LONG CRENDON (fn. 1)
Crendone (xi cent.); Craendon, Creindon (xii
cent.); Grandone (xiii cent.); Grendon-by-Tame,
Croyndon (xiv cent.); Creedonia (xv cent.); Cryndon,
Credendon, Long Crendon (xvi cent.).
This parish covers 3,348 acres, of which about
1,413 are arable, 1,587 permanent grass, and 2
woods. (fn. 2) The soil is loam and clay on a subsoil of
Kimmeridge Clay, Portland Beds and Gault. The
level of the land varies from rather over 200 ft.
above the ordnance datum in the south by the
Thames to about 400 ft. in the north, near the
Chilton boundary.

Plan of Nutley Abbey, Long Crendon
(Adapted from the Inventory of the Historical Monuments of Buckinghamshire with the permission of the Royal Commission
and the consent of the Controller of H.M. Stationery Office.)
In the 16th century Leland entered Long Crendon
over Crendon Bridge of four stone arches and
journeyed thence 'by some hilly and after great
pasture ground and grounds 'fruitfull of benes.' (fn. 3)
The bridge or its successor, now bearing the name of
Thame Bridge, still carries the road to Bicester across
the Thame. Some distance north-east of the bridge
it flows past the site of Nutley Abbey, a house of
Austin Canons, the remains of which are now to a
great extent absorbed in a substantial modern
mansion, the property and residence of Mr. H.
Reynolds.
The existing remains of the abbey are built of
stone and include parts of the south and west cloister
ranges dating from the 13th century, and an L-shaped
building, probably the guest-house, on the north-west,
dating from the 15th and early 16th centuries. The
church, which stood on the north side of the cloister,
and the whole of the eastern range of the cloister
have been destroyed, while of the south and west
ranges little remains except those walls adjoining the
cloister which are now incorporated into comparatively
modern structures.
The buildings on the south consisted of the frater,
with the common room or warming-house on the
east, and probably the kitchen on the west. At
the west end of the original north wall is a moulded
13th-century doorway with jamb shafts which doubtless admitted from the cloister to the screens at the
west end of the frater, while a similar doorway at the
east end opened into the warming-house; both are
now blocked and a wide gateway has been opened in
the north wall of the frater. The wall between the
frater and warming-house is also original and retains
a blocked 14th-century doorway which formed an
entrance to the cellar under the frater; high in the
wall is a richly moulded corbel table with an arcade
of trefoiled arches. The site of these buildings is now
occupied by a barn, stables and coach-house, the other
inclosing walls being comparatively modern. Of the
west range, which was probably the cellarer's building, the east and part of the south walls are original,
while the north end abuts upon the guest-house, which
was entered from these buildings by a 15th-century
doorway, now blocked. In the east wall are a richly
moulded doorway from the cloister and traces of
another doorway further north which has been
built up.
The guest-house, which, having been converted
into a dwelling-house, has been well preserved though
somewhat altered, consists of a 15th-century block
with an early 16thcentury wing built
at right angles to it
on the west, and a
modern projection
on the north containing the staircase;
the west cloister
range, which has
been partly rebuilt
and converted into
kitchen offices, forms
an additional wing
at the south-east.
The house is of two
stories with tiled
roofs and forms a
picturesque group of
buildings. The hall,
on the ground floor
of the 15th-century
block, is lighted from
the south side by two
original windows,
each of two cinquefoiled lights with
tracery under a square head, and above them on the
first floor are two similar windows. In one of the
rooms of the first floor is a 15th-century fireplace
with carved spandrels, and the heavy oak beams supporting this floor are of the same period. The 16thcentury wing has a hexagonal stair turret projecting
from its north-west angle, and behind the fireplace
in the main apartment on the ground floor is a closet
entered from a small room projecting at the southwest. A large stone dovecote with a tiled roof to
the north-east of the house, which is probably of
pre-Suppression date, contains a very large number of
cells, its accommodation being increased by short
celled projections from its internal walls. A stone
coffin has been unearthed on the site of the east
cloister range, which is now occupied by modern
farm buildings, while foundations of old walls have
been disclosed about the cloister garth.
The village, built on high ground to the west,
consists of irregular narrow streets branching off from
the high road to Thame, and along these are many
17th-century buildings and some of earlier date.
