HORLEY AND HORNTON
The ancient parish of Horley covered 2,563 a. and
was composed of Horley township (1,141 a.) and
Hornton township (1,422 a.). (fn. 1) It lies in the extreme
north-west of the county on the Warwickshire
border, and is largely bounded by streams which
eventually flow into the Sor Brook, a tributary of
the Cherwell. (fn. 2) The woodless upland parts of the
parish are well over 600 ft. and lie on Middle Lias
rocks; they are divided by steep-sided gullies
lying between the 450 and 500 ft. contours at
Hornton village and along the boundary streams.
At Bush Hill in the north of the parish there is
rough land (c. 23 a.) at a height of 600 ft. and on the
north-western boundary are extensive quarries of
Hornton stone, some still working. (fn. 3)
The parish lies between the Banbury-Warwick
and Banbury-Stratford roads, turnpiked in 1744
and 1753 respectively. (fn. 4) A secondary road connects
Horley with both; a road from Hornton to Balscott
crosses the main Stratford road and another meets
it at Wroxton. The hard-bottomed ford on the
Banbury road was not bridged until modern times,
and the bridge over the Wroxton Brook dates from
1916. (fn. 5)
Horley lies near the eastern boundary of the
parish crowning a hill 500 ft. high, some 3½ miles
from Edgehill. The village lies between two streams,
Wroxton Brook and Horley Brook; Horley means
'clearing in a tongue of land'. (fn. 6) The village has an
irregular plan. One long street of cottages and farmhouses ascends the hill from Horley Mill to the
church on the hill-top, still 'large and handsome' as
it was when Rawlinson described it in 1718. (fn. 7) Here
the houses are mainly concentrated on the west side
of the hill in a rough parallelogram. On the west is the
vicarage-house and on the south side of the hill-side
are the manor-house of the sometime prebendal
manor, and what is evidently the manor-house of the
lay manor of Horley, now a farm-house. (fn. 8) The
fishponds once existing to the west of the village
presumably belonged to one or both of these manors.
At one time it was a more scattered village: in
1705 there was a substantial house called Yellow
Well Hall on the edge of the village and there were
still houses at Yellow Well on the north of it in the
19th century. There is a tradition that there were once
houses in the Town Gore. (fn. 9) It seems always to have
been a smaller village than Hornton and in the mid17th century, when it is first possible to make a
rough estimate of the village population, 47 men took
the Protestation Oath compared with 73 at Hornton. (fn. 10)
In 1801 it had a population of 269 and reached the
peak figure of 425 in 1841. There were then 90
houses in the village. By 1901 the population had
fallen to 247 and in 1961 it was 232. (fn. 11)
In general the houses and cottages are built in the
local ironstone and in the regional style. They
mostly date from the period 1580–1640 but many
may have been altered in the 18th century, Later
buildings include some early-19th-century cottages,
with their gable end to the road, and the mid-19thcentury vicarage-house, 'a small, neat, modern
residence' built for the curate. (fn. 12) In the 20th century
many old cottages have been reconditioned; and
council houses in Lane Close were built after the
Second World War. (fn. 13) Well-kept grass verges in the
main street are a feature of the village.
There is now only one inn, the 'Red Lion', but in
1783 there was also the 'Crown'. (fn. 14) The latter house
had probably long retailed beer, for it was occupied
early in the century by a maltster, John Bray. (fn. 15) The
churchwardens met in one or other of these inns in
the 1780s. (fn. 16) Growing population led to the appearance of the 'Buck' in 1786 and the 'Bull' in 1806. (fn. 17)
The most imposing house is the Manor House,
lying a little south of the church. Its medieval
predecessor was occupied by the prebendaries (fn. 18)
from time to time. They alone had a right to a seat in
the chancel of the church, with which the house is
directly connected by a right of way. The older
part of the house, the present long east-west range,
belongs to the 16th and 17th centuries. It is a 2storied structure of coursed ironstone rubble with
mullioned windows. It has been little altered since
1624 when John Austin bought the manor from
Richard Light, who had resided there. (fn. 19) Some
interior panelling of about that date may well have
belonged to the 17th-century house. In 1665 John
Austin returned 5 hearths for the hearth tax and in
1718 Rawlinson reported that Nathaniel Austin was
living there. (fn. 20) It was probably Nathaniel who remodelled the east end of the old house, which has
an east wing of about 1700 as its front elevation.
It consists of 5 bays, is of 2 stories with a hipped
roof in which are 3 dormers, and has a central doorway surmounted by a broken pediment and approached by semi-circular steps; its large sash windows have moulded architraves with keystones and
the interior is elegantly designed. The house was inhabited after 1741 by Edward Metcalfe. (fn. 21) By 1802
no person 'of note' resided in Horley; (fn. 22) but in 1852
the house was recorded once again as a gentleman's
residence. (fn. 23) In 1892 it was bought by James Stockton, a Banbury solicitor. (fn. 24)
The manor-house of the lay manor, lying south
of the prebendal manor, is now Bramshill Park
Farm and may well have been used as a farm-house
since the early 18th century, when the Copes bought
it. (fn. 25) It was occupied in the 17th century by the
Danvers family. Daniel Danvers died there in 1624 (fn. 26)
and his Puritan son Anthony seems to have lived
there until the 1660s when he went to London. (fn. 27)
In the last quarter of the century the new lord,
Richard Thomson, occupied the house. His wife and
3 of his children were buried in the church between
1678 and 1690, (fn. 28) and it is likely that Thomson
himself remained in the house until 1718 when he
sold it to Sir John Cope of Bramshill. As only
this Horley house and the arms of Thomson are
shown on Michael Burgher's map of Oxfordshire, (fn. 29)
it was evidently then the most important house in
the village. The existing house appears to represent
only the southern portion of a larger building,
the northern part of which has been demolished.
This may have been the result of a fire, as local
tradition has it. Three 18th-century sketch-plans
of a house at Horley, now among the Cope papers,
may represent Bramshill Park Farm soon after
the Copes obtained possession, though it is difficult
to relate them to any part of the existing building. (fn. 30)
One gives the measurements of the rooms and shows
that the hall, then divided into two, was 9–10 ft.
high and once measured 30 ft. x 20 ft. The diningroom was 17 ft. x 20 ft. There were three flights
of stairs — the great stairs, the back stairs, and the
little stairs. A list of the chief rooms made in 1735
enumerates the great parlour, the hall, the diningroom, 3 bedchambers, and 3 garrets. (fn. 31) The surviving portion of the mansion appears to date
partly from the 16th and partly from the 17th century. The rectangular bay which projects from the
east front has a lead rainwater-head with the initials
'T.R.D.', which no doubt are those of the owner
Richard Thomson who bought the manor in 1668.
The outbuildings in the farm-yard date from c. 1600.
They retain a doorway and two 3-light mullioned
windows of that period.
Park House, once a Cope property, incorporates
parts of a medieval structure. It was originally built
on the 3-unit plan with the 2 ground-floor rooms
both of about the same size, though on different
levels, and separated by a through passage. To the
right of this passage there is a doorway of 14thcentury date and in the rear wall there is a small
medieval window with an ogee head. The back
entrance is through another medieval doorway. In
the west gable of the house is a 2-light 14th-century
window, now blocked. The chimney once backed into
the left side of the through passage. (fn. 32)
Besides the farm-houses there are several 17thand 18th-century cottages. One thatched cottage
abutting on the Methodist chapel retains some of
its 17th-century mullioned windows; some cottages
have cellars. The schoolmaster's house and schoolroom were originally built c. 1630, (fn. 33) backing upon
the churchyard. It is a substantially built stone house
with mullioned windows and thatched roof. The
master's house appears to have been enlarged in
1711, the date on the chimney stack. The schoolroom
was extended in 1842 by the addition of a classroom
with small Gothic windows; was again enlarged in
1899, and yet again in 1961, when glass and steel were
the main building materials. (fn. 34)
Horley House, lying rather apart from the village,
is a large early-19th-century mansion built of local
stone in a plain late Georgian style. The main front
has 5 sash windows and a stone pilastered porch.
The house was perhaps built for John Hitchcock,
one of the chief landed proprietors, who was living
there in 1852. (fn. 35)
Hornton village lies mainly at the bottom of a
steep sequestered valley at a height of 500 ft., but
has spread up the hill which rises to 600 ft. The
original settlement, as in the case of Horley, was on
the land between two small tributaries of the Sor
Brook, and the Old English name of the village
signifies 'dwellers on a tongue of land'. (fn. 36)
It was among the larger villages of north Oxfordshire in the Middle Ages and by the 17th century
the population may have been c. 300. (fn. 37) In 1662
there were 18 householders with sufficiently substantial houses to be taxed, and in 1665, besides the
manor-house, there were 3 other farm-houses of
about the same size, all assessed on 4 hearths; 8
others were assessed on 2 or 3 hearths. (fn. 38) By 1801 the
population was 485; it rose rapidly to just over
590 in 1841 and 1851, and fell to 362 in 1901 and
to 318 in 1961. (fn. 39)
The comparative isolation of the village has
resulted in the preservation of many of the 16th
and 17th-century farm-houses and even of cottages.
The village has in recent years attracted commuters
who have modernized and restored carefully. Local
pride in the appearance of the village is evident not
least in the exceptionally well-tended church and
churchyard, a well-known feature of Hornton in the
19th century. (fn. 40) In 1959 'by a quiet communal effort'
the villagers were awarded the Marlborough trophy
for the best-kept small village in the county; (fn. 41)
a century earlier Bishop Wilberforce had called
Hornton the 'fringe of civilization'. (fn. 42) The older
houses are built of the local ironstone rubble or,
in the case of the better ones, of ironstone ashlar.
The steep pitch of the roofs indicates that thatch
was once used generally and it is still common.
