steampowered saw mill and a pug mill were built on the
estate by M. P. W. Boulton in the mid 19th
century. (fn. 328)
Local Government.
In 1279 John des
Préaux had view of frankpledge in his liberty
'without the king's bailiff'; he also had waifs, and
if a thief was caught in the liberty he might, after
summoning a coroner, hang him on his gallows. (fn. 329)
Courts leet and baron were held in Great Tew
until at least the early 19th century: in 1817 they
met at the Horse and Groom (probably the later
Falkland Arms). (fn. 330) In 1692 a court met in April,
but by the mid 18th century there seem to have
been October courts only, which appointed constables, tithingmen, fieldmen, and haywards, and
made orders for the management of the open
fields. (fn. 331) The jury continued to supervise the
fields and officers between courts. (fn. 332) The constables were supported by levies on the yardland,
and income came also from letting a small
amount of 'town land', which seems to have been
lost at inclosure. (fn. 333)
The vestry appointed churchwardens, overseers, and surveyors of the highways. Little Tew
had its own constable, churchwarden, and overseer by the mid 17th century and until it became a
separate parish c. 1857, and though it remained
ultimately dependent on the Great Tew vestry it
collected its own rates; the Little Tew warden
contributed a quarter of the Great Tew wardens'
costs. (fn. 334) At Great Tew the churchwardens' income
in the 16th century evidently came chiefly from
customary payments of corn and malt: in 1567,
presumably after a dispute, parishioners agreed
in the archdeacon's court that payments should
be ½ bu. malt from a yardland. (fn. 335) Yardland levies
were still used in 1763; (fn. 336) the open fields then
comprised 79 yardlands, while Anthony Keck
was assessed on 52 yardlands presumably made
up of the 36 yardlands of demesne recorded in
1624 and a nominal 16 yardlands for impropriated
tithes. (fn. 337) The 52 yardlands were assessed at only
7d. compared with 2s. 6d. for the other yardlands,
perhaps because the demesne, as in 1624, was
exempt from most local charges. Yardland levies
were presumably replaced at inclosure in 1767 by
pound rates, but in 1778 Beaconsfield farm was
still exempt from rates, and it was also claimed
that 'owners of estates' (probably only the lord at
that date) were exempt from all taxes except land
tax and militia payments. By the 1830s all paid
rates. (fn. 338)
In 1776 the overseers spent £196 on poor
relief, in 1783–5 a yearly average of £247, and in
1803 £369, or c. 17s. a head of the population. (fn. 339)
The overseers' total expenditure was usually less
than £500 until 1812–13, when it rose to a peak of
c. £680 (excluding militia and other charges) or
£1 10s. a head. (fn. 340) Many of the farms were vacant
at that time, (fn. 341) but the extra employment created
by M. R. Boulton's rebuilding policies seems to
have resulted in Great Tew escaping the crisis
that affected most of its neighbours in that
decade: total expenditure fell to as little as £386
in 1822–3 (including over £80 for coal to be sold
cheaply to the poor). Costs rose gradually thereafter, and average expenditure on the poor in
1831–2 was £452, just over £1 a head. (fn. 342)
There are signs that in the 1760s the poor were
sometimes set to work on such tasks as road
mending. (fn. 343) In 1783 Great Tew had a workhouse
and advertised for a contractor to farm the poor. (fn. 344)
By 1803 there was no indoor-relief, but a rented
workhouse was again in use in 1810–11; (fn. 345) it was
still there in 1815, but as no indoor-relief was
provided it may have been used as pauper
housing. (fn. 346) Cottage rents were also being paid,
and in 1815–16 cost over £30 a year. (fn. 347)
In 1803 there were 35 adults on permanent
out-relief, and in the period 1807–17 numbers
were usually between 30 and 50. Small numbers
of roundsmen were mentioned, and in 1807
the parish was contributing 2d. a day towards
the cost of each; the total of 16 men on the
round in the winter of 1815–16 was evidently
the result of a new policy, but roundsmen were
not mentioned in later accounts, and numbers on
regular relief also fell. (fn. 348) Employment again
became a problem in the 1830s, and in 1835 the
vestry agreed to pay 7s. a week to able-bodied
labourers. (fn. 349)
The parish became part of the Chipping
Norton poor law union, appointing its first
guardian in 1836. (fn. 350) The vestry continued its
oversight of many parish affairs, such as highway
repair and providing coal for the poor. (fn. 351) In 1847
it organized a voluntary subscription to assist
large families. (fn. 352) In 1894 a parish council was
formed when Great Tew became part of Chipping
Norton rural district, and in 1974 the parish
became part of West Oxfordshire district. (fn. 353)
Church.