Not far from the church at its north-east end is Cop
Hill, which must have given its name to the Copt
Close of the 17th century. (fn. 4) An ancient cemetery
with remains of Roman date was discovered close by
in 1824. (fn. 5)
To the west of the churchyard stands the Court
House, (fn. 6) once known as Old Staple Hall, which dates
at least from the 15th century. It is a long rectangular
timber-framed building of two stories, the upper
story projecting on the south and west sides. The
east end seems originally to have formed one narrow
but lofty apartment, reaching from the ground floor
to the roof, and is distinguished in the upper part
externally by a break in the line of projection of
the wall of the upper story, the wall-plate, which is
continued without break, being trussed by straight
struts. A large fireplace at this end, with a 16th
century moulded wood lintel, occupies the full width
of the building, while near it on the south is a round
brick oven, which projects beyond the outer face of
the wall; the arrangement of the rest of the lower
stage has been somewhat altered for domestic purposes. The upper story is divided by the main
uprights into five bays, four of which form one large
apartment with an open timber roof, while the east
bay, originally the upper part of the lofty room already
mentioned, has been formed into a separate apartment by the insertion of a floor. The house has
a tiled roof, at the east end of which is a rectangular
chimney stack, which has been rebuilt with the old
bricks. This interesting building is now in the hands
of the National Trust. (fn. 7)

The Court House, Long Crendon
Immediately south-east of the church is the Manor
House, a square two-storied stone building with brick
quoins and a classical wood cornice, dating from about
1680, but considerably altered early in the 19th cen
tury; it has a tiled hipped roof containing attics, and
retains some original moulded panelling and a staircase with twisted balusters.
Long Crendon Manor, to the south-west of the
village, is a timber-framed house of two stories with
attics. It appears to have been originally an early
15th-century H-shaped building having a large central
hall, now converted into the kitchen, with wings at
either end. The west wing was rebuilt in the 16th
century and contains some moulded fireplaces of that
date, one of which has carved spandrels; the whole
building has been considerably altered at subsequent
periods and is now entirely coated with rough-cast.
A courtyard before the house is entered through a
mediaeval gate-house, the southern archway of which
has been rebuilt, while the floor to the story over,
which appears to have been approached by a stairway
on the east, has been removed, but traces of the
original vaulting remain.
The Mound, at Lower End, a timber-framed house
of two stories with a thatched roof, is probably of
mediaeval date, though it has been considerably altered
and enlarged at subsequent periods. It retains some
wood mullioned windows of late 16th-century date,
and a stone moulded fireplace, while in an old external
stone wall, now incorporated in the house, is a wide
doorway with moulded jambs. An old timber and
brick stable, to the south-east, with an original timber
roof, was formerly a cottage, but the first floor has
been removed. This house, once known as Emertons,
has lately been bought and restored by Sir Laurence
Gomme.
Long Crendon Baptist chapel dates from 1810;
the Wesleyan chapel built in 1840 replaces an earlier
building. Since 1866 the Primitive Methodists have
had a place of worship here. (fn. 8)
The inhabitants of Long Crendon are now almost
entirely engaged in agriculture, but there was formerly a considerable trade in the manufacture of
needles. One of the factories where this industry
was carried on still survives. (fn. 9)
Tittershall (Tudreshull, xiv and xv cent.; Totterell, xvii cent. (fn. 10) ) Wood, an outlying part of Long
Crendon, between the parishes of Ludgershall and
Wotton Underwood, the woodland for a hundred
swine of 1086, (fn. 11) was formerly shared in equal portions
by the lords of the manor. Other place-names are
Rodewellefeld, Prestosleyen, Frychhegh, Harlagesforlond, Stubforlond and Wasshefordweye (xiv cent.),
and Charlons Close, Putney Plott, Priestleyes and
Crooxhams Close (xvii cent.). (fn. 12)
Honour
In 1086 there was a park for beasts of
the chase at Long Crendon, (fn. 13) and since
the manor was later the caput of the
honour of Giffard, (fn. 14) an important house of the lord
must have existed here. Tradition calls it a castle
and places it in the neighbourhood of Cop Hill.
When the park was granted with other property for
the foundation of Nutley Abbey, in the 12th century,
it is likely that Long Crendon
ceased to be the chief residence of the lord. In 1233
the king ordered the houses
and gardens of Richard Earl
Marshal at Crendon to be
destroyed, (fn. 15) but in the following year Gilbert, his brother
and heir, received a grant of
timber from Bernwood Forest,
'ad se hospitandum apud
Crendon.' (fn. 16)

Giffard. Gules three lions passant argent.
