Manor and Estates
From the Norman Conquest until the 16th or 17th
century most of Kencot belonged to Kencot manor, (fn. 1)
which was divided between coheirs in the early 14th
century, and subsequently passed in two halves to a
succession of mostly non-resident owners. One half,
owned in the 14th century by the Meaux family, seems
to have been broken up in the early 17th, the land being
absorbed into various freeholds. The other half, still
including over a third of the land in the parish in the late
18th and early 19th centuries, passed to the Jordan and
Stephens families, of whom some were resident. It was
reduced by piecemeal sale in 1839 when part was
acquired by the Larges, a family of local gentleman
farmers who already had land in Kencot; the Larges'
share continued as a sizeable manorial estate centred on
Kencot Manor until 1897, when house, land, and lordship became separated. The residual estate was finally
broken up in the 1920s, though the Larges remained
nominally lords of Kencot in the early 1930s.
A few small freeholds were recorded in the Middle
Ages, and some larger ones from the 16th and 17th
centuries, among them a large glebe of 70–100 a. which
seems to have resulted from post-medieval gifts or
purchases. (fn. 2) After tithe commutation in 1767 the glebe
comprised over 200 a., and owed a quarter of the parish's
total land-tax assessment. Two or three other sizeable
freeholds recorded in the 18th and 19th centuries, owned
mostly by outsiders and leased to local farmers, presumably included lands formerly belonging to the Meaux
family's manor. Several other significant estates originated in the manorial sale of 1839, in particular over 200
a. acquired piecemeal by the neighbouring Bradwell
Grove estate: by 1910–12 W. H. Fox of Bradwell Grove
owned nearly a third of Kencot (including Kencot Hill
farm), and was the largest single landowner. Landowners
in the mid 20th century included Fox's successor Cecil
Heyworth-Savage, W. M. Goodenough of Filkins, both of
whose estates were leased to local farmers, and the resident Foreshews of Malthouse Farm.
Kencot Manor
The Middle Ages to Early 18th Century
The 4-hide manor of Kencot was held of the king in 1086
by Robert d'Oilly (d. c. 1092), and under him by Roger,
perhaps a relative from a minor branch of the family.
Robert's overlordship descended with the barony of
Hook Norton, owned by the d'Oillys until 1232, and
later by their heirs the de Plessis family. (fn. 3) It had apparently lapsed by 1428, (fn. 4) and in 1477 the overlord was said
to be George Talbot, 7th earl of Shrewsbury, apparently
as lord of Bampton manor: a later earl of Shrewsbury
was named as overlord in 1634, when Kencot was allegedly held as of Bampton manor. (fn. 5) There is no further
record of the overlordship.
Roger's tenancy of the manor, later assessed at two
knights' fees, passed to Roger d'Oilly, presumably a
descendant, before 1142, and to his successors, nearly all
called Roger, until the early 14th century. In 1268 or
1273 on the death of Adam Fettiplace, to whom Roger
d'Oilly had leased the manor for life, Roger son of Roger
(d. c. 1309) sued his nephew Roger (son of John and
grandson of Roger) for the manor, which he claimed
ought to have reverted to him since he had 'bought' it
from his father; his rights were upheld. When Roger (d.