Several notable examples of 17th-century yeoman
houses survive. The manor-house, described as a
cottage in 1852, and now a farm-house, bears the
inscription '1607 C.E.'. (fn. 43) Though considerably
altered at later periods its original construction can
be traced. It is a 2-story house with attics, built on
the common regional plan of a through passage
with a large hall and kitchen on either side, and a
third room, the parlour, adjoining the hall. A newel
staircase in the north-east corner, which provides
access from the ground floor to the roof, may be a
part of the original house, and several original
windows with flat-splayed stone mullions and
moulded labels survive. The thatched roof has
parapet gables and the dormer windows, flush with
the second floor, project into it. The roof, of the
tie-beam type with a single collar, shows an early
example of a roof truss that was to be generally
adopted in the 17th and 18th centuries for the more
important houses in this region. The farm has an
out-building with kitchen and oven, probably provided for farm labourers in the 18th century. (fn. 44)
The Mount is a 2-story house dating from the end of
the 17th century. It is of special architectural interest as it presents the 'final stage in evolution of
the three-unit "upland" plan'. Built on the hill-side
and facing down the valley, it comprises a parlour,
with a cellar underneath, a small hall with a broad
straight-flight stair against the rear wall, and front
and rear entrance doorways. There is a kitchen containing a large fire-place and smaller second stair.
The house is solidly built with walls 2½–3 ft. thick,
and the architectural detail is of good quality,
notably the moulded jambs and camber arch with
lozenge-shaped stops to the label mould of the main
doorway. The cellar has a well in it and a gutter to
run off superfluous water. Eastgates Farm is similar
in plan to the Mount, and like the Mount has its
gable-end on the road and retains its original
mullioned windows and doorway. It has masonry
enrichment of the high quality found in small
manor-houses in this area, and wrought iron casement fasteners, comparable with those at the Cope
farm-house at Horley. Cromwell cottage is of the
same 3-unit type, but is only 1½ story except over
the kitchen bay where there are two. Wheeler's
Farm, also on the hill-side, is of the 3-unit type and
dates from the late 17th century. Other examples are
the Glen, a smithy for much of its history, the adjoining Profitts House, and a house on the north side
of the Hornton-Wroxton road, with a date-stone in
the west gable inscribed '1661 T[homas] H[icks]'.
The village's two inns, the 'Bell' and the 'Red
Lion', were probably licensed between 1753 and
1772, but they were not mentioned by name until
1782. (fn. 45) The name of a Hornton inn-holder, however,
was recorded in 1709. (fn. 46) The 'Dun Cow' had opened
by 1854 when it was a butcher's and beer-retailer's
combined. Rock Tavern, lying isolated from the
village near the quarries, was mentioned in 1854
and was clearly used mainly by quarry men. (fn. 47)
Outside the village Hornton Grounds House
dates from the early 19th century and Hornton
Hill House from 1864. The latter was built of
Hornton stone in the Georgian style, and was
notable in 1910 for its avenue of 'grand ornamental'
beeches and other trees. (fn. 48)
Manors and Other Estates.
Hornton
was not mentioned in Domesday Book but clearly
was included under Horley, where there were 2
large and 2 small estates in 1086. One 10-hide
estate, held by Berenger de Todeni and of him by
Ralph, had been held before the Conquest by
Queen Edith and Turgot the law man (lageman). (fn. 49)
Like another of Berenger's estates, Hutton Bardolf
(N.R. Yorks.), this estate, the later lay manor of
HORLEY AND HORNTON, was held in the 13th
century by the Bardolf family. (fn. 50) It formed part of
the honor of Brandon, which, according to Dugdale,
comprised 10 fees attached to Brandon Castle in
Wolston (Warws.). (fn. 51) The overlordship of Horley
and Hornton may thus have followed the descent
of Brandon which passed from Geoffrey de Clinton
to his daughter Lesceline, who in the early 12th
century married Norman de Verdun. (fn. 52) In the 1220s
Nicholas de Verdun was recorded as overlord. (fn. 53)
On the death of Theobald de Verdun in 1316 a fee in
Horley and Hornton was among the lands which
were to be divided between his four daughters and
in 1344 it formed part of the inheritance of his
daughter Margery and her husband Mark Hussee. (fn. 54)
As in the case of other manors granted to the Hussees
all trace of the overlordship then disappears. (fn. 55) In
1458, however, Horley and Hornton were said to be
held of the Earl of Warwick; (fn. 56) this may perhaps be
explained by the fact that the earls of Warwick held
the overlordship of Brandon in the 13th century. (fn. 57)
In 1222 Hugh Bardolf and Robert the Chamberlain, both descendants of Osbert, Sheriff of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire (d. by 1116) (fn. 58) made a
division of lands, Hugh taking the ½ fee in Horley
and Hornton. (fn. 59) Hugh made a grant in the 1220s to
Stanley Abbey (Wilts.) (fn. 60) and sold the rest of the ½
fee to Robert Lexington, a royal judge. (fn. 61) He held
it in 1230 but had granted it before 1236 to his
brother John, who in 1239 was allowed free warren
in his demesne lands in Horley and Hornton. (fn. 62)
John Lexington died in 1257 holding 10 hides in
Horley and Hornton and leaving as heir his brother
Henry Lexington, Bishop of Lincoln. (fn. 63) On the
bishop's death in 1258 Horley passed to his nephew
William Sutton, a member of a Nottinghamshire
family. (fn. 64) William was dead by 1276, and his widow
Eve was married to Robert Paynel, who held the
manor during her lifetime, (fn. 65) and claimed free warren
in the parish. (fn. 66) William Sutton's son Robert was
already dead, and the manor eventually descended
to his grandson Sir Richard Sutton, whose son John
married Margaret, the sister and later the coheir of
Sir John de Somery. (fn. 67) In 1307 Richard agreed with
Agnes de Somery, Margaret's widowed mother,
that he would hold Horley and Hornton and other
manors for life, and that he would not alienate
them so that they could not descend to his son. (fn. 68)
Richard Sutton held a fee in Horley and Hornton in
1316, and still held it in 1344 and 1346. (fn. 69) The family
descended in the male line, (fn. 70) but no later reference
has been found of any connexion with Horley.
A manor of Horley is next found in the possession
of the Arden family of Drayton, but it is not clear
that this was the Sutton holding. Robert Arden had
held land there by at least 1327, when he was
granted free warren in his demesne lands. (fn. 71) In 1329
he was allowed view of frankpledge there. (fn. 72) Sir Giles
Arden held Horley manor with his wife at his death
in 1376. (fn. 73) He left two young coheirs one of
whom, Margaret, married Lewis Greville. (fn. 74) Their
son William, on whom Horley was settled in 1398,
was living there in 1406, but later lived at Drayton, (fn. 75)
and the family connexion with Horley came to an
end.
By 1428 John Langston, presumably John
Langston of Caversfield, held the lands in Horley
and Hornton which had once belonged to Richard
Sutton. (fn. 76) They seem to have passed to the Dynhams, for on his death in 1458 Sir John Dynham
and his wife Joan held the manors of Horley and
Hornton. This is the first time they are described as 2
manors. (fn. 77) They passed to his son John Lord Dynham, who died childless in 1501, (fn. 78) and for the next
40 years the 2 manors followed a somewhat different
descent. In the end, however, both were acquired
by the Light family. (fn. 79) Hornton had been settled by
Lord Dynham on his brother-in-law Sir John
Sapcote of Elton (Hunts.), the husband of Elizabeth Dynham, and his heirs. (fn. 80) Sapcote died in 1501
and in 1541 his son Sir Richard Sapcote sold Hornton manor to Christopher Light. (fn. 81) Horley manor,
on the other hand, which in 1501 was held for life
by Sir Reynold Bray (d. 1503) by gift of Lord
Dynham, (fn. 82) was divided into quarters among the
families of Lord Dynham's four sisters. (fn. 83) One
quarter, which must have been that which went to
Joan Dynham and her husband Lord Zouche, was
bought in 1540 from Joan and Prudence Coke by
Christopher Light (d. 1546); (fn. 84) in 1544 Light bought
another quarter from Sir Michael Dormer, who in
1542 had bought it from Sir William FitzWilliam
and his wife Anne, said to be the daughter and heir
of Sir Richard Sapcote, who died in 1542; (fn. 85) in
1553 the younger Christopher Light bought another
quarter from Sir John Arundell, the grandson of Sir
Thomas Arundell and Katherine Dynham; (fn. 86) while
the fourth quarter, which had gone to the Carew
family, passed like their quarter of Souldern to the
Comptons, (fn. 87) and was bought in 1580 by Christopher
Light. (fn. 88) Light died at Horley in 1584, leaving half
the manor-house and his demesne in Horley to his
wife Margaret for life, and the rest of the two
manors to his son Richard, aged four. (fn. 89) Richard
Light probably sold off the land of Hornton manor,
for there are no later references to it. (fn. 90) By 1617 he
had left Horley for Banbury, and in that year he and
his mother, who was again widowed, sold Horley
manor to Daniel Danvers and his son Anthony. (fn. 91)
In 1661 Anthony transferred the estate to his son
and heir John Danvers, a London sugar refiner, (fn. 92)
and in 1663 the Danvers family sold the manor to
Sir Charles Wolseley, Bt. (fn. 93) Wolseley, who was
connected with the neighbourhood through his
marriage to a daughter of William, Lord Saye and
Sele, sold the manor in 1668 to Richard Thomson
of Edgcott (Northants.). (fn. 94) By 1680 Thomson was
living at Horley, but in 1718 he sold the property to
Sir John Cope of Bramshill (Hants), the son of Sir
John Cope, Bt. (d. 1721), lord of the neighbouring
manor of Hanwell. (fn. 95) While Hanwell went in 1721 to
another branch of the Cope family, Horley descended with the title in the main branch. (fn. 96) By 1663,
however, Horley manor consisted of only 6 yardlands, (fn. 97) and it is doubtful whether any manorial
rights belonged to it. This manor is constantly
referred to in 18th-century deeds, (fn. 98) and until at
least 1813, but the inclosure award and other records
refer only to the lords of the prebendal manor. (fn. 99)
The Copes, however, continued to be landowners in
the parish, their chief farm being Bramshill Park
Farm. (fn. 100)
The second manor, known later as the PREBENDAL MANOR OF HORLEY AND HORNTON, probably descended from the 10-hide estate
held in 1086 by Robert, Count of Mortain. (fn. 101) Robert's
tenant Ralph may have been Ranulf Flambard (d.