The church was established before
the mid 11th century when the village was known
as Church Tew. (fn. 354) The earliest known rector was
William son of Ralph, who witnessed a late 12thcentury local charter. (fn. 355) The ecclesiastical parish
included Nether Worton until the 17th century
and Little Tew until c. 1857; there may have been
a medieval chapel in Little Tew, and a new chapel
built in 1853 was served at first from Great Tew.
The benefices of Great and Little Tew were
reunited in 1930. (fn. 356)
The advowson was given with the manor to
John des Préaux c. 1206, and in 1302 a later John
des Préaux granted it to Godstow abbey. (fn. 357) In
1308–9 arrangements were made to appropriate
the living on the death of the rector John de
Trillowe, and a vicarage was ordained. (fn. 358) John,
who seems to have died between 1314 and 1316, (fn. 359)
was later remembered as a benefactor to the
abbey, while Margery de Dive, elected abbess of
Godstow in 1316, was credited with the acquisition of Great Tew. (fn. 360) Godstow presented the first
vicar in 1309, and retained the advowson until
the Dissolution; (fn. 361) it was granted by the Crown in
1541 to William Rainsford, (fn. 362) and thereafter
descended with the manor, although the Crown
presented by lapse in 1781. (fn. 363)
In 1291 the rectory was valued at 50 marks,
which in 1341 was said to have included £8 13s.
4d. for the glebe and hay tithes and £6 13s. 4d. for
altar fees, the rest being presumably the tithes of
corn, wool, and lambs. (fn. 364) In 1535 the farmer of the
rectory, Richard Busby, was paying £20 3s. 4d. a
year; a further payment to Godstow for various
rents was probably for non-rectorial lands. Outgoings, however, reduced the net value to only
£15 13s. 4d. (fn. 365) Thereafter the rectory was absorbed
in the manorial estate: at inclosure in 1767
Anthony Keck was awarded 290 a. for his tithes. (fn. 366)
The rectorial glebe was presumably absorbed
into the Godstow abbey's other Tew lands,
passing to Rainsford in 1541. John des Préaux's
grant to the abbey in 1302 had included 2 a. and
the reversion of 2 yardlands held by Stephen des
Préaux, (fn. 367) but in 1541 only the former Chalgrove
estate of 8 yardlands, yielding £3 6s. 8d., and
'Our Lady lands', comprising 3 houses and
possibly 3 yardlands rented at 23s., were mentioned. (fn. 368) A 'parsonage house' and 4 yardlands
called the parsonage lands, held by a tenant of
Edward Rainsford in 1608, (fn. 369) and a meadow
called Parson's mead (c. 12 a.) held by Tanfield in
1622, (fn. 370) may represent a hide of former glebe, but
more probably were so called because they were
former Godstow property.
Under the terms of the appropriation of the
living the vicar was to receive £6 13s. 4d. a year
out of the rectory. (fn. 371) In 1526 the vicar was
receiving £10, and although Rainsford in 1541
was expressly charged with providing that sum
there was soon a return to the smaller stipend, (fn. 372)
perhaps because the increase had been for additional services in a chantry. By the 18th century
the stipend was regarded as a modus for vicarial
tithes; the only vicarial tithes mentioned at
inclosure in 1767 were those of certain old
inclosures for which Anthony Keck was awarded
c. 1½ a. (fn. 373) The living was augmented from Queen
Anne's Bounty in 1750, (fn. 374) reaching a total value of
£12. 6s. 8d. in 1781. In that year it seems to have
been agreed by T. E. Freeman, purchaser of the
Keck estate, that the living (perhaps reflecting
past practice) should be made up to £50 a year. (fn. 375)
In 1783 George Stratton was paying £44 to the
vicar, and presumably the remaining £6 came
from the Bounty. At the same time T. E.