The honour of Giffard represented the Domesday fief
of Walter Giffard, which comprised lands in Akeley, Ashendon, Aston Abbots, Beachampton, Bradwell,
Bow Brickhill, Broughton, Buckingham, Chearsley,
Chilton, Long Crendon, Dorton, Edgcott, Fawley,
Hardmead, Hartwell, Hillesden, Great Horwood,
Great Kimble, Lavendon, Leckhampstead, Lenborough, Lillingstone Dayrell, Linford, Loughton,
Maids' Moreton, Milton Keynes, Missenden, Moulsoe,
Mursley, Newton Longville, Oakley, Pitstone, Ravenstone, Stewkley, Stone, Swanbourne, Whaddon, Whitchurch, Lower Winchendon, Little and Great Woolstone and Wotton Underwood, (fn. 17) with some manors
in Bedfordshire (fn. 18) and Berkshire. (fn. 19) The descent of
the honour seems to have been identical with that of
the manor of Long Crendon (fn. 20) until the partition, in
1191, of the Giffard inheritance between William
Marshal Earl of Pembroke and Richard de Clare
Earl of Hertford, (fn. 21) who between 1201 and 1212
each held forty-two knights' fees as a moiety of the
honour of Giffard. (fn. 22) The later history is obscure.
Most of the Giffard manors of Domesday were included in William Marshal's liberty as part of the
honour of Giffard in the early years of Henry III, (fn. 23)
and after the partition of the Pembroke lands in
1275 the honour seems to have been merged in the
barony of the marshalcy, of which Crendon itself was
held in 1284. (fn. 24)
Manors
The manor of LONG CRENDON,
once of Seric, son of Alveva, was held of
the Crown in chief in 1086 by Walter
Giffard, (fn. 25) probably son of the Walter Giffard who
fought at the Conquest. (fn. 26) From the second Walter
Giffard Crendon descended to his son and heir
of the same name, (fn. 27) who died without issue in
1164. (fn. 28) It seems to have remained in the Crown
until the partition of the Giffard inheritance in
1191, (fn. 29) when the manor came to William Marshal,
afterwards Earl of Pembroke, by his marriage with
Isabel de Clare. (fn. 30) William Marshal held the greater
part of Crendon, then head of the honour of Giffard, (fn. 31)
in demesne until his death, when regent of the
kingdom, in 1219. (fn. 32) From his widow Isabel (fn. 33) it
passed to their second son Richard, who leased it in
1228 to John de Wilenhale, citizen of London, (fn. 34)
tenant in 1233, (fn. 35) when the custody of this manor
was committed to Richard Earl of Cornwall. (fn. 36) Gilbert,
younger brother and heir of Richard Marshal, in the
next year assigned the issues of the manor of Crendon
to Eleanor Countess of Pembroke, (fn. 37) the king's sister,
widow of his eldest brother the younger William
Marshal. (fn. 38) Eleanor, whose second husband Simon de
Montfort was returned as lord in 1255, (fn. 39) died seised
in 1275, and Crendon was divided between the
co-heirs of Eva wife of William de Braose, (fn. 40) youngest
sister and co-heir of Anselm Marshal, the last
survivor of the regent's sons. (fn. 41)
Maud, the only surviving child of Eva de Braose
in 1275, when she was wife of Roger Mortimer, (fn. 42)
granted her third of Crendon Manor to her younger
son William. He died childless in or before 1297, (fn. 43)
and the manor reverted to his mother, (fn. 44) descending
in 1301 to her eldest son Edmund Lord Mortimer
of Wigmore. (fn. 45) After Edmund's death in 1304 Crendon was held by his widow Margaret. (fn. 46) She survived
by about four years her son and heir Roger Mortimer,
Earl of March, who died in 1330. (fn. 47) Crendon, the
reversion of which had been settled in 1316 by
Roger on his son Edmund and his wife Elizabeth, (fn. 48)
then passed to the widowed Elizabeth, (fn. 49) afterwards
wife of William de Bohun, Earl of Northampton, on
whose behalf an extent of the manor was made in
1336. (fn. 50) She died seised in 1356, (fn. 51) and two years