1128), the royal minister, (fn. 102) who in the early 12th
century held land in Horley of the king. In 1115
Henry I granted Horley with the church of King's
Sutton (Northants.) to augment the prebend which
Ranulf and his son Elias held in Lincoln Cathedral.
By the terms of the grant the prebend was to be
held by Elias for life with reversion to Ranulf for
life and remainder to the cathedral. (fn. 103) By 1146
Horley was listed among Lincoln's prebendal
endowments (fn. 104) and the manor, which also included
land in Hornton, was held by the prebendaries of
Sutton-cum-Buckingham. (fn. 105)
In the early 13th century the archdeacons of
Buckingham were usually the prebendaries: in
1212–14, for example, the archdeacon is found
defending his right to 4 yardlands in Hornton; (fn. 106)
in 1239 he was granted free warren in his demesne
lands in Horley and Hornton; (fn. 107) and in 1243 he was
returned as holding half Horley vill in free alms of
the Bishop of Lincoln's fee. (fn. 108) Later the archdeacons
of Buckingham ceased to be prebendaries and in
1276 the Archdeacon of Northampton claimed, as
prebendary, free warren in the parish. (fn. 109) In the 14th
century several cardinals held the prebend. (fn. 110) In
1535 the prebend was leased by the prebendary,
Richard Pate, to John Pate, who was in the service
of Bishop Longland. (fn. 111) On Richard Pate's attainder
his successor, Richard Cox, a royal chaplain and
later Bishop of Ely, was appointed in 1542 by
Henry VIII. (fn. 112) Cox's rapid advancement under
Edward VI (fn. 113) owed something perhaps to the fact
that in 1547 he surrendered the endowment of this
'noble prebend' to the Crown. (fn. 114) Soon afterwards
it formed part of a large grant to the Duke of
Somerset, on whose attainder in 1552 it reverted to
the Crown. (fn. 115) The prebend itself was never formally
dissolved, but being 'disseised of its estate' the
bishop's attempts to fill it were unsuccessful. (fn. 116)
During the rest of the 16th century the estate was
leased by the Crown, first to Sir John Mason, who
was in possession in 1554, (fn. 117) and in 1569 to Henry
Seymour for life, a grant which was renewed in
1595. (fn. 118) In 1609 the estate was granted by James I
to Sir Robert Brett, a gentleman usher of the Privy
Chamber, (fn. 119) who at once divided it and sold the part
in Horley and Hornton to Richard Light, the lord
of the other manor in the parish. (fn. 120) It was charged
with a rent of £20 to the Crown which was paid
until it was redeemed in 1769. (fn. 121) In 1624 Light sold
the manor to John Austin who settled it on his son
Robert. (fn. 122) On John's death in 1639 (fn. 123) the property
passed to his son Robert, and then to the latter's son
John, who was probably the John Austin, the elder,
who died in 1687. (fn. 124) He was succeeded by his
son Nathaniel (d. 1728), (fn. 125) and by his grandson,
John Austin of Drayton, who sold the property to
Edward Metcalfe in 1741. (fn. 126) At the time of the
Inclosure Act in 1765 Metcalfe was the only lord of
the manor in the parish. (fn. 127) He only owned about 6½
yardlands, all in Horley, but also had manorial
rights in Hornton. (fn. 128) After his death the estate was
held by his relict Elizabeth until her death in
1791 when it passed to John Metcalfe Wardle, a
relative by marriage. (fn. 129) In 1828 either Wardle or his
son of the same name sold it to Daniel Stuart, the
owner of Wickham Park, (fn. 130) and on his death in
1846 he left it for life to his daughter Catherine. (fn. 131)
She never married and after her death it was sold
in 1892 to James Stockton, a Banbury solicitor. (fn. 132)
At this time the estate consisted mainly of Horley
Manor farm (306 a.), the manor-house, and the
manorial rights of Horley and Hornton manors,
which were worth about £5 a year. (fn. 133) The property
passed to Stockton's son, Lt.-Col. Arthur Stockton. (fn. 134)
By 1965 manorial rights had lapsed.
In 1086 1 hide in Horley and Hornton was held
in chief by Robert of Stafford, and of him by
Richard. (fn. 135) Another hide was held of the Count of
Mortain by the 'monks of St. Peter', tentatively
identified as the monks of Préaux Abbey. (fn. 136) Nothing
further is known of these estates.
In 1222 or 1223 Hugh Bardolf, tenant of the lay
manor, with the consent of his overlord Nicholas de
Verdun, granted 3 carucates in Hornton in free alms
to Stanley Abbey (Wilts.). (fn. 137) The Abbey still held
the land in 1229 (fn. 138) but no further record of it has
been found.
Local Government.
In the Middle Ages
the lay and prebendal manors held view of
frankpledge for their tenants. (fn. 139) In the early 17th
century, when the manors were jointly owned,
the manorial rights of the lay manor appear to
have lapsed. Some late records (1772–1894) of the
prebendal manor, have survived; (fn. 140) the early court
rolls were said to have been lost in the Civil War. (fn. 141)
In the late 18th century there were usually one or
two courts baron yearly for tenants in both Horley
and Hornton but by 1839 the court was being held
biennially. (fn. 142) Courts were held by the steward, with a
bailiff, and the business was chiefly the admission
of tenants and the payment of fines and heriots. The
view of frankpledge was usually held in October or
November. The homage, constable and tithingman
were then sworn, and various village nuisances
presented. In 1778, for example, the surveyors of
the highways at Horley were presented because the
footbridge across the ditch leading from Horley to
Moor Mill in Hanwell was dangerously out of
repair, and there were other presentments for not
cleaning ditches. (fn. 143) The last court leet was held in
1920 at the manor-house. (fn. 144)
The townships of Horley and Hornton each had
their own parish officers. The earliest record of their
work in Hornton is the constable's book, 1798–1834. (fn. 145)
The normal term of office was one year but one man
served from 1797 to 1801. The constable's duties
were the usual ones, although Hornton's constable
spent very little on the travelling poor. (fn. 146) His most
important item of expenditure was on the militia,
particularly after the Acts of 1802–3. In 1803 their
operation took up most of the expenses, and he also
had to provide substitutes for 2 men chosen in the
ballot at Banbury. These men were hired in Warwick and were paid £41 5s. in all. The rate for substitutes had doubled by 1808, and the whole expenses
came to £106 17s. 4d., of which £73 16s. was paid
by William Gardner, probably one of the overseers.
Throughout the period the constable's expenses rose
steadily; in 1793–4 they were over £5 and by 1834
£30–£40 a year, without the militia expenses.
No overseers' accounts for Horley and only one
set for Hornton have survived. In 1776 Horley spent
£100 on relief and Hornton £59 10s., and the mean
average for 1783–5 was £170 and £150 respectively.
In 1802–3 Horley and Hornton raised £380 and
£343 respectively by poor rates, and they spent
£340 and £310 respectively on out-relief alone.
Hornton's population was almost twice as large as
Horley's in 1801 and after; 37 Hornton people
received permanent out-relief compared with 23
at Horley, and 101 children of all ages compared
with 37. Occasional relief was given to 43 persons
at Hornton and to only 7 at Horley. The poverty of
Hornton is confirmed by the fact that a rate of
7s. 6d. there raised less money than a 6s. rate in
Horley. (fn. 147) In 1834–5 Horley spent £176 on the poor
out of £243 raised, Hornton £359 out of £438, the
rest being spent on removals and county rates. (fn. 148)
The overseers' accounts of 1831 to 1836 (fn. 149) show how
Hornton's affairs were managed. Expenditure on
relief, which in 1831–2 was £699, dropped steadily
to £422 by 1835. (fn. 150) The receipts came mainly from
levies, but there was also a small income of about
£7 a year from rents, probably of the parish houses
which were insured by the overseer in 1833. Two
overseers were appointed yearly and each accounted
for six months. The accounts were approved yearly
by a small group of four or five. Unlike Horley,
Hornton had no assistance from charitable funds. (fn. 151)
The bulk of the money for the poor was spent on
regular weekly payments: in April 1831, for example,
there were 49 persons, receiving between 1s. and
7s. There were occasional payments for rent and
house repairs, for medical attention, and household
equipment. The overseers also paid the constable's
and mole-catcher's bill, and supplied coal to the
poor at cheap rates. It was evidently bought in the
summer and stored, for there are entries relating to
the purchase of coal in June and to the rent of the
coal shop. Nearly £4 was 'gained' by the sale of coal
over the whole year. Roundsmen were mentioned
occasionally, in the winter months. The largest
number of men paid was 13 in a seven-day period
from 14 February 1835, and the total soon fell again.
Both Horley and Hornton became part of the
Banbury Union, and Hornton overseers started to
pay to the Banbury Board of Guardians from July
1835. The needs of the two parts of the parish
varied widely; in 1851–2 Horley, with a population
of 392 and a rateable value of £1,848, spent £80 on
poor relief, while Hornton, with 591 inhabitants,
spent £356. Though Hornton was larger in extent
than Horley its rateable value was only £1,779, and
its rates were three times as high. (fn. 152)
Economic History.
In 1086 there was land
for 20 ploughs in the parish but only 16 ploughs were
in use: there were 9 ploughs on the demesne of the
4 manors, while the tenants had 7 ploughs. All
estates had some share in the meadow which was
estimated at 46 a., and 1 furlong by 30 perches.