c. 1309) died without male descendants the manor was
divided between two coheiresses and their husbands,
Richard of Goldsborough (Yorks. WR) and John de
Meaux. (fn. 6)
The Goldsboroughs still owned half the manor in
1350, (fn. 7) but in 1357 their half was acquired by John
Laundels, sheriff and escheator of Oxford. (fn. 8) In 1421–2 it
was held by his heir Nicholas's widow and her second
husband John Hill, (fn. 9) but in 1428 a Richard Goldsborough was said to hold what his namesake had held
in 1346. (fn. 10) Before 1448 the half was acquired by William
Lovel (d. 1455), Lord Lovel, (fn. 11) whose second son
William, Lord Morley, held half the manor on his death
in 1476; his son and heir Henry Lovel, Lord Morley,
came of age in 1489 but died the same year, (fn. 12) to be
succeeded by his sister Alice who, with her husband,
presented to the church in 1505. (fn. 13) Alice's second
husband was Sir Edward Howard, Admiral of England,
after whose death in 1513 the half manor was granted
by the Crown to his father Thomas, newly restored as
duke of Norfolk, as part of the estates given to him as a
reward for the victory at Flodden. (fn. 14) In 1540 Thomas's
son sold it back to the Crown in exchange for property
in Norfolk. (fn. 15) In 1545 the king granted the half manor to
Sir Thomas Pope, (fn. 16) who ten years later gave it to his new
foundation of Trinity (formerly Durham) College in
Oxford; (fn. 17) the grant does not seem to have taken effect,
however, since the manor was still listed among Pope's
possessions on his death in 1559. (fn. 18) In 1599 Pope's
nephew William Pope (d. 1631), later earl of Downe,
sold the manor to Hugh Browker (d. 1608) of Southwark, whose son Thomas Browker, with his wife Mary,
sold it in 1627 to Sir Edward Yate (d. 1645) of Buckland (then Berks.). (fn. 19) James Yate, presumably a descendant, sold it to John Jordan (d. 1736) of Burford in
1708, (fn. 20) perhaps as part of Jordan's settlement on his son
on the occasion of his forthcoming marriage. (fn. 21)
Throughout the 16th century the manor was let to
tenants, apparently sometimes with manorial rights. In
1518 Thomas, duke of Norfolk, leased it to John Tipper
(or Tapper) for 13 years, together with land called
'Nayres' and a 'barkehouse' with ¾ a. belonging; the
previous tenant was named as Thomas Polyn or
Palleyn. (fn. 22) The lease to Tipper was probably re-assigned
before it had run its course, for in 1524 John Edmonds
of Deddington was the highest taxpayer in the parish,
and in 1541 he was granted the lease of the manor and
'Nayres' by the Crown for 21 years. (fn. 23) Before 1544 the
lease was granted to Bartholomew Platt of Sparsholt
(Berks.), and in 1558 Sir Thomas Pope leased the manor
to Platt's daughter Elizabeth and her husband Francis
Yate (fl. 1559–77, d. by 1594), the lease to run for 21
years from 1561; (fn. 24) the Yates certainly held property in
Kencot by 1559 and seem to have resided until the early
17th century, (fn. 25) although in 1595 the manor court was
held in William Pope's name. (fn. 26) The lease was then held
by Francis Yate's son John. (fn. 27) By the time the Yates
acquired the freehold of the manor in 1627 they seem to
have ceased to live at Kencot, leasing the manor house to
various gentry throughout the 17th century, and its land
to the Turners, a local yeoman family to whom they were
related by marriage. (fn. 28)
The Meaux half of the manor passed on John de
Meaux's death after 1331 to his heirs, who were probably still holding it in 1395. (fn. 29) In 1428 it was held by John
Anthony, perhaps a lessee, but probably before 1439 it
passed to the Spanby family of Spanby (Lincs.), relatives
of Thomas de Meaux. (fn. 30) John Spanby presented to the
church in 1502, (fn. 31) and in 1505 the manor passed to
Arthur Spanby (d. 1509), (fn. 32) succeeded by Arthur's sister
Joan and her husband James Saunders or Standish (d.
1557). (fn. 33) They seem to have conveyed it to the Haydock
family, (fn. 34) and in 1595 William Haydock conveyed it to
his relative Thomas Smallpage (d. 1597) of Gray's Inn,
who left it to his nephew Percival Smallpage (d. 1661). (fn. 35)
In 1624 Percival sold a house, close, and yardland to
Thomas Hullett or Hewlett, a Kencot slater, (fn. 36) perhaps as
part of a piecemeal sale of the whole estate, which seems
to have been broken up about that time. Later allusions
to Kencot manor referred apparently to the Goldsborough half acquired by the Jordans. (fn. 37)
The 18th to the 20th Century
From John Jordan (d. 1736) the manor passed to his son
John, who mortgaged it together with much of his property in Burford. Though bankrupted by 1745 he or a
later John seem to have retained rights in the manor
until the early 1760s, when it was released to his relative
through marriage, the attorney William Stephens (d.