later her son and heir Roger Mortimer, Earl of
March, granted his manor of Crendon to William
Lord Ferrers of Groby in exchange for half the
manor of Ludlow. (fn. 52) William was seised at his death
in 1371, when part of Crendon was assigned in dower
to his widow Margaret. (fn. 53) Henry their son and heir
also left a third of his estate in this parish to his
widow Joan, who died in 1394. (fn. 54) From her son
William Lord Ferrers the manor descended in 1445
to Elizabeth daughter of his son Henry and wife of
Sir Edward Grey, (fn. 55) a younger son of Reginald Lord
Grey de Ruthyn. (fn. 56) Elizabeth settled Crendon in
1447, (fn. 57) and again in 1462, in conjunction with her
second husband Sir John Bourchier. (fn. 58) This was
after the death of the son of her first marriage,
Sir John Grey, whose widow Elizabeth Woodville
became the wife of Edward IV. (fn. 59) Thomas Grey,
the eldest son of Sir John Grey and Elizabeth, afterwards Marquess of Dorset, (fn. 60) died in 1500 seised of the
manor of Crendon, (fn. 61) which his son and heir Thomas
sold twenty years later to Michael Dormer. (fn. 62) At
his death in 1545 Sir Michael left this part of Crendon
to his son Geoffrey with contingent remainder to his
son William. (fn. 63) William, who was already owner by
his father's will of several smaller holdings in this
parish, (fn. 64) acquired the Dorset manor of Geoffrey in
1552. (fn. 65) In 1563 he conveyed it to John Piers, (fn. 66)
by whom and his wife Alice it was mortgaged to
Simon Egerton in 1569. (fn. 67) Simon acquired from
Henry Yonge and his wife Alice (fn. 68) their interest in this
manor in 1574, (fn. 69) and died seised in 1576, when he
was succeeded by his brother Richard. (fn. 70) Within five
years, however, John Piers and his wife Alice
had recovered possession and settled Crendon on
their daughter Thomasine and her husband John
Brewster. (fn. 71) John and Thomasine obtained licence
in 1584 to alienate this property to John son and
heir of William Dormer aforesaid, (fn. 72) who was lord
until his death in 1627. (fn. 73) From his son and heir
Robert, who was dead in 1641, (fn. 74) Crendon passed
to his son Robert Dormer. (fn. 75) He was succeeded
in 1689 by Robert Dormer, his eldest son by his first
wife Katherine Bertie. (fn. 76) The younger Robert survived his father about four years, (fn. 77) and was succeeded
by his half-brother John Dormer, the eldest of his
father's seven sons by his second wife Anne Cottrell, (fn. 78)
lord in 1705 (fn. 79) and 1706, and in the latter year
holding with his wife Diana. (fn. 80) In his will, proved
in 1719, John left his Buckinghamshire manors to
his younger brother, another Robert Dormer, (fn. 81) from
whom it passed to another younger brother, LieutenantGeneral James Dormer. (fn. 82) He died unmarried in
1737, (fn. 83) leaving his landed estates to his first cousin Sir
Clement Cottrell, who took the additional surname of
Dormer (fn. 84) . Charles, his eldest son and heir-apparent,
in 1744 settled Crendon, (fn. 85) which he apparently
parted with before his death in 1779. (fn. 86) It is said to
have been sold to George Grenville of Wotton, (fn. 87)
whose grandson Richard Grenville, Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, was lord in 1824. (fn. 88) His grandson of the same name and title held it in 1887, (fn. 89) and
was succeeded in 1889 by his daughter Lady Kinloss, (fn. 90)
who still has rights in the parish.

The Village, Long Crendon

Braose. Azure crusily and a lion or.

Mortimer. Barry or and azure a chief or with two pales between two gyrons azure therein and a scutcheon argent over all.

Ferrers of Groby. Vairy or and gules.

Grey de Ruthyn. Barry argent and azure with three roundels gules in the chief.