Woodland (9 sq. furlongs) was only mentioned on
one estate. There were 2 mills, one on Robert of
Stafford's estate worth 5s., the other divided
between the 2 10-hide estates and worth 1s. 4d. to
each. The total value of the parish had increased
from £12 in 1066 to £15 in 1086; 3 of the estates
had risen in value, while the Mortain estate remained at £5. The recorded peasant population was 31,
of whom 14 were serfs, 12 were villani, and 5 were
bordars. No population was recorded on one of the
1 hide estates. (fn. 153)
In 1306 there were 39 tenants assessed for tax in
Hornton and 19 in Horley. In 1316 and 1327 the 2
villages were assessed together, when 71 and 51
names were listed. The lord of a Horley manor paid
2 or 3 times as much as the highest peasant contributor in 1306 and 1316; most tenants were poor,
for in 1306 three-quarters paid 2s. or less for the
thirtieth and in 1316 and 1327 over half paid 2s.
or less. (fn. 154) The parish's assessment was set at
£10 1s. 11d. in 1334, the third highest in the hundred. (fn. 155)
For the 1523 subsidy the villages were assessed
together and there were 18 names for the first
assessment and 24 for the second. Christopher
Light was assessed on £80 worth of goods, a few
wealthier farmers at between £9 and £4, and as
many as 9 at only 4d. for the first assessment, and 15
at between 4d. and 1s. 6d. for the second. (fn. 156) In 1577
the lord of the manor was again assessed highest, on
£8 worth of land. (fn. 157) By the 17th century, however,
the parish seems to have been dominated by a number of fairly wealthy farmers rather than by any one
man. Of the 9 Horley and 13 Hornton men assessed
for the hearth tax of 1665 only one had 5 hearths,
5 had 4 hearths, and 6 had 3 hearths; on the other
hand 9 were discharged for poverty. (fn. 158) Richard Arne
(d. 1665), 'gentleman' of Hornton, had chattels
at his death worth £205; two 3-hearth householders,
Thomas Hicks, 'yeoman' of Hornton, and Nathaniel
Kinch, 'yeoman' of Horley, had chattels at their
deaths worth £305 and £129 respectively. (fn. 159)
Most tenants held by copyhold and records of the
terms of tenure of tenants of the prebendal manor
have survived. In 1652 a widow was admitted tenant
after her husband to 2 yardlands, and paid an entry
fine of only 2d.; (fn. 160) entry fines were still low in the
late 18th century. (fn. 161) Although some tenements were
granted for 2 or 3 lives it was customary to make
grants to the tenant and his heirs for ever according
to the custom of the manor, eldest sons being admitted as rightful heirs. Heriots were paid in money and
ranged from 8s. for a croft to £1 3s. 4d. for a house. (fn. 162)
The manorial court's main concern was to keep a
check on encroachments on the lord's waste. A late
18th-century rental shows that buildings on the
waste included, for example, a house, a shop, and a
stable, and payments for those were exacted in the
courts. (fn. 163)
There are few records of the exploitation of the
land in the Middle Ages. The lords had a warren
in the parish by 1239, recorded also in 1272. (fn. 164) Both
villages retained separate open fields until the mid18th century. There was a 2-field system at Hornton, (fn. 165)
which may have survived, as in neighbouring parishes,
into the 16th or 17th century and have then been
converted into a 4-field system. Certainly at Horley
in 1766 there was a 4-course rotation of crops on
the Cope estate. (fn. 166) The situation of the fields is not
shown on any map but the arable probably lay on the
hill slopes while the valley bottoms, being a heavy
clay and badly drained, probably provided meadow
and pasture. (fn. 167) Maps of 1797 and later show that the
common and wastes lay near Horley village, to the
south-west of Hornton village, and on Bush Hill,
which was still marked on maps as rough pasture in
1882 and in the 1930s. (fn. 168) When Sir Anthony Cope
purchased the manor in 1609, he bought 40 a. of
heath as well as 150 a. of pasture, 50 a. of mead,
and 240 of arable. (fn. 169) Although some of the farming
was conservative there are indications that many
farmers had introduced improvements within the
framework of the open fields. Whereas a yardland
and holding in 1645 lay in 39 parcels, partly arable
and partly greensward, the glebe some 30 years
later was consolidated into 3 parcels of 10 a. to 16 a.
and 4 parcels of 12 to 32 ridges. (fn. 170) On both holdings
the system of leys farming had been adopted. In
1631 a grant in Horley included 3 leys, and the
terrier of ½ yardland made in 1672 lists 8 leys,
some lying in the plain and some on the hill. (fn. 171)
Variety was further introduced by the use of
'hitches', and vetches and clover were grown on 2
such hitches in Horley in 1712. (fn. 172)
The keeping of comparatively large animal stock
made the provision of pasture and commons and
the regulation of their use a matter of importance.
By a 12-year agreement of 1712, which in general
confirmed a previous 12-year arrangement, (fn. 173) it was
decided by the lord and tenants of Horley that a
common cow-pasture should be inclosed and set
out, that a 'horse hitch' should be taken out of the
fallow each year, and that Upper and Middle Moors
should be divided by lot. Everyone sharing in the
cow-pasture was to stint 8 sheep 'for the better
making' of it; if sheep were put on it without
permission, 1d. was to be deducted from their
shepherd's wages. The horse-hitch was to be
'mounded' and prepared by everyone sharing in it,
and was to be divided by lot in proportion to each
man's number of yardlands. Each man was to sow
3 peck of vetches on his lot for every horse, mare, or
gelding which he wished to keep there, and was to
stint 1 sheep. The owners of tithes on this land
agreed in the one case to take only 1/15 of grain there
and in the other case not to take any tithes from the
new hitches, save rent for small tithes. It was
specifically laid down that no one should put
animals of Hornton men on this common, but Hornton men were evidently allowed to pay for the
privilege of sowing in the new hitches. All common
grass growing in the corn-field was to be sold and
the money, together with the money from Hornton
men, was to be used to trench the fallow, i.e. to
drain the heavy soil. (fn. 174) Regulations were laid down
at the same time for the grazing of cattle and sheep
in other parts of the commons and open fields:
animals were not to be put on the gores and moors
until after harvest, nor on the stubble field before
Michaelmas, nor on the hitch when sown, nor on
any greensward after mowing, save for one or two
horses for working purposes; and no horse was to be
tied within 60 yards of any standing or cut corn,
nor to be tethered on any balk or common ground
in the field unless the grazing had been bought.
Another order said that no one was to dig or take
away the earth of the commons. (fn. 175)
The fields and commons were supervised by two
fieldsmen chosen annually, and the grazing by
two 'tellers', who in 1712 were to be the fieldsmen
as well. Each commoner was obliged to inform the
tellers of his stock turned out to graze, and the
tellers could impound surplus animals; for payment
they were given 8 sheep commons. Cattle were kept
with the common herd under the herdsman, who
received them night and morning and gave notice
with his horn. Two bulls were to be kept each year
to go with the herd; the providers of each bull were
to have commons for 10 sheep and 3 lambs. (fn. 176)
Stints in the parish were diverse: in a dispute over
the number of sheep-commons attached to the sale
of 2 yardlands in Hornton the seller stated it to be
20 and the buyer 48, while the eventual agreement
was for 40; and in 1611 the sale of 3 yardlands in
Hornton included commons for 24 sheep, 5 beasts,
and 4 horses to the yardland. (fn. 177) The Horley stint was
changed by the 12-year agreement of 1712 to 24
sheep and 10 lambs in the cow-pasture and 12
sheep and 5 lambs in the field per yardland. At the
end of the agreement the ancient stint of 40 sheep
to a yardland was to be restored to the commoners
and 67 sheep to a yardland to the parson. (fn. 178) There
were a number of pasture and meadow closes (fn. 179) but
when the open fields were finally inclosed in
1766 old inclosures amounted at most to 324 a. (fn. 180)
It is not possible to locate these inclosures, but
according to a grant of 1813 at least 68 a. lay in Horley
township. (fn. 181)
The chief crops grown were wheat, oats, barley,
and pulses; and cattle and horses were kept as well
as sheep. (fn. 182) The sheep flocks, judging from inventories, were normally fairly small: few 17th-century
farmers seem to have had flocks of more than 40
to 50. The following random selection of 17thcentury inventories shows the mixed interests of
the farmers. Thomas Allen (d. 1616) of Horley,
whose goods were worth £82, had £18 worth of
corn and grass, a flock of 45 sheep, 5 horses, 8
cows and calves, pigs, poultry, and 8 stocks of bees. (fn. 183)
Another Hornton man had £45 worth of corn (oats,
pease, and maslin), and horses (with harness) and
cattle worth £27, out of a total valuation of £94. (fn. 184)
A rather more prosperous man, Nathaniel Kinch
(d. 1693) had a large flock of sheep (valued at £20),
7 horses, swine, and cows worth £24; his crops of
wheat, pulse, barley, and hay were valued at £40,
and he had cheeses worth £1 6s. 8d. (fn. 185) Another rich
yeoman had more than two-thirds of the value of
his goods in crops and stock: his barley, pease,
winter corn, and oats were valued at £124; his
horses, colts, cows, sheep, and pigs at £91. (fn. 186) A
gentleman of the parish had £100 worth of wool
stored in his house; at the time of his death his
flock of 45 sheep was small, but this may not have
been its normal size. He also kept a few horses and
cows. (fn. 187)
The inclosure of 2,289 a. in Horley and Hornton
Fields took place in 1766. The largest single allotments
were made in Horley Field where Sir John Mordaunt
Cope received 219 a., the vicar 181 a., and Edward
Metcalfe 252 a. for his 6½ yardlands in Horley and
impropriate tithes. No award was made for manorial rights over the waste, which Metcalfe evidently
retained. There were 15 other allotments in Horley
Field, of which only 5 were between 10 a. and 100 a.