1791): Stephens had been leasing part since 1736, apparently including the manor house. (fn. 38) The estate then
included several houses and former demesne totalling
some 360 acres; more land was added at inclosure in
1767, including over 23 a. of meadow obtained from an
exchange with another landowner, Robert Yeatman. (fn. 39)
Stephens was succeeded by his widow Ann (d. 1808)
and son John (d. 1831), who in 1820 settled it on two
daughters and their husbands Humphrey Tuckwell and
the Revd Henry Mears. (fn. 40) Heavily mortgaged from the
1820s, the estate was eventually broken up and sold
between 1832 and 1839. (fn. 41) Up to 200 a., along with
Kencot Manor, Manor Farm, a malthouse, and three
cottages, was apparently sold to the farmer John Large,
one of a local yeoman family who later styled himself
gentleman. At first Large lived in Kencot Manor and
farmed the estate himself, together with 130 a. leased
from another owner, but between 1840 and 1852 he
sold over half his land to his relative Charles Large, a
major landowner in Broadwell, whose successors sold it
in 1889. By 1852 Kencot Manor was let to John's relative William Large, and another house to the prominent Kencot farmer Thomas Wakefield, while Large's
remaining land, around 92 a., was farmed by Thomas
Tuckwell, presumably a relative of the previous owner. (fn. 42)
After John Large's death in 1854 his younger son
Charles Edward Large bought out his coheirs, and in
1892, when living at Leamington Priors (Warws.),
conveyed the estate to a relative; he sold it piecemeal in
1897, Kencot Manor to Frederick Douglas Howe, and
the land (with Manor Farm and some smaller houses)
to William Paintin. (fn. 43) The Large family nevertheless
retained the lordship, and were still recorded as lords in
1931. (fn. 44) Paintin bought a great deal of other land in
Kencot, including the rectory farm and numerous
cottages, and by 1910 was one of the main landowners
in the parish, although he lived in Broadwell. (fn. 45) On his
death in 1922 the estate passed to his brother Henry,
who sold it in parts. (fn. 46)
Manor House and Residence
The d'Oillys had a demesne farm in Kencot in the late
13th century, with a house and buildings attached, but
whether any of the family ever lived there is unknown:
probably their main local residence was their manor
house at Bampton. (fn. 47) Later medieval owners were probably all non-resident, (fn. 48) and the site was presumably
abandoned.
The Yate family appear to have lived in Kencot while
leasing the manor in the late 16th and early 17th
century, (fn. 49) and presumably built or acquired a new manor
house: in 1605 Francis Yates's son John (fl. 1580–1607)
was accused of digging mortar pits in Filkins, perhaps in
connection with building work. (fn. 50) Probably they occupied
a predecessor of Kencot Manor, which was certainly
regarded as the manor house later, and which, given its
location near the church, may have stood on or near the
medieval manorial site, although the surviving building
is 18th-century and later. (fn. 51) John Yate was succeeded by
another John (fl. 1621 X 1625), (fn. 52) but despite Sir Edward
Yate's purchase of the manor in 1627 the family seems
thereafter to have let the manor house, notably to
members of the Hammersley family: Sir Hugh
Hammersley (d. 1636), a former lord mayor of London,
married the mother of the rector of Kencot as his second
wife. (fn. 53)
After their purchase of the estate in 1708 the Jordans
allegedly rebuilt part of Kencot Manor, (fn. 54) and though
John Jordan (d. 1736) was apparently non-resident his
son seems to have lived at Kencot in the 1740s and
1750s, where he or a later John were buried in 1770. (fn. 55)
William Stephens, who resided constantly from the
1750s or earlier, (fn. 56) may have occupied the house briefly as
lessee, but more likely occupied the newly built and
rather grander Kencot House, which remained in the
family until the 1880s; his brother Henry, with whom he