Freeman, who retained part of the Keck estate,
was providing £30, bringing the total vicarage to
c. £80. (fn. 376) Freeman in 1781 had settled c. 75 a. on
trustees, the income to pay land tax on that estate
and on a new vicarage house shortly to be
granted, then to provide £30 to the vicar, while
the residue supported a school. In 1810, after
much confusion, G. F. Stratton disencumbered
the Great Tew trust estate by granting in
exchange 56 a. in Middle Barton, which at that
date was more profitable than the Great Tew
land, though later the exchange was heavily
criticized. (fn. 377) There was a further augmentation
from the Bounty in 1793, and before 1805 all the
Bounty money was invested in c. 19 a. of land in
South Newington. (fn. 378) At the inclosure of Little
Tew in 1794, largely as a result of agitation by the
vicar, Samuel Nash, the vicarage was awarded
16½ a. in return for serving the chapelry. (fn. 379)
In 1808 the clear improved value of the vicarage
was £83, probably excluding the £30 from the
trust estate which the vicar, wrongly, seems to
have regarded as a grant solely for a lectureship. (fn. 380)
An attempt by M. R. Boulton to augment the
vicarage in 1830 was given up after a quarrel with
the Bounty officials, (fn. 381) and in 1831 the vicar's
income comprised £91 rent from land, the
annuity of £44, and an additional payment from
Boulton of £50, apparently reduced from £60 in
recognition of his recent expenditure on the
vicarage house. (fn. 382) When Little Tew parish was
created in 1855 the glebe acquired by Nash was
transferred to it. Great Tew was augmented in
1877 by a grant of £6 13s. 4d. from the Common
Fund. (fn. 383) The vicarage house, the Barton land, and
some stock were regulated by a Scheme of 1907,
altered in 1978, which prescribed the proportion
of the income that should be devoted to the
school. (fn. 384) In the later 19th century the living was
usually valued at between £150 and £200 net,
and in 1930 at £212; the income of the combined
benefices of Great and Little Tew in that year was
c. £400. (fn. 385)
In 1662 the vicar, Henry Pewde (Perode,
Peande), was taxed on a two-hearth house, but
by 1738 there was no memory of a house belonging to the living. (fn. 386) Eighteenth-century vicars
seem to have been housed by the Kecks, and in
1875 it was asserted that the house which formed
the core of the Boultons' manor house had once
been used as a vicarage. (fn. 387) After the death of
Anthony Keck in 1767 there was evidently a
problem over housing, but by 1781 the present
vicarage house was in use, and in 1787 George
Stratton conveyed it to trustees. (fn. 388) The house,
bearing the date 1696 and the initials of William
and Ann Franklin, (fn. 389) was much rebuilt by Stratton, whose initials with the date 1781 survive on
the south gable, though he was reported to be
building the vicarage house as late as 1796. (fn. 390)
The house was in serious disrepair by 1815, (fn. 391) and
M. R. Boulton carried out major alterations
c. 1829. (fn. 392)
The 13th-century rectors included several
members of the patron's family, including Drew
des Préaux, recorded in 1240, (fn. 393) and Simon des
Préaux rector 1293–1302, who was convicted of
wasting the church's goods in 1296, when a
coadjutor was appointed. (fn. 394) In 1244 Walter of
Hasfield was presented by Ralph des Préaux,
subject to a pension of 25 marks payable to
Humphrey of Bassingbourn so long as he bore
himself as a clerk. (fn. 395) The rector presented in 1290
was Robert of Thorpe, one of the bishop of
Lincoln's clerks, who was later dispensed to hold
an additional three livings while not a priest. (fn. 396)
The medieval vicars appointed by Godstow
abbey (fn. 397) were less eminent. Some served the
living for long periods, notably John Taylor,
1419–52, John Warland, 1452–73, and Edmund