Another of the co-heirs of Eva de Braose was
Humphrey de Bohun, son and heir of her daughter
Eleanor by Humphrey, son and heir of Humphrey
de Bohun Earl of Hereford. (fn. 91) From Humphrey,
Eleanor's son, who was returned as lord about 1284, (fn. 92)
the manor descended in 1298 to his son Humphrey. (fn. 93)
John, son and heir of the last Humphrey, (fn. 94) in 1330
settled on Peter Favelore the remainder of his manor
here which Walter de Finchingfield then held for life. (fn. 95)
John's heir in 1336 was his brother Humphrey, who
died in 1361. (fn. 96) He was succeeded by his nephew
Humphrey, son and heir of his younger brother
William Earl of Northampton, (fn. 97) who died in January
1372–3, leaving two daughters Eleanor and Mary. (fn. 98)
His manor of Crendon was held by his widow Joan
until she died in 1419, (fn. 99) nearly twenty years after
the death of their daughter Eleanor. (fn. 100) Mary their
second daughter was represented at Joan's death by
her eldest son, then Henry V, (fn. 101) who was found to
be co-heir of his grandmother with Anne daughter
of the late Duke of Gloucester and Eleanor. (fn. 102) In
the partition of the Bohun inheritance Crendon fell
to the king, to whose widow Queen Katherine it was
assigned in dower in 1422. (fn. 103) . It belonged to the
Crown fifteen years later, (fn. 104) but before or in 1449 was
granted to the college of All Souls, Oxford, (fn. 105) and has
remained in its possession to the present day. (fn. 106)

Bohun. Azure a bend argent cotised or between six lions or.

All Souls College, Oxford. Or a cheveron between three cinqfoils gules.
In 1483 Crendon was one of the Buckinghamshire
manors claimed by Henry Duke of Buckingham as a
descendant of Humphrey de Bohun. (fn. 107)
The last third of the manor was divided between
the two heirs of Eva, second daughter of Eva de
Braose, who had married William Cantelow. (fn. 108) . One
of these, John, afterwards Lord Hastings, son of her
daughter Joan by Sir Henry Hastings, (fn. 109) was a minor
and the king's ward in 1275. (fn. 110) In 1313 he left his
share in the manor to his son John, (fn. 111) at whose death
in 1324 it descended to his son Laurence, aged six,
afterwards Earl of Pembroke. (fn. 112) Laurence, in or
before 1342, granted Crendon for life to Theobald
de Mounteny, (fn. 113) who died in 1362. (fn. 114) The reversion
belonged to John, son and heir of Laurence, but
the king resumed the wardship in 1363. (fn. 115) Agnes
widow of Laurence was dowered in 1364, (fn. 116) and
John died seised eleven years later. (fn. 117) His son and
heir John died without issue in 1389. (fn. 118) Crendon,
which was amongst his possessions, (fn. 119) is not mentioned in the claims on the Hastings inheritance in
1391. (fn. 120) In that year one of the claimants, Reynold
Lord Grey de Ruthyn, apparently placed the manor
in trust for the benefit of Philippa, the last earl's
widow. (fn. 121) Her second husband, Richard Earl of
Arundel, who was executed in 1397, died seised of a
quarter of a knight's fee in Crendon in right of his
wife. (fn. 122) Philippa died in 1400, (fn. 123) and Reynold Grey,
who was then found to hold the reversion of other
Buckinghamshire lands which she held in dower from
John Hastings, (fn. 124) again settled, (fn. 125) and in 1405 further
put Crendon in trust (fn. 126) for the use of Joan wife of
William Beauchamp, Lord of Bergavenny and daughter
of Richard Earl of Arundel by his first wife Elizabeth,
daughter of William Bohun, Earl of Northampton. (fn. 127)
She died seised of a quarter of a knight's fee in Crendon
in 1435, when her heir was her granddaughter Elizabeth wife of Edward Nevill, younger son of Ralph
first Earl of Westmorland. (fn. 128) It is uncertain whether
Crendon came to the Crown before Elizabeth's death
in 1448, but her husband was living in 1467, (fn. 129)
when it was granted for life to Elizabeth queen of
Edward IV, (fn. 130) who surrendered
it in the next year. (fn. 131) Katherine, Dowager Duchess of
Norfolk, a daughter of Ralph
Nevill first Earl of Westmorland, (fn. 132) enjoyed a life interest
in this manor in 1475, when
the king settled his remainder
of it on the queen. (fn. 133) The
duchess was dead before
1480, (fn. 134) in which year Edward IV granted the manor
of Crendon to the Dean and
Canons of St. George's,
Windsor. (fn. 135) It remained among their possessions,
except for a temporary alienation in 1649, (fn. 136) until
1867, (fn. 137) and has since been held by the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners. (fn. 138)

St. George's, Windsor. Argent a cross gules.