ran a joint legal practice until 1779, perhaps lived with
him or occupied one of the village's other grander
houses, possibly Kencot Lodge, which was also owned by
the family in the 19th century and which was extended
in the 1730s. (fn. 57) William's widow Ann remained at
Kencot until her death in 1808, though Tuckwell and
Mears lived elsewhere, the former at Signet. (fn. 58)
Following Large's purchase in 1839 various members
of the Large family inhabited Kencot Manor, which had
perhaps earlier been leased, and which was for a time
used partly as a grocer's and draper's shop. (fn. 59) At the
estate's sale in 1897 the house was separated from the
land and became a gentleman's residence: F.D. Howe,
the purchaser in 1897, sold it with 3½ a. in 1923 to
Captain Sidney Darvell, whose widow sold it to
Major-General W.E.V. Abraham (d. 1980). Following
Abraham's death the house was split into two parts,
Kencot Manor and Manor Lodge, both owned in 2003
by professional people. (fn. 60)
Freehold Estates
Medieval Freeholds
In 1279 a 2-yardland farm in Kencot was owned by the
Knights Hospitallers' preceptory of Quenington (Glos.);
it was last mentioned as part of the grant of Kencot to Sir
Thomas Pope in 1545, having presumably continued in
the Hospitallers' possession until the Dissolution. (fn. 61) In
1279 it was let to a tenant for 24s. rent. Two other small
freeholds in 1279 were held of Kencot manor, one of
them a yardland and the other 4 yardlands. (fn. 62) No other
early medieval freeholds were mentioned.
Kencot Farm
An estate described as 'Kencot farm in Kencot', including a house and 2½ yardlands, was recorded in the early
16th century, (fn. 63) when Thomas Wenman of Witney held it
of Bampton manor in free socage. Wenman leased it for
40 years to Bartholomew Platt, gentleman, subsequently
lessee of the Popes' Kencot manor; both leases passed to
Platt's daughter Elizabeth and her husband Francis Yate,
whose son John apparently held Kencot farm until the
1590s. The reversion of Platt's lease was sold by Richard
Wenman in 1558 to Thomas Fryers (d. 1573) of
Burford, gentleman, (fn. 64) whose grandson Edmund sold the
farm and its house in 1613 to the vicar of Black Bourton,
James Godman. (fn. 65) Godman died in 1638, the profits of
the estate going to his widow, to his daughter Mary and
her husband John Attwood, and to James Saunders, (fn. 66) a
local gentleman still resident in Kencot in 1659. (fn. 67) The
estate has not been traced further, and the house is
unidentified; possible candidates, both 17th-century
substantial yeoman's dwellings, are Red Rose Cottages
or Kencott Cottages.
Glebe
The second largest estate in the parish from the 17th
century was the church glebe, comprising some 70 a. in
1634 and 105 a. by 1685, besides the tithes. (fn. 68) From
inclosure in 1767 it totalled 225 a., (fn. 69) a quarter of the
parish. Though the property of the rector until sold to
William Paintin in 1907, (fn. 70) the land was usually let to
local tenants, including the Turners in the 17th century,
and farmers such as Thomas Wakefield and Henry
Oakey in the mid 19th. (fn. 71) After Paintin's death in 1922 it
was bought by the Goodenoughs of Filkins who, probably in the later 1920s, added to it Asthall farm. The
estate, known from around 1920 as Home farm, was
sold in 1954 to the tenants, the Eustace family, who still
owned it in 2003. (fn. 72) Asthall farm was sold in the mid 20th
century to the Walkers, who still farmed it in 2003. (fn. 73)
Post-Inclosure Estates
Several other large estates can be traced from inclosure
in 1767. Among them was that of Phillips Lyttleton of
Studley (Warws.), eldest son of Phillips Lyttleton and his
wife Dorothy; she was the granddaughter and heir of
Goddard Carter (d. 1725) of Alvescot, who owned property in Kencot. (fn. 74) At inclosure Lyttleton was awarded 190
a., most of which passed to descendants; (fn. 75) it was later
sold, a part being acquired by John Large before 1832,