Clerke, 1493–1521. The medieval church contained several chapels, including a chantry
founded in 1325 by Edward Maybank and
endowed with property in Fleet Street, London;
Maybank had been granted by Godstow abbey a
life lease of the 2 yardlands in Great Tew given
with the advowson. (fn. 398) Margery de Dive, the early
14th-century abbess of Godstow, charged the
rectory with payments totalling £6 13s. 4d. for
her anniversary and those of John de Trillowe
and others; the payments were made until the
Reformation. (fn. 399) Thomas Wilcotes in 1471 gave
land to Oriel College, Oxford, for obits for
himself, his wife Eleanor, his father John, and
others, including a dirge and mass at Great Tew;
in the 17th century the college still arranged
annual sermons there. (fn. 400)
In 1526 a chantry priest was paid £5 6s. 8d.,
and a pension of 33s. 4d. was paid to Edmund
Clerke, the retired vicar, who also held another
Godstow living. (fn. 401) His successor, Edward Gabett,
seems to have been resident, (fn. 402) but in 1535
claimed to be paying a deacon 10s. and 1 qr. of
oats yearly, and 1 bu. maslin weekly. (fn. 403) At the
Reformation the chantry revenues may have
been concealed. (fn. 404) As late as 1557 William Rainsford attempted to found another chantry, his will
providing for the creation of a chapel in Great
Tew church 'in all ways after the proportion and
form' of William Fermor's chapel at Somerton;
an endowment was to provide £10 a year for a
priest, but probably the plan was never fulfilled. (fn. 405)
From c. 1555 until 1595 the living was technically
void, but John Shaw from 1557 was called
variously vicar, clerk, and stipendiary curate, and
Edward Bradford in 1563 was called curate and
later vicar; in 1593, when perhaps very old, he
was judged 'insufficient'. (fn. 406)
Many of his successors in the 17th century
were active among their flock and probably
resident, frequently participating in local willmaking. Edward Wardle was vicar for 33 years
from 1595, and Henry Pewde, B.A., from 1628
until his death in 1671. (fn. 407) Henry Cockson (vicar
by 1679) was excommunicated in 1693 for marrying someone without banns or licence; (fn. 408) though
vicar of Sandford he probably lived at Tew,
where he and his family were buried. In 1738 the
vicar was fellow of an Oxford college, in term
staying with the Kecks at Tew only at weekends,
though longer in the vacation. (fn. 409) Thomas Jones,
vicar in 1759, lived half the year on another cure,
but Walter Thomas (d. c. 1780) claimed to be
usually resident, though he did not say where. (fn. 410)
Both Jones and Thomas employed non-resident
curates from time to time, (fn. 411) suggesting that the
vicars were paid more than the declared stipend
of the benefice. During the 18th century there
were two services and a sermon each Sunday, and
communion three or four times a year for 20 to 40
communicants.
Samuel Nash, vicar 1790–1829, was also vicar
of Enstone, but lived at Tew. He was a firm
defender of his church's temporal condition, but
seems to have been a troublesome figure. In 1793
one of his churchwardens reported him for
keeping beasts in the churchyard, and complaints
over his conduct of services and their inconvenient hours continued throughout his long
incumbency: apparently he followed a morning
service begun shortly before noon with an afternoon service ending at 2.30 p.m., presumably to
fit in with his duties at Enstone. (fn. 412) He was
reported in 1804 to have recovered from mental
illness, but in 1830 M. R. Boulton referred to the
'late, insane incumbent' and alleged that during
the past 20 years the parish had been deprived of
'all efficient pastoral superintendance'. (fn. 413)
During the 19th century there was the usual
improvement in the service of the living. Nash's
successor employed an assistant curate, and J. J.