and the rest were under 10 a. In Hornton there were
34 allotments: Richard Calcott received 174 a. and
4 others between 111 a. and 122 a.; there were 14
allotments between 10 a. and 100 a. and 15 of under
10 a. Seventeen of the Hornton allotments included
compensation for impropriate tithes. (fn. 188)
Inclosure did not immediately affect the pattern
of landholding. In the late 18th century the land
of the parish was still divided between a comparatively large number of proprietors: 27 in Horley
and 36 in Hornton. There were 19 owner-occupiers
in the parish, of whom 4 had fair-sized farms in
Hornton. Seven tenant-occupied farms in Hornton
were assessed at between £2 and £7, and there were
4 in Horley assessed at between £6 and £21 but
other holdings were all small. (fn. 189) In 1831 tenants
farmed the 4 chief farms in Horley; there was one
fair-sized owner-occupied farm. In all there were
24 assessed for tax in Horley and 28 in Hornton,
where the 4 larger farms were owner-occupied,
and there were 5 tenant farms with smaller rentals. (fn. 190)
In 1851 there were 21 farmers in all, of whom 2
had large farms of 345 a. and 330 a., one in Horley
and the other in Hornton. There were 2 other farms
of over 200 a., but the average size was much smaller:
9 farms in the parish were between 100 a. and 150 a.,
and 6 between 26 a. and 70 a. (fn. 191) By the end of the
19th century the number of farms in the parish
had been reduced to 13, and by 1939 to 9 and 3
small-holdings. (fn. 192) In 1961 the average farm was
small (c. 150 a.), although some like the Mount
dairy farm in Hornton were under 90 a., and one,
the Upton Estate, which lay in both Horley and
Hornton, covered 1,000 a. (fn. 193)
Davis's map of 1797 shows a mainly arable parish (fn. 194)
and 19th-century leases contained the proviso, often
found elsewhere, for extra payment for the conversion of meadow and pasture into tillage, indicating
that increased profits were to be expected from arable:
in a lease of 1804, for example, an extra £20 a year
was asked for every acre of meadow and pasture
converted without licence; and a lease of 1840
asked for £50 for every acre converted. (fn. 195) An agricultural expert stated in 1854 that the red land at
Horley was 'well adapted for growing barley and
turnips', (fn. 196) and this was still recognized at the end of
the century. In 1892, for example, the arable of
Horley Manor estate (306 a.) was described as
'deep, staple turnip and barley land, growing heavy
crops and very healthy for sheep'. This estate was
then about a third under pasture. (fn. 197) A smaller farm
in Horley (140 a.) was over half arable; (fn. 198) Hornton
House estate (303 a.) was described in 1910 as
'rich old pasture and production arable' and again
over half was arable. (fn. 199) A survey of the county's
agriculture in 1914 estimated that 51 per cent. of
the parish was permanent pasture, while 22 per cent.
of the arable was under wheat, 23 per cent. under
barley, and 13 per cent. under oats. There was a
high percentage of root crops as compared with the
rest of the county, i.e. 10 per cent. swedes and
turnips. The proportion of sheep kept was high: 61
to every 100 a. of cultivated land, and there were
17 cattle to every 100 a. (fn. 200) The chief disadvantage of
farming in this area was said to be the distance from
Banbury, as the roads were too hilly for it to be
profitable to carry large quantities of feeding stuffs
and manures or to send produce away frequently. (fn. 201)
Compared with the best Oxfordshire land the land
of the parish was of average fertility. Many of the
valley sides were so steep that they could not be
ploughed easily, if at all, and the light land with the
ironstone very near the surface was prolific of weeds.
Mechanization, introduced during the Second
World War, reached a very high level on the large
farms with the result that the labour force dropped
considerably, horses almost disappeared, and hedges
were bulldozed so as to enlarge the fields to 20–40
acres. Farming remained mixed: about half the
land was permanent pasture, although on the larger
farms there was a complete change-over to arable
with 1-year or 3-year leys, and the heavier soil of
the bottoms was drained by irrigation. Barley,
wheat, and roots were the main crops grown, though
there were some oats and sugar beet. The rotation
used on the largest farm (700 a.) was 2 years corn,
1 rape and turnips, 2 corn, and 3 leys, compared
with 1 year each of corn, roots, corn, and leys
before the war. (fn. 202)
The comparative isolation of Horley and Hornton resulted in village craftsmen and small traders
persisting rather longer than elsewhere. In 1851
there were 4 tailors, a clockmaker, and 2 millers in
each village, and at the end of the century fruiterers,
grocers, shopkeepers, a blacksmith, and a watchmaker were still to be found. (fn. 203) Agriculture was the
chief occupation up to the 19th century, (fn. 204) but
quarrying and weaving had always been of some
importance. The Hornton stone quarries supplied
the principal building stone in the Banbury and
Edgehill districts. (fn. 205) Quarrymen and masons are
recorded in wills and registers from 1609, and in the
1851 census there were 19 stone-masons, 5 quarrymen and 10 labourers in Hornton, and 5 stonemasons in Horley. (fn. 206) In the 20th century the stone was
quarried mainly for the ironstone by the Oxfordshire
Ironstone Co. and very little was used for building. (fn. 207)
Carr's Pit, the last of the Hornton quarries to be
worked for Hornton stone proper, was closed in
1942. Besides its extensive use for building this
stone has been much used for monumental work,
especially blue Hornton, though a purple and
brown Hornton was also used. The Stanleys have
been masons for generations, and since the First
World War their firm has been based on Edge Hill.
Their market is world-wide, stone being sent to
New Zealand and South America, as well as all over
England. At one time the firm employed 50 per
cent. Hornton men, but in 1963 only a few of its 40
employees came from the village. Gilbert Scott was
an admirer of Hornton stone, and several modern
sculptors, including Henry Moore, favour it. (fn. 208)
Plush-weaving was another minor industry
carried on in Horley and Hornton down to the late
19th century: weavers are recorded in the parish
from the 17th century. Two weavers were listed for
the 1851 census, as well as two plush-weavers and a
shag-weaver. (fn. 209) In the 20th century most nonagricultural workers in the two villages are employed
in Banbury.
The descent of the parish's 2 mills (fn. 210) in the Middle
Ages is not recorded, but it is probable that one was
the water-corn-mill at Horley, which later belonged
to the prebendal manor and which descended with
it in the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 211) In 1631 it was
rated at £12 a year. (fn. 212) In 1804 it was leased for £90 a
year. (fn. 213) There was a miller, usually described as both
farmer and miller, at Horley until 1920, but he was
no longer recorded by 1924. (fn. 214) The fate of the other
Domesday mill is not known. There was a windmill
marked near Hornton village in 1797 and 1882, but
no miller was recorded there after 1869. (fn. 215)
Church.
Architectural evidence shows that both
Horley and Hornton churches were in existence by
the late 12th century. In 1115 Henry I granted land
in Horley, and the church of King's Sutton (Northants.), which Ranulf Flambard held of him, to
augment the prebend which Ranulf and his son
Elias held in Lincoln. (fn. 216) There is little doubt that
from this date the churches and tithes of Horley
and Hornton were appropriated to the prebend,
which was known as the prebend of Sutton-cumBuckingham. (fn. 217) Until the mid-15th century Horley
and Hornton, like Buckingham, were chapelries of
King's Sutton. (fn. 218)
In 1231 Horley church belonged to the Archdeacon of Buckingham, (fn. 219) who held the prebend;
from then until the mid-15th century it was served
by a curate nominated by the Vicar of Sutton. (fn. 220)
Hornton church was recorded in 1403 as a chapel of
Sutton; (fn. 221) the nature of its relationship with Horley
at that time is not known.
Between 1438 and 1448 a vicarage of Horley and
Hornton was ordained. (fn. 222) The ecclesiastical revenue
of the parish was divided between the prebendary
and the vicar. The prebendary was patron and
made the first presentation in 1452. (fn. 223) After the
surrender of the prebend in 1547 (fn. 224) presentations
were made by lessees of the prebendal manor, who
occasionally sold turns. (fn. 225) In 1609, when James I
granted the manor to Sir Robert Brett, he retained
the advowson; since then Horley and Hornton has
been a Crown living. (fn. 226)
The prebendaries and their successors in the
rectory had all the great tithes of Horley, except
those of 6 yardlands which were paid to the vicar,
as well as 6½ yardlands of glebe: at inclosure the
impropriator was allotted 252 a. (fn. 227) In 1839 Daniel
Stuart, lord of the prebendal manor, declined to
take sole responsibility for the upkeep of Horley
chancel; although the vicar also held great tithes he
claimed that he was exempt from repairing the
church or the chancel. (fn. 228) Stuart repaired the chancel
in 1840. (fn. 229) The great tithes of Hornton also presumably belonged to the medieval prebendaries. When
the land of Hornton manor was split up, however, (fn. 230)
the great tithes were apparently sold off in small
quantities. (fn. 231) From this time they belonged usually,
if not always, to the holders of the land, (fn. 232) and at
inclosure in 1766 were extinguished. (fn. 233) Since the
land-holders and tithe-owners were the same, the
repair of Hornton chancel was paid for out of the
church rates. (fn. 234)
In 1526 the vicarage was valued at £11 and in
1535 £16 13s. 4d. (fn. 235) After inclosure in 1766 the
value of the living, which before then had been
worth c. £120, (fn. 236) rose sharply and by 1789 the vicar
was said to be receiving £500. (fn. 237) In the 1860s the
net value of the living was c. £400, but agricultural
depression later in the century caused a fall in the
letting value of the glebe, from which most of the
vicar's income came. (fn. 238)
In the 17th and 18th centuries the vicar was
receiving the great and small tithes of 6 yardlands
and a few acres in Horley except from the rectory's
3 yardlands there, and all Hornton's small tithes,
which by 1765 had been commuted for 6s. a yardland. (fn. 239) The vicarial glebe comprised 3 yardlands in
Hornton and a close of c. 5 a.; there was a vicaragehouse in Horley and a cottage in Hornton. The vicar
also received £6 13s. 4d. from King's Sutton
rectory, (fn. 240) which was still paid in the 19th
century. (fn. 241)
In the Middle Ages the Dean of Lincoln had the
right to visit the prebend of Sutton-cum-Buckingham, and therefore Horley and Hornton, once every
3 years. The Bishop of Lincoln instituted to the
vicarage of Horley and Hornton and the chapter
inducted. (fn. 242) After the Reformation and the formation
of the Diocese of Oxford the parish formed part
of the Peculiar of Banbury, Horley, and Hornton; (fn. 243)
in the early 17th century the chapter's official held
visitations sometimes at Horley and sometimes at
Hornton and sometimes at Banbury, but later only at
Banbury. (fn. 244) From the later 18th century the bishops
of Oxford tried unsuccessfully to end the jurisdiction of the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln. (fn. 245)
In 1838, however, it was the chapter that dealt with
complaints about Horley chancel and until 1858
Horley wills were proved in the Peculiar court. (fn. 246)
In 1853 the parish was formally transferred to
Oxford Diocese. (fn. 247) Before that date, however, the
Bishop of Oxford licensed curates and occasionally
visited. (fn. 248)
The connexion of the medieval prebendaries of
Sutton with Horley and Hornton was sometimes
close; in the 14th century there was a prebendal
house at Horley (fn. 249) and prebendaries were responsible
for rebuilding the chancel. Two prebendaries,
Henry Roworthe (1416–20) and Robert Gilbert
(1420–36), have their portraits in the church windows. (fn. 250) Another, Richard Lavender, left 13s. 4d.