The other half of the purparty of the heirs of Eva
Cantelow (fn. 139) came in 1275 to her daughter Milicent
and her husband Eudo la Zouche. (fn. 140) Milicent, who
held alone between 1284 and 1286, (fn. 141) in 1296 made
a settlement in favour of her son William and his
wife Maud. (fn. 142) This William la Zouche, one of the
lords of Crendon in 1302 and 1316, (fn. 143) apparently
conveyed his rights to John second Lord Hastings,
whose share, a sixth in 1316, (fn. 144) had increased to a
third before his death in 1324. (fn. 145)
At the beginning of the 14th century William de
Warmodeston held land in Crendon of the Hastings
and Bohun lords, (fn. 146) some of which was settled on him
and his wife Alice by John de Warmodeston in 1311. (fn. 147)
This or another John de Warmodeston held with his
wife Alice in 1335. (fn. 148) Alice de Warmodeston, sole
tenant in 1346, (fn. 149) was succeeded by a second or third
John de Warmodeston, whose daughter and heir
Katherine, a minor in 1361, (fn. 150) was in 1367 the wife
of Thomas de Loveden, (fn. 151) a descendant probably of
the Thomas de Loveden who had held half a knight's
fee in Crendon in 1330. (fn. 152) Their combined lands
formed the so-called manor of LOVEDENS, sold by
Thomas Loveden of Crendon to Michael Dormer
in 1517. (fn. 153) William, Sir Michael's son, sold it in
1554 to Nicholas Bethune. (fn. 154) In 1568 James Braybrook held an estate in Crendon of All Souls College,
Oxford, (fn. 155) which, as the manor of Lovedens or Loveday,
descended on his death in 1590 to his son William, (fn. 156)
whose son Richard was seised from 1592 to 1648. (fn. 157)
A so-called manor in Crendon, held by John
Barton and his wife Isabel between 1432 and 1473, (fn. 158)
was probably part of the manor of All Souls College,
from the revenues of which two priests were paid to
celebrate for the souls of Isabel and John. (fn. 159)
Other sub-tenants of the divided manor of Crendon
in the 13th and 14th centuries belonged to the
families of Fitz Piers, Ellis, and Craven. (fn. 160)
Clarice widow of Peter Morel, who held 1½ hides
of land in Crendon of her own inheritance in 1179
and 1185, (fn. 161) was succeeded by John Morel, probably
her son, (fn. 162) tenant of a quarter of a knight's fee here
of the old enfeoffment under William Marshal in the
reign of Henry III. (fn. 163) At the latter date Robert son
of William Revel, a minor, held land of William
Marshal of the new enfeoffment. (fn. 164) Robert or his
heir of the same name was a landowner in Crendon
in 1277, when half his possessions were assigned to
his creditor Benedict the Jew. (fn. 165)
A weekly market on Thursday, which was allowed
to William Marshal in 1218, (fn. 166) does not appear to have
survived the partition of the manor. In 1276 free warren
was claimed. (fn. 167) Courts leet and views of frankpledge
were held for the manor. (fn. 168) There is evidence of a
windmill in the manor from 1297. (fn. 169) Robert Revel
owned a capital messuage in 1277 (fn. 170) the Mortimer and
Hastings lords had theirs rather later (fn. 171) ; in 1554
there was a capital messuage on the manor of Lovedens
which the Dormers owned, (fn. 172) and the Dean and Canons
of Windsor owned a mansion-house here in 1706. (fn. 173)
NUTLEY MANOR, which owed its origin to
Walter Giffard's grant of the park of Crendon, an
important appurtenance of the manor in 1086, (fn. 174) to
the house which he founded there, and which was
often called accordingly St. Mary of the Park of
Crendon, (fn. 175) belonged to Nutley Abbey until its surrender (fn. 176) in 1538. (fn. 177) The wardenship was given in
1542 to Sir John Williams, (fn. 178) who received a life
grant of the demesne the next year. (fn. 179) In 1547 this
with the site of the monastery was granted to Sir
William Paget. (fn. 180) The estate afterwards came to Sir
John Williams, and as the manor of Nutley was left
by him in 1559 to his widow in dower, (fn. 181) passing at
her death to his daughters and heirs, Isabel wife of
Richard Wenman, and Margery wife of Henry
Norreys. (fn. 182) In 1579 Isabel, with her second husband
Richard Huddleston, (fn. 183) alienated her moiety to Bartholomew Wyld and William Bower, (fn. 184) probably with
a view to its transference to her sister, whose son John,