Campbell (vicar from 1844) held two services
each Sunday at Great Tew and provided a curate
to hold services in Little Tew; communion
services were held once a month and at the great
festivals. (fn. 414) Congregations of between 120 and
150 were recorded, but the considerable advance
of nonconformity during the 19th century was
also recognized; in 1857 the vicar saw the squire's
absence from church as a special difficulty. (fn. 415) The
number of services remained unchanged until
the 1890s, when it was reported that there were
two assistant curates, three or four services every
Sunday, and more communicants. (fn. 416) The living
was held in plurality with Little Tew for many
years before the union of 1930. (fn. 417) In 1979 a plan to
sell the vicarage house and serve Great Tew from
a distance was opposed by the parishioners, who
were able to show that the house was an endowed
charity. The parish retained a resident vicar in
1981.

The Church of St. Michael, Great Tew
The church of ST. MICHAEL (fn. 418) comprises
chancel, aisled nave, south porch, and west
tower. (fn. 419) Of the 12th-century church only the
south doorway survives, (fn. 420) but Norman masonry,
including what may be the head of a window
blocked by the overlapping north aisle, may be
seen on the exterior of the north wall of the
chancel; (fn. 421) the dimensions of the nave suggest that
it retained its 12th-century width (only 18 ft.),
though it was probably lengthened later. The
aisles were built or rebuilt in the 13th century,
divided from the nave by arcades of which the
southern is lofty and stands on archaic square
bases. The aisles were widened in the early 14th
century, probably receiving ridged instead of
lean-to roofs; the footings of a narrower south
aisle may be seen at the east end. That both aisles
were widened as part of a single scheme is
suggested by the fact that the nave and aisles
together form a square. Both aisles contained
chapels, their sites marked by 14th-century
piscinae with mutilated canopies. A new chancel
arch was inserted in the early 14th century and
the chancel largely rebuilt. A low-side window
seems to have been blocked later in the century.
The south porch is probably of the early 14th
century, though it incorporates a crude and
possibly earlier two-light window. The lower
stages of the tower were built c. 1400 and
the upper stages about a century later, though
the top of the tower, in lighter stone, may be later
still. The clerestorey, nave, and aisle roofs and
parapets were probably added when the tower
was heightened. The east window is also of
c. 1500. A rood loft, approached by a staircase in
the thickness of the south wall, may have stretched
across the full width of the church; the east
window of the north aisle was blocked and a new
window inserted in the north wall c. 1500,
presumably to light the loft or a gallery. A lean-to
schoolroom added at the west end of the north
aisle probably in the mid 17th century was pulled
down in the later 18th century. (fn. 422)
The architect Thomas Rickman restored the
church and chancel in 1827–8; the work included
ceilings and sedilia and a piscina of four cusped
arches in artificial stone in the south wall of the
chancel. (fn. 423) Rickman may also have been responsible for the later alteration of the north side of
the chancel to create a niche for a table monument
with reclining marble figure by Sir Francis
Chantrey (1834) in memory of Mary Ann Boulton
(d. 1829); a 14th-century two-light window was
partially blocked by the niche, and a corresponding window on the south side was altered to
balance it. Plans to block the west window in the
tower in 1831 and reuse the tracery (fn. 424) seem not to
have been carried out, but before 1875 the west
window of the south aisle was rebuilt in the style
of one of the 14th-century north aisle windows. (fn. 425)
In 1869, when a west gallery was removed, the
tower arch was opened and a memorial window
by J. Hardman inserted, the gift of the vicar J. J.