to Horley church in 1508. (fn. 251) By contrast an Italian
cardinal who held the prebend in 1383 was said to
have spent little on the churches annexed to it. (fn. 252)
The earliest known clerk connected with the parish
was Thomas, who held a yardland in Horley in 1231. (fn. 253)
According to the ordination of King's Sutton vicarage in 1277 the Vicar of King's Sutton was to receive
2 marks a year from Horley chapel (fn. 254) and the likelihood is that he chose and paid the chaplains of
both Horley and Hornton. By 1438 at least Hornton
had its own churchyard and it appears that Horley
people were buried there; the dean and chapter at
that date considered the possibility of providing a
more convenient burial place for Horley, since the
inhabitants had a via nimis tediosa to Hornton chapel. (fn. 255)
The Vicar of Sutton apparently found chaplains
difficult to find and keep and it was at the request of
the prebendary, Nicholas Dixon (1438–48), that
the Bishop of Lincoln ordained Horley and Hornton
vicarage. (fn. 256)
Thereafter the Vicar of Horley probably nominated and paid a curate for Hornton; in 1526 he was
paying the curate £5. (fn. 257) Later the curate probably
lived in the 'very small' house of some 2 bays (fn. 258)
which in the early 19th century was still known as
the Vicarage. (fn. 259) Occasional references to individual
curates have been found between the 1590s and
1736; (fn. 260) separate registers were kept and Hornton's
churchwardens made regular presentments to the
Peculiar court. (fn. 261)
Only one pre-Reformation vicar, David Caunton
(1489–1502), was a graduate. (fn. 262) Hugh ap Richard (or
Pritchard), vicar from 1583 to 1599, was a pluralist
but lived at Horley where he was said to preach
sometimes; (fn. 263) his curate at Hornton, however, was
described as 'no preacher'. (fn. 264) In 1606 the vicar was
said to read and preach the word faithfully. (fn. 265) His
successors, John (1612–52) and Thomas Clarson
(1652–68), sadly neglected the fabric and furniture
of both churches. (fn. 266) One of their problems may have
been church rates; in 1631 the rate for Horley was
7s. a yardland and that for Hornton 5s. 8d., but
Hornton people refused to pay rates for the upkeep
of Horley church. (fn. 267) Stephen Goodwin (1669–1722),
member of a prominent local family, (fn. 268) rebuilt the
vicarage-house; (fn. 269) he was, however, probably the
last resident vicar for over a century. During his
incumbency there was trouble over pews erected in
the south aisle 'to the disturbance and great prejudice' of Richard Thomson, who had sole right to
sit there, and they were ordered to be removed. (fn. 270)
Goodwin's successor was also Vicar of Banbury
and a succession of curates served Horley. (fn. 271) With
the institution of John Dechair in 1758 the parish
fell into a state of deep neglect and became a subject
of scandal in the neighbourhood. Complaints about
Dechair were made not only to the Bishops of
Lincoln and Oxford, but to the Archbishop of
Canterbury and the patron, the Lord Chancellor. (fn. 272)
By 1790 the 'venerable parsonage' was in ruins, the
churchwardens' presentments having been consistently ignored, (fn. 273) while the vicar wrung every penny
he could from the living by selling the materials of
the farm buildings as they fell down and cutting
and selling the timber from the glebe. (fn. 274) In 1804
Dechair spent several months in the parish, but as
he was at this time 77 and subject to many infirmities,
he gave 'little satisfaction' to his parishioners. (fn. 275)
Of his curates, (fn. 276) one was dismissed for drunkenness; (fn. 277)
the curate in 1805–6, Joseph Jones, aroused opposition by nonconformist tendencies. The latter
distributed nonconformist literature, including a
Presbyterian catechism, and indulged in 'violent
and ranting' preaching. In 1806 a neighbouring
rector wrote that he considered the churches of
Horley and Hornton as 'meeting-houses', and the
bishop insisted on a change of curates. (fn. 278) A later
curate spent much of his time in Warwick, where he
had 'some fortune', so that both sets of churchwardens complained to the Bishop of Oxford about
the irregular hours of services and the 'indecent and
scandalous' delay in burials. The bishop sent a
sharp order to Dechair to engage and pay a reasonable stipend to a satisfactory curate. (fn. 279) As a final proof
of Dechair's negligence lands which before inclosure
had been used for the upkeep of the church were
omitted from the inclosure award and were therefore 'melted down in the common mass' and
divided among the landowners. (fn. 280)
On Dechair's death in 1810 the parishioners
without success petitioned the Lord Chancellor to
present their curate to the living. (fn. 281) Two nonresident pluralists followed, although the second,
Sir John Hobart Seymour, Bt., (fn. 282) was responsible
for considerable repairs to the church fabric, (fn. 283)
persuaded the lay rector to repair the chancel, (fn. 284) and
provided allotments for churchgoing parishioners. (fn. 285)
The parish obtained a resident and devoted vicar
in 1853 on the presentation of W. J. Pinwell, who
had been curate since 1848. (fn. 286) He held 3 services on
Sundays in the 2 churches in summer and 2 in
winter, (fn. 287) but growth in population, Dissent in both
places, and long neglect made the parish a difficult
one. Accordingly it was decided to make Hornton
into a separate parish, so that it could have a resident
minister and two Sunday services. Plans for the
separation drawn up in 1864 and 1870 came to
nothing largely because of the difficulty of dividing
up the endowments. (fn. 288)
When Charles Heaven came to the parish in 1879
he found it in a 'most deplorable condition', especially Hornton, which had a population of 600
'poor people'. There was no musical instrument
there and no choir, no light or heating in the winter
months, the roof let in the water, the churchyard was
neglected, and there had been no Sunday school for
many years. He at once tried to raise the very large
sum of £5,450 to pay for the restoration of both
churches and the rebuilding of the vicarage-house. (fn. 289)
There were no large landed proprietors in the
parish, however, and he soon found himself in serious
financial difficulties. He had to pay a third of the
profits of the living to his retired predecessor and
himself farm the glebe at a time of falling prices. (fn. 290)
By 1893 the condition of Hornton church had
become a public scandal and was the subject of a
series of articles and letters in Birmingham newspapers. Because of lack of heat services had to be
held in the school in winter, a house had been
built in the churchyard, and the registers were badly
kept. In the vicar's defence attention was called to
his financial difficulties, to the past neglect and
'gradual decay' of Hornton church, and to the difficulty of finding churchwardens. In the previous year
it may be noted there had been a disputed election
for parish warden in which a female candidate had
obtained nearly half the votes. It was proposed both
to secure the vicar's resignation and to separate
Horley and Hornton, (fn. 291) but Heaven remained
vicar until his resignation in 1914 and Horley and
Hornton still form one ecclesiastical parish. (fn. 292)
In the 20th century local pride in both churches
developed and both were restored in 1915 through
the energy of the vicar, H. J. Buxton, who later
became Bishop of Gibraltar. Much voluntary work
has since been done in the church and churchyard,
and church life is described as vigorous in both
villages. (fn. 293) J. H. Clements-Ansell, who lived at
Horley Manor, was a noted benefactor from 1910 to
1948. (fn. 294) Since 1946 the living has been held in
plurality with Hanwell. (fn. 295)
The church of ST. ETHELDREDA, (fn. 296) Horley,
consists of a chancel, a central tower, a spacious
aisled nave, and a south porch, all built of Hornton
stone. (fn. 297) The tower dates from the late 12th century;
it has 2 belfry windows of that date to east and west.
The arch upon which its western wall stands retains its Romanesque chamfered abaci, while the
bases of the eastern arch are said to exist beneath
the chancel paving, the responds and capitals
having been remodelled in the 14th century. (fn. 298) Above
the same arch there is visible the outline of what
appears to be a large relieving-arch, though it is
possible that it represents an attempt, afterwards
abandoned, to enlarge the chancel-arch. The massive
diagonal buttresses at the external corners of the
tower were probably added in the 19th century,
but the footings of the original buttresses at rightangles to the tower can still be seen at groundlevel.
The existing chancel, though remodelled in the
14th century, appears to date substantially from
c. 1200 and was probably built at approximately
the same date as the tower. Internally it retains an
aumbry with dog-tooth ornament and a heavy
roll-moulding running beneath the windows in the
north and south walls: externally the south doorway
and the lower parts of the south wall are of the same
date. Of the nave as it existed in the 12th century
there is no trace except the outline of a steep-pitched
roof on the west face of the tower. It may, however,
be presumed that it was aisleless, as is still the case
at Bucknell, a church of similar date and plan.
During the earlier 13th century it was rebuilt with
a higher roof and narrow lean-to aisles. The principal surviving portion of this 13th-century nave
is the west wall, in which the line of the original
roof can still be traced externally. Two cusped
niches and a doorway ornamented with attached
shafts are features of the 13th-century west front.
Early in the 14th century the church was enlarged
and remodelled. Both arcades were rebuilt with
more lofty arches, and the south aisle at least was
widened and re-windowed, though the original
13th-century south doorway was re-used in a new
position. At the same time the chancel was largely
rebuilt on its original foundations, though retaining
much of the 13th-century masonry internally. Both
in the chancel and in the south aisle the 14thcentury masons conformed closely to the pattern
of the 13th-century plinth still existing in the west
wall of the nave. At the same time a clerestory was
constructed in order to light the nave and a south
porch was built. The buttressing of the tower
probably took place at the same time as the general
remodelling of the church. Like the relieving-arch
already noted it may indicate some failure of the
masonry in the east wall of the tower. A staircase
turret formerly rose about 3 ft. above the parapet of
the tower; it was removed early in the 19th century. (fn. 299)

The Church of St. Etheldreda, Horley
In the early 15th century the north wall of the
north aisle was rebuilt, both the fenestration and
the external plinth being of that date. The original
13th-century north doorway was, however, retained and reset in the new masonry. The large
square-headed west window of 3 lights with a transom dates from c. 1600, and no doubt replaces a
medieval window that had fallen into decay.