and part by William Hervey (d. 1863), to be incorporated into Hervey's Bradwell Grove estate. (fn. 76) The house
for the Lyttleton estate may have been Red Rose
Cottages. (fn. 77) John Stevens, one of a local family recorded
from the 17th century (but unrelated to William
Stephens the attorney), was awarded over 100 a. at
inclosure. (fn. 78) That property, held by the Stevens family
until 1813, was also eventually bought by John Large,
and descended with his other lands. (fn. 79)
Charles Stephens (d. c. 1844), a younger son of
William Stephens the owner of Kencot manor, retained
property in Kencot and elsewhere following his mother's
death in 1808. (fn. 80) Soon afterwards he adopted the surname
Loder, presumably as part of a family settlement: the
Loders had long had connections with both the Jordans
and the Stephenses, as well as peripheral interests in
Kencot. (fn. 81) Part of Charles's estate was apparently acquired
from Francis Edmonds (d. 1797) of Kencot, gentleman, (fn. 82)
possibly related to the wealthy Gloucestershire farming
family of Edmonds. Other property included Kencot
House and Kencot Lodge, (fn. 83) both of which may have been
owned by the Stephenses in the 18th century: Kencot
House (Fig. 50) was built possibly for Charles's father
William, while the 17th-century Kencot Lodge was
extended in the 1730s and again in the 1830s or 1840s,
forming the modern Kencot Lodge and North Lodge
(Fig. 49). (fn. 84) Charles's grandson William Stephens Loder
moved away about 1851, when his 'mansion', evidently
Kencot House, was offered for lease with 5 a.; (fn. 85) he finally
sold it in 1888, while living at Bath. (fn. 86) Thereafter Kencot
House was briefly occupied by farmers including Richard
Eustace and Charles Cattell, and about 1899 was
acquired by W.F. Pilkington, a doctor who still lived there
in the late 1920s. After passing through various hands it
was owned in 2003 by the Patrick family. (fn. 87)

50. Kencot House from the
south
Estates Detached from Kencot Manor
Several new freeholds resulted possibly from the
break-up of Kencot manor in the 1830s. Some 83 a. were
bought in 1839 by William Hervey of Bradwell Grove,
who in 1852 owned Kencot Hill farm (then 130 a.),
another 23 a. let separately, and a 7-a. plantation
attached to Woodside farm in Filkins but lying within
Kencot parish. (fn. 88) The land was sold by Hervey's heirs with
the rest of Bradwell Grove to W.H. Fox (d. 1920), and in
1921 was bought by Lt-Col. Cecil Heyworth-Savage (d.
1949), who retained it in 1940. It was let to tenants
throughout, and finally sold by the family in the 1980s,
some of its land being bought by the owners of Home
farm, the Eustaces. (fn. 89) A house and 100 a. owned in 1840
by William Faulkner may also have been detached from
the manor; in the 1850s and 1860s house and land were
let separately, the former to gentry and the latter to local
farmers. Possibly this was among lands subsequently
acquired by W.H. Fox. (fn. 90) Apparently also part of the
former manor was Malthouse farm, sold by John Large
to William Green before 1852 with 89 a. of land. (fn. 91) The
Foreshew family, who farmed it for most of the 20th
century, sold it in 1996. (fn. 92)
The early ownership of Manor Farm, included in the
property bought by William Paintin in 1897, is
unknown, (fn. 93) though in the 17th century, when the Yates'
manor house was apparently let to the Hammersleys and
other gentry, it may have been occupied by the Turners
as long-term tenants of the demesne farm: no other
house of that date in the parish is of comparable status. (fn. 94)
The house (Fig. 52) remained a tenanted working farmhouse in the late 19th century, leased from the 1870s to
the prominent farmer Augustus Gillett, but before 1901
it became another gentleman's residence, occupied by
James Samson Furley. (fn. 95) He bequeathed it to the National
Trust in 1949 on condition that his relative,
Commander R.H. Fyson, could occupy it for his lifetime; the Fyson family still lived there in 2003. (fn. 96)