Campbell. (fn. 426) There were few other structural
alterations, but after major repairs in 1964–6 a
consistory court met in the church to investigate
the removal of ancient glass from some of the
windows. (fn. 427)
The font is 15th-century. There are traces of
wall-paintings of c. 1400 in the south aisle and on
the west wall of the north aisle. (fn. 428) The church was
largely reseated in the 1890s, (fn. 429) but there are some
15th-century bench ends. In the north aisle is a
screen with linenfold panelling and tracery of
c. 1500. (fn. 430) The pulpit is a three-decker of the early
19th century. The organ dates from the 1860s;
there are several earlier references to the purchase
of musical instruments. (fn. 431)
In the north aisle and chapel are the stone
effigies of an unidentified knight (fn. 432) and lady of the
early 14th century. In the chancel are brasses to
John and Alice Wilcotes (d. 1422 and 1410) and
to William Busby (d. 1513) and his wife Agnes;
on the wall is a brass engraved with a representation of the Holy Trinity to which belongs a
fragmentary inscription to William Rainsford
(d. 1487). (fn. 433) A tablet erected in 1885 records the
burial at an unknown site at Great Tew of Lucius
Cary, Lord Falkland (d. 1643); the lead coffin of
Henry Cary, Lord Falkland (d. 1663) was discovered in the chancel during repairs in the
1820s. (fn. 434) Other memorials include those to
Frances Heyes (d. 1674), daughter of Rachel,
Viscountess Falkland, to George Stratton
(d. 1800), and to many members of the Boulton
family, most of whom were buried in Birmingham until the later 19th century. Vicars commemorated include Henry Cockson (n.d.), James
Ashton (d. 1790), Charles Dayman (d. 1844), and
J. J. Campbell (d. 1882). There are many painted
hatchments of arms, including those of the
Tracy, Keck, and Stratton families. (fn. 435)
The plate includes a silver chalice of 1575. (fn. 436) Of
a ring of eight bells given by Francis Keck in 1709
two have been recast, in 1785 and 1842; the ring is
one of the finest in the diocese. (fn. 437)
The church is approached along an avenue of
evergreens, and the churchyard is flanked by the
ornamental trees of the park. The avenue probably formed the main approach to the former
manor house; its stone entrance gateway, early
17th-century Italianate, has evidently been remodelled and may have been moved to its present
position from the grounds of the demolished
house in the early 19th century, the date of the
wrought ironwork. The churchyard was extended
on the south-west in 1921. (fn. 438)
Nonconformity.
One Roman Catholic in
Great Tew was returned in 1676, but in 1738
there were none. (fn. 439) An increase of Roman
Catholicism in the parish in the mid 18th century,
which owed much to the proximity of the earl of
Shrewsbury's chapel at Heythrop, probably
mostly affected Little Tew where there were still
a few Roman Catholics in the early 19th century. (fn. 440)
Forty-three Protestant nonconformists in the
parish were returned in 1676. (fn. 441) 'Separatists'
recorded earlier were all of Little Tew, (fn. 442) but
Quakers were prominent in both Great and Little
Tew in the 17th century and early 18th. John
Evans and Thomas Reeves were gaoled in the
1660s for refusing the oath or non-payment of
tithes, and between 1689 and 1729 some 6
Quakers resident in Great Tew were fined
repeatedly for refusing tithes. (fn. 443) In 1738 there
were 4 Quaker families in Great Tew, (fn. 444) who
probably attended the South Newington meeting. Numbers decreased during the 18th century
and none were recorded after 1778. (fn. 445)
From the later 18th century Little Tew was the
centre of nonconformity in the ecclesiastical
parish. No permanent chapel was founded in
Great Tew, though many Baptists were reported
in the village in 1834, and in 1854 the vicar said
that a third of the villagers were Baptists or
Ranters. (fn. 446) In 1869 it was estimated that 150
Primitive Methodists were meeting in a cottage
in Great Tew, and in 1878 the vicar reckoned
there were 30 nonconformist families. (fn. 447)
Education.
Lettice Cary, Lady Falkland
(d. 1647), started a school for poor children; (fn. 448)
though no details of her endowment are known,
Great Tew appears on a list of 18th-century
endowed schools. (fn. 449) A schoolroom, built at the
north-west corner of the church and pulled down
in the later 18th century, (fn. 450) was long disused.