As at Hanwell, there is a fire-place and chimney
in the south-west corner of the south aisle. The tubshaped font (restored in 1855) (fn. 300) may date from the
late 12th or early 13th century.
The exposed position of the church no doubt
helped to account for its early decay, though there
seems to have been much neglect. The lay rector
was constantly presented in the early 17th century
for a dilapidated chancel. On one occasion some of
the timber and one beam were said to have fallen
down and in 1621 it was described as 'ruinous and
much decayed' so that the rain came in. (fn. 301)
In 1632 the church itself was said to be 'ready to
fall'. (fn. 302) In 1690 the roof of the 'north side' was
ordered to be repaired with lead, (fn. 303) and in 1701,
1706, and 1714 repairs to the 'leads', generally, were
again necessary. (fn. 304) Some time in the 18th century,
perhaps about 1760, (fn. 305) the upper part of the east
window of the chancel was rebuilt and new tracery
was inserted in the westernmost of the 2 windows
in the north wall of the chancel. In 1785 over £39
was paid for work on the tower and work in 1838–9
included new roofing and slating (not leading) the
nave and the south aisle, repairing the north aisle,
and reflooring and re-pewing the church. The work
was paid for by subscription and was done as cheaply
as possible, deal being used. The roof of the north
aisle was not thoroughly repaired until 1855. (fn. 306) The
pulpit and reading desk had been provided in 1836.
By 1879 a thorough restoration was required. (fn. 307)
In a private letter the vicar wrote that the tower might
fall any day. (fn. 308) In 1883 and 1884 the churchwardens
examined the tower and found that it was necessary
to do repairs at once to prevent the roof from falling
in. Nothing was done, however, until 1915. The
tower was then repaired and the fabric put in good
order. The deal pews were replaced by chairs, and
Persian carpets were given by the vicar. (fn. 309) Later,
under the supervision of the architect, Mr. L. Dale,
the rood, rood-loft, and rood-screen were erected;
the pulpit was painted with scenes from the life of
St. Etheldreda, and 2 new altars were installed in
the north and south aisles. (fn. 310) The church is lit by
clusters of candles.
Several coffin lids of the 12th or 13th century
survive. A carved stone with cusped panelling at the
east end of the south aisle appears to be part of a
tomb of 15th-century date. There is also a brass
indent of c. 1500 in the tower representing a civilian
and lady with six daughters and several sons. Only
parts of the brass itself remain. (fn. 311)
There is some ancient glass of the earlier 15th
century: in a window in the north aisle is the
kneeling figure of Henry Roworthe, rector until
1420 and Archdeacon of Canterbury. In the next
window is the figure of Master Robert Gilbert,
another rector, who became Bishop of London in
1436. There are fragments of the Beauchamp arms
in the east window of the south aisle and in the
westernmost window of the north aisle. (fn. 312)
The church is remarkable for its wall-paintings:
the gigantic St. Christopher, dated c. 1450, is one
of the largest and most perfect representations of
the saint in this country. (fn. 313) Other scenes, the Annunciation, St. Michael weighing souls, St. George and the
Dragon, and a representation of the Seven Deadly
Sins, were uncovered by the vicar in 1853, but none
could be preserved. A figure, probably of St. Etheldreda, remains on the western pier of the north
arcade; on the north wall of the nave, near the tower,
are some designs consisting of circles enclosing a
character resembling the letter T. Some postReformation texts also remain on the south wall.
The painted Commandments in the chancel were
put up in 1822, and the 18th-century organ and
organ-case, said to have once belonged to Handel, (fn. 314)
was acquired in the late 18th or early 19th century.
The church plate includes a pair of silver chalices
of 1690, a silver paten of 1702 and a silver flagon of
1855. There were also a pair of pewter plates and a
pair of tankard flagons, all of the 18th century. (fn. 315)
There is a ring of 4 bells by William and Henry
Bagley dated 1706. (fn. 316)
The registers are complete from 1538. (fn. 317)
The church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST,
Hornton, is built of the local ironstone and consists
of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, western tower,
and south porch. (fn. 318) It was originally built in the late
12th century, was enlarged in the 13th century,
and again enlarged and considerably altered in the
course of the next 2 centuries. Of the original
church there remains the nave and the north aisle:
the 3 arches of the nave arcade are in the transitional
style between Romanesque and Early English and
rest on cylindrical shafts which have capitals with
square chamfered abaci. Another survival of the
12th-century church is the cylindrical font with an
arcade of interesting arches and a base moulding
of cables. (fn. 319)
In the 13th century the chancel seems to have
been reconstructed, as the quoins at the east end are
decorated with roll-mouldings of this period. The
fourth arch of the north nave arcade indicates that
the nave was lengthened westwards in the course
of the 13th century.
Probably in the early 14th century the chancel was
largely rebuilt and a chapel was added on the north
side. Only one blocked-up arch remains of the 2
which formerly separated the chapel from the
chancel. A south arcade of 2 bays was built, a
clerestory was added, and a flat timber roof replaced
the former steeply pitched one; nearly all windows
and doorways in the body of the church and chancel
were remodelled. A plain carpet was added to the
exterior of the nave, aisles, and chancel. Later in the
14th or early in the 15th century the tower was built.
In the 15th century the church was lightened by the
insertion of a 4-light east window. An elaborately
carved reredos, of which there are some remains at
the east end, was probably also erected in the 15th
century.
Minor repairs were carried out from time to time
in the post-Reformation period but no structural
alterations of importance have been made and the
building remains an essentially medieval one. The
roof was badly out of repair in 1629 and 1632 when
the rain was coming in (fn. 320) but in 1670 and 1685 the
church was stated to be in 'very good repair'; (fn. 321)
no further reports on the state of the fabric have
been found before the 19th century.
When Beesley wrote in 1841, the church was in
a very unsound and dangerous condition; the walls
were 'fractured in an alarming manner and were
much out of the perpendicular'. (fn. 322) In 1848 the curate
was proposing to open up the blocked tower arch. (fn. 323)
A west gallery, probably erected in the 18th century,
existed at this time. (fn. 324) In 1881 the vicar reported
that the roof was so much out of repair that moss,
ferns, and plants flourished inside the church. (fn. 325)
This neglect continued despite the efforts of the
vicar. In 1893 the windows were broken and the
kneelers were rotting from the damp. High pews in
church and chancel, 'fantastically placed to face all
points of the compass' (fn. 326) also aroused criticism. The
building was not thoroughly repaired until 1919.
Work, including the installation of heating and
electric light, was completed in 1922. (fn. 327)
The church is notable for its wall-paintings. The
whole of the south aisle was once brilliantly painted
and traces of a 14th-century painting of the Virgin
and Child remained at the east end in the 19th
century. They were in too bad a state to preserve
and have since been almost entirely covered with
whitewash. (fn. 328) Over the chancel there is a Doom and
over the pulpit the figure of St. George. There are
also the remains of post-Reformation decoration
on the north wall of the church and the south wall
of the chancel, including the Creed written in
English and other texts.
Only a fragment of painted glass remains — the
coat of arms of one of the Verdun family in the east
window of the south aisle. (fn. 329)
Late brasses in the chancel are to Richard Arne
(d. 1665/6), and to John Goodwin (d. 1727), to
Mary Zouch, his daughter (d. 1736), and to Mary,
his wife (d. 1740). There is a brass effigy of a civilian
and his son, Thomas Sharman, yeoman (d. 1586),
in the south aisle. (fn. 330)
There is a silver Elizabethan chalice and paten of
1582. (fn. 331)
In 1706 the 3 bells and a sanctus bell were 'all
broke' and they were ordered to be recast. (fn. 332) There
are now 5 bells. (fn. 333)
The registers are complete from 1538. (fn. 334)
Nonconformity.
In 1656 Horley appeared in
the lists of the Midland Association of General
Baptists (fn. 335) and in 1693 Nathaniel Kinch of Horley
was licensed to teach in any public meeting in the
county. (fn. 336) He held a conventicle in the village attended by over 100 people, several of them described
as gentlemen. (fn. 337) In the same year John Cox's house
in Hornton was licensed for meetings. (fn. 338) In 1733
Horley was a member of the General Assembly of
General Baptists; it was the only General Baptist
community in Oxfordshire. (fn. 339) In 1768 the christening
of 2 adult Anabaptists was recorded. (fn. 340)
In the 17th and 18th centuries there was a considerable group of Quakers living in Hornton and
attending the Shutford meeting. (fn. 341) Prominent
among them was William Rush who was imprisoned
in 1688 and again later for failure to pay tithes;
between 1697 and 1713 his goods were regularly
distrained on for the same offence. (fn. 342) Of the 12
Hornton family names found in the Quaker register
in the 18th century Jarrett was the most common. (fn. 343)
In 1736 Stephen Jarrett was prosecuted for nonpayment of tithes. The case involved a not uncommon
subterfuge whereby Quakers allowed a man to pay
their tithes and deducted the amount from his next
bill; earlier Quaker tenants of the land farmed by
Jarrett had done this, but Jarrett refused and was
in trouble over tithes until 1747. (fn. 344) The family
survived in Hornton until at least 1806, when the
death of Joseph Jarrett, weaver, was recorded. (fn. 345)
Hornton provided many of the most active members
of Shutford meeting, William Stevens, Stephen and
John Jarrett, and Joseph Tompson. These men had
all died by 1787 and their deaths seem clearly
related to the decline of Shutford meeting. (fn. 346)
Between the late 18th and mid-19th century other
nonconformist groups appeared of which little is
known. In 1794 2 houses had been registered at
Horley. One of them, Elizabeth Adams' house, was
to be used for the 'public worship of Almighty
God according to the Orthodox Faith'. (fn. 347) The 1851
Ecclesiastical Census gives the date of the foundation
of the Methodist chapel as 'before 1800' (fn. 348) and in
1802 the vicar spoke of a Methodist chapel as
'lately erected' and licensed, though without a
licensed teacher. (fn. 349) In 1805 the vicar reported that
the group was ministered to by licensed visiting
teachers and that many Methodists absented themselves from church. (fn. 350) On the day of the census in
1851 the chapel had a morning congregation of 75
and an evening one of 90. In addition there was a
Primitive Methodist meeting attracting a congregation of up to 60; (fn. 351) this meeting perhaps began as
the group which in 1831 was meeting in the house of
William Salmons. (fn. 352)
In Hornton a house was registered in 1790 and
there were three further registrations in the 1830s. (fn. 353)
It is not possible to be sure what sect used these
meeting-houses although one was probably registered by Methodists. (fn. 354) The Primitive Methodists
registered a building in 1836, a chapel was built in
1842, and by 1851 there was an average congregation of 120. (fn. 355) There was also an independent
meeting in Hornton dating from 1834 which in
1851 had an average congregation of 45. (fn. 356) This may
be identical with an 'independent' Methodists
meeting held in a club room belonging to the 'Bell'
in 1854. (fn. 357) No further reference to either meeting
has been found.