afterwards Sir John Norreys, was lord of the whole in
1585 and 1590 and mortgaged it in 1592. (fn. 185) From
Sir John Norreys Nutley descended in 1597 to his
nephew Francis Lord Norreys, son and heir of his elder
brother William, (fn. 186) who was
engaged three years later in a
suit for its recovery from the
trustees of his uncle's mortgagee. (fn. 187) As Earl of Berkshire
he died seised in 1623–4, (fn. 188)
and his manor of Nutley
passed to his daughter Elizabeth, wife of Edward Wray. (fn. 189)
She and her husband leased
the site in 1625 for twentyone years to Edward Lenton, (fn. 190)
who was living there at the
close of this term. (fn. 191) The
manor, which was included
in a settlement of 1628–9, (fn. 192) afterwards came to
Bridget, only child of Edward and Elizabeth Wray. (fn. 193)
Bridget held it with her second husband, Montagu
Earl of Lindsey, in 1648 (fn. 194) and in 1650, when they
renewed the lease of 1625 to Norris Lenton. (fn. 195) In
1689 Henry, one of their younger sons, was lord. (fn. 196)
He died in 1734, having had by his wife Philadelphia
a son James, whose son Norris seems to have been
the last of his line. (fn. 197) By 1765 the manor had come
to Peregrine Bertie, eldest son of Peregrine Bertie of
Lincoln's Inn, (fn. 198) a great-grandson of Bridget Wray's
husband by his first wife, Martha Cockayne. (fn. 199) Albemarle Bertie, who succeeded his brother Peregrine in
1782, (fn. 200) sold Nutley in 1791 to Henry Reynolds, (fn. 201)
whose ancestors had long been tenants here and
whose descendant, Mr. Henry Reynolds, is still in
possession. (fn. 202)

Lenton. Azure a bend ermine between two dolphins or.
Later gifts of Walter Giffard from the township of
Crendon itself, the whole wick (wykam) with the men
and their holding (tenura), the garden once of Robert
the chaplain, the site of the kitchen where the earl's
dogs afterwards lay, the site of the grange for which
the monks of Newton Longvile paid rent, (fn. 203) passed
under the style of Crendon Manor (fn. 204) with Nutley
until 1648, (fn. 205) if not later. In 1731 it belonged
to Willoughby Bertie. (fn. 206) son and heir of James
Bertie, grandson of Bridget Wray and the Earl of
Lindsey. (fn. 207) Willoughby Bertie still held in 1745, (fn. 208)
when he had succeeded his uncle Montagu in the
earldom of Abingdon. (fn. 209) His son and heir, another
Willoughby Earl of Abingdon, (fn. 210) who succeeded in
1760, (fn. 211) is said to have sold the estate before or in
1799 to George Spencer Duke of Marlborough, (fn. 212)
whose youngest son, Francis Almeric Lord Churchill,
owned it in 1824. (fn. 213) He was succeeded in 1845 by
his son and heir Francis George Lord Churchill, (fn. 214)
whose estate in Long Crendon had passed before
1862 to Mr. John Dodwell, (fn. 215) and is now held by
Mr. Herbert Dodwell.
Lands in Crendon called SPERLINGS MANOR
at the close of the 15th century, when they belonged
to the chantry or gild of St. Christopher in Thame, (fn. 216)
were granted in 1552 to Sir John Williams, (fn. 217) and
leased by his daughter Margery and her husband
Henry Norreys to John Ketill in 1567. (fn. 218)
The water-mill mentioned in Domesday Book (fn. 219)
was possibly identical with the mill which, about a
century later, the third Walter Giffard granted to
Nutley Abbey. (fn. 220) A water-mill adjoining the abbey (fn. 221)
was included amongst the appurtenances of the manor
of Nutley in the 17th century. (fn. 222) In 1862 this was
represented by the 'very ancient water-mill' situated
to the left of the abbey ruins. (fn. 223) One or possibly two
windmills, and dovecotes varying in number from one
to three, belonged to the manors of Nutley and
Crendon in the 16th and 17th centuries. (fn. 224) Court
leet, view of frankpledge and free warren came to
Sir William Paget with the site of the manor of
Nutley in 1547. (fn. 225)
Church
The church of ST. MARY THE
VIRGIN consists of a chancel measuring
internally 29 ft. by 16 ft., central tower
17 ft. square, north transept 24 ft. by 17 ft., south
transept 23 ft. 6 in. by 16 ft. 6 in., nave 40 ft. by
19 ft., north aisle 15 ft. wide, south aisle 9 ft. 6 in.
wide, and north, south and west porches. It is built
of limestone and roofed with lead and tiles.