Vicars reported no school between 1738 and
1771, but in 1774 a voluntary charity school was
said to teach 30 boys and girls to read and knit;
four years later there was again said to be no
school. (fn. 451) In 1781 T. E. Freeman (fn. 452) gave land in
Great Tew to augment the vicarage and also
provide £12 for a teacher for at least 10 boys
and 10 girls; after much confusion over the
endowment the land was exchanged for an estate
in Middle Barton in 1810. (fn. 453) From the 1780s
the teacher was usually paid an extra £3 a year
to teach a Sunday school, (fn. 454) and was awarded
a further £10 in 1815 when the school was
apparently enlarged. After a Chancery inquiry in
1823, following allegations by the vicar, Samuel
Nash, it was settled that the teacher should
receive £12 for the 20 free pupils and £12 extra
for every 20 children nominated by the trustees,
who should also provide £10 a year for coal,
books, and other school purposes. In 1825 a
master and mistress were taking fees from the
additional pupils, running a Sunday school with
c. £16 raised by subscription, and paying for
books from a collection in the church. The school
building near the vicarage house was rented from
M. R. Boulton. (fn. 455)
In 1818 there were two small dame schools in
Great Tew and others in Little Tew; from 1823
that hamlet had its own endowed school. (fn. 456) By
1831 there were said to be only 18 boys and 17
girls at the Great Tew day school, compared with
75 attending the Sunday school, but the vicar
claimed that no child over 6 years old who was
not working was without schooling. There was
no infant school and efforts to start an evening
school had failed. (fn. 457) About 1845 the 35 pupils
recorded were allowed free education, and the
schoolmaster was receiving perhaps £25 from
private pupils, c. £31 from the endowment, £10
for the Sunday school, and £8 16s. for keeping
the parish coal account. (fn. 458) In 1847 the schoolmaster was also postmaster and tax collector. (fn. 459) In
1852 Boulton built a new school and master's
house on the Green, stone buildings in traditional
style with stone mullions and dripstones. (fn. 460) In
1854 the school was attended by 40 boys and 40
girls. (fn. 461) In 1867 a certificated master taught 95
pupils, of whom 35 were educated freely and the
rest paid school pence. (fn. 462) At that time the whole
rent of the charity estate (c. £70) seems to have
been paid to the school, but by 1890 the vicar was
again receiving the greater share, the school only
£28. (fn. 463) The charity was regulated by a Scheme
drawn up in 1907, which devoted two sevenths of
the income from the Barton land to the school
and divided the stock equally between the school
and vicarage. (fn. 464)
Attendance declined to 64 in 1890, and in 1904
the school was transferred to the county council. (fn. 465)
From 1923 it was attended by the children of
Little Tew. The roll was 66 in 1935, and the
following year the school was reorganized as a
junior and infant school, with 31 children on
the register, the seniors travelling thereafter
to Chipping Norton. (fn. 466) In 1979 there were 43
children on the Great Tew school register. (fn. 467)
Charities for the Poor.
Edmund
Hiorn (d. 1627) and Thomas Fletcher (d. 1641)
each bequeathed £5 to the poor of Great Tew and
John Sly (d. 1657) £5 to the poor of Little Tew; (fn. 468)
in 1781 George Stratton, lord of the manor,
invested those sums, with an additional gift of his
own, in stock (known thereafter as the Poor's
Stock) which yielded £1 4s. a year as a bread
charity distributed at Christmas. (fn. 469) The income
remained unchanged until in the 1960s the stock
was reinvested to produce £5 a year, which was
distributed in bread until 1976. (fn. 470)
George Stratton and T. E. Freeman (fn. 471) gave £20
each as a coal charity in the late 18th century; by
1825 the charity was lost 'through the insolvency
of the holder'. (fn. 472)
Marianne Boulton, by will proved 1934, left
£1,000 for the poor, which in 1967 was yielding
£30, distributed to pensioners or large families. (fn. 473)
A Scheme of 1977 amalgamated the Poor's Stock
and Boulton's charity in a general charity for
relief in need. (fn. 474)