By 1878 the vicar admitted that two-thirds of his
parishioners were professed dissenters. (fn. 358) Methodism has survived in both villages. The death of
older members has led to a decline in recent years,
however, the total membership being 67 in 1965.
Of that number 51 belonged to Hornton chapel. (fn. 359)
Schools.
The parish had 2 schools with 17thcentury endowments, one at Horley and one at
Hornton. By his will, dated 1627, Michael Harding,
a North Newington yeoman, left a house in Horley
for a school-house, and c 14 a. of land to maintain
the schoolmaster on condition that John French of
Broughton and his sons might have free education
for 3 of their children for ever. A Commission of
Charitable Uses in 1636 found that the house had
'fallen flat down', but that the rents of £13 6s. 8d.
from the land were sufficient to repair the house,
and then pay a schoolmaster. (fn. 360) The earliest known
master was also described as curate. (fn. 361)
Another schoolmaster is commemorated by a
grave stone, placed in the church by a pupil, which
records his death in 1776 and says that he acquired
much useful learning which he dispensed with great
integrity.
In the early 19th century Horley school was in a
very unsatisfactory state. Reading and writing were
being taught to a maximum of 20 boys, but the
trustees of the school had no knowledge of its lands or
funds as a Banbury attorney held the deeds and
refused to give any information. (fn. 362) When the master
died in 1820, the trustees had to postpone appointing
a successor until they could repair the building. The
school re-opened 9 months later under new rules:
girls were now also taken and taught knitting and
sewing by the schoolmaster's wife; all children
over 6 years in Horley were admitted free, and
children from adjoining parishes, on the payment
of a fee. The new schoolmaster was to teach according to the National system for a salary of £42 a year.
The new arrangement was extremely unpopular in
the village and in 1823 there were only 14 free
pupils; the number of paying pupils, however, had
risen to 32, some of whom came from neighbouring parishes. Petitions drawn up by the parishioners against the National system seem to have
alleged that children learned faster before it was
adopted. The Charity Commissioners found no
substance in the charges and pointed out that 3 of
the principal inhabitants were satisfied with the
changed arrangements. (fn. 363) By 1833 the number of
pupils had risen to 16 boys and 25 girls, and there
was also a Sunday school, supported by local
subscription and attended by c. 60 children. (fn. 364)
This increase necessitated the building of a new
schoolroom in 1842. (fn. 365) In 1860 the vicar gave the
attendance figures at Horley National school as 46
daily and 13 on Sundays, making a total of 59.
Presumably the 13 who attended on Sundays were
in addition to the day pupils since he also stated
that, at Horley at least, he was able in many instances
to retain children at Sunday school after they had
left day school. There were no adult or evening
classes in this year and none in 1878. (fn. 366)
When the National school was inspected by the
Charity Commissioners in 1867, it was found that
the number of children attending was 42: that prizes
were given to children who had attended for 2 or
5 years; that a weekly fee of 3d. was paid for the
children of tradesmen, but nothing for those of
labourers; and that there were 2 teachers, appointed
by the trustees. The schoolmaster's house was very
dilapidated, and the commissioners recommended
selling part of the Harding land and rebuilding the
house. (fn. 367) In 1871 2 National schools were returned
for Horley with accommodation for 61 children. (fn. 368)
Up to this date no Government grant had been
received and in 1878 the schools were refused
Government inspection unless extensive alterations
were made in the buildings and additional apparatus
provided, all of which would involve the parish in an
outlay of at least £100. (fn. 369) The schools continued to
exist for the next 20 years without financial aid
from the Government; every child attending who
was born in the village received his education free. (fn. 370)
A new building to contain all the children was
erected in 1899 and opened in May 1900. (fn. 371) There is
no record of Government inspection or grant in this
year but £28 was received in 1902. (fn. 372) Average attendance was 41 in 1900 and 50 in 1906. (fn. 373) The land of
the original endowment was sold in 1918 when the
school was handed over to the Board of Education,
and the proceeds invested. The income of c. £50
is used to keep the school in repair. The old schoolhouse, probably the 17th-century building, has a
thatched roof; a small stone school-room was
added and later a large brick building. (fn. 374) In 1962 the
school was called the Horley Endowed School; it
had a roll of 19 and received a grant. (fn. 375)
The school endowment in Hornton dates from
1613 when John Fox left ½ yardland in Hornton for
a schoolmaster to teach 3 children. In 1665 the
Commissioners of Charitable Uses decreed that
the rent of £3 had been misapplied, and should
revert to its original purpose. (fn. 376) It does not appear to
have done so, for there was no school in 1738. (fn. 377)
When the open fields of Hornton were inclosed in
1766, however, a plot of land was set aside to maintain a schoolmaster to teach poor children in
Hornton to read, write, and count. This plot was
occupied by the Giles family, and towards the end
of the 18th century Richard Giles claimed the land
as his own. In 1800, after much trouble and expense,
the vicar and parishioners gained possession of it.
The plot was then let for £9 a year, and 34s. was
set aside to pay for the education of 3 or 4 children,
the remainder being reserved to pay legal expenses. (fn. 378)
By 1815 Hornton free school was attended by 31
girls and 20 boys. There had evidently been some
agitation to affiliate it to the National Society, but
there was opposition and it was said that the old
system provided employment for people in the
village and gave satisfactory results. (fn. 379) By 1825 the
legal expenses had been paid off, and the full rent
of 12 guineas now went to pay the schoolmaster,
and to supply books and coals for the school. As
yet there was no school-house and no master's house. (fn. 380)
Finally, in 1833, a National school was built. (fn. 381) In
this year 68 children at the school were supported
by an annual subscription of £7 and by an endowment of £14. There was also an infants' school for
25 children, who attended at their parents' expense.
A Sunday school had been founded by voluntary
subscriptions in 1809 and in 1833 had 75 pupils. (fn. 382)
The National school and the Sunday school were
attended respectively by 35 and 40 children in
1854 and by 45 and 54 in 1860. (fn. 383) In 1853 £20 was
raised by subscription to buy a cottage for the use of
the schoolmaster. (fn. 384)
In 1867 the school was found to be 'as bad as it
could be', an opinion which was apparently shared
by the Diocesan Inspector. The schoolmaster was
unqualified and was a tailor by trade, the instruction
he gave was very limited and there was 'an entire
absence of life and animation'; both the children
and the school were dirty. The school's income came
from rent paid by the schoolmaster, rent from allotment, subscriptions, and school pence. The school
was open to Dissenters who were not obliged to
learn the catechism. (fn. 385) In 1878 the School Board,
compulsorily elected in 1875, was proposing to take
over the school because there was insufficient
accommodation for 30 of the children. The vicar
complained that the Board had been forced on the
parish and that they had been ordered to erect a
Board school at a cost of £1,300. This order, in
view of the poverty of the parish, was greatly
resented. The vicar got the order suspended for 6
months and campaigned to raise a fund to enlarge
the existing school at one-fifth of the cost. (fn. 386) He
appears to have been successful and in 1882 a new
school was opened. The old building had been
thoroughly repaired and a new wing added to it.
Whereas previously the school had not belonged to
any religious denomination it now became a Church
of England school and the new wing was to be used
for a Sunday school, which had apparently been
allowed to lapse some time ago. A night school
in winter months was also to be started. The
schoolmaster was certificated and a girl taught the
infants. Children paid 2d. or 3d. according to the size
of their families. The average attendance was 69. (fn. 387)
The school was destroyed by fire c. 1912 and the
infants were accommodated temporarily in Hornton
Reading Room, the older children in Hornton
Primitive Methodist Sunday school. (fn. 388) In 1913 the
Board of Education appointed Oxfordshire County
Council as trustees of the school (fn. 389) and in 1914 a new
elementary Council school was built. (fn. 390) It was
decided in 1923 that the proceeds from the sale of
the schoolmaster's house in 1881 should be used to
promote the social and physical training of the poor
in Hornton. (fn. 391) The school continued as a Council
school and in 1962 had a roll of 42. (fn. 392)
Charities.
In 1671 Thomas Saul left a rentcharge of 6s., which was given in bread to poor
widows of Horley and Hornton every few years when
sufficient money had accumulated. During part of
the 19th century the landowner distributed this
rent in pence to schoolchildren, but by 1903 the
charity had reverted to its original purpose. In 1961
25s. was spent on logs of wood for pensioners. The
rent-charge was redeemed in 1925.
A bequest was made by John Bray, maltster, in
1725 of an annuity of 10s. charged on his house and
land to be given to 20 poor persons. The last distribution was in 1863. The tenant later refused to pay
and by 1888 the Charity Commissioners considered
recovery of the money impossible. (fn. 393)