The church dates from the 12th century, but the
only remains of this period are the lower parts of the
lateral walls at the west end of the nave, and the head
of a small window reset in the west wall. The
chancel, tower, transepts and aisles, with the nave
arcades, were built during the 13th century. The
north aisle was widened, the north part of the north
transept rebuilt, and the north porch added in the
first half of the 14th century. The south porch dates
from the 15th century, when the south transept was
rebuilt. About 1510 the west porch and the upper
stages of the tower were added and the west wall of
the nave was rebuilt. The fabric was restored by Sir
Arthur Blomfield in 1890–1, and the transepts have
since been repaired.
The chancel is lighted by two original lancets on
the north, three on the south and a modern five-light
window on the east, while in the south wall are a
square-headed doorway, which is probably original,
and a trefoiled piscina with a sexfoil bowl. On the east
wall is a 15th-century bracket, and in the east jamb
of the middle window on the south is a mask corbel.
The upper part of the north wall is thinner than the
lower part, the offset occurring externally at a line midway in the height of the lancets. The central tower
opens by four 13th-century arches to the chancel,
nave and transepts, and is of three stages with an
embattled parapet; the tower arches were restored in
the 16th century, when the upper stages were built,
and again in 1632 and 1633, these last dates being
carved on the piers. The bell-chamber, which is
reached by a stair turret on the north-west, is lighted
from all sides by pairs of 16th-century windows, each
of two transomed lights with tracery in the head.
The north transept has a large 14th-century traceried
window in the north wall of five cinquefoiled lights,
two 13th-century lancets in the east wall, one of which
is blocked, and a 14th-century arch to the aisle on the
west; the walls were raised in the 15th century and
finished with a plain parapet. Under the large
window is a moulded tomb recess. The south transept
is lighted from the east by two 17th-century square
headed windows, and from the west by a 15th-century
traceried window of three lights. In the south wall
is a 15th-century window of four lights, now blocked
by the Dormer monument. The present roof of this
transept dates from the 15th century, but above the
tower arch can be seen the lines of the original highpitched roof.
The nave has on either side a 13th-century arcade
of two arches, the north arcade having a quatrefoil
pillar and responds with moulded bell capitals, and
the south similar responds, but an octagonal pillar
with a capital of the same character. High in the
wall on the south are traces of circular clearstory
windows. In the west wall is an early 16th-century
doorway with moulded jambs, and above it a contemporary window of four lights under a four-centred
head. The jambs of this window are continued to
the floor, and the recess so formed is flanked by two
other recesses, the jambs of which fall upon stone
benches. Above the west window is the head of the
12th-century light already mentioned. The north
aisle is lighted by two 14th-century windows, one in
the north wall and the other in the west wall, both
of two trefoiled lights with tracery, and in the north
wall is a doorway of the same period, while at the
north-east are a low blocked window and a 14th
century trefoiled niche with a crocketed label. The
north porch, though considerably restored, retains the
original entrance archway. The south aisle has a
13th-century doorway with jamb shafts and a richly
moulded arch, above which are traces of a gable;
to the east of it is a 15th-century traceried window,
and there is a similar window in the west wall. The
roofs of the nave and aisles, though much repaired,
retain a considerable amount of 15th and 16th
century work. The south porch has an originalentrance arch of two orders, the inner order springing
from corbels, and the west porch has a moulded
archway with foliated spandrels, and a quatrefoil light
in each side wall.

Plan of Long Crendon Church
Adapted from the Inventory of the Historical Monuments of Buckinghamshire with the permission
of the Royal Commission and the consent of the Controller of H.M. Stationery Office
The octagonal font dates from about 1380; the
sides of the bowl have quatrefoil panels, and at the
angles are angel-heads with outspread wings, which
from a rich band round the rim; the base is
enriched with foliated panels and lions' heads.
In the south transept is a 17th-century communion
table with rails. Below the northern tower arch are
parts of a 16th-century screen, and in the south
transept is an open screen of about 1680. The stand
of the wood lectern is of the late 17th century.
On the east wall of the north transept is a brass
with figures commemorating John Canon, who died in
1460, and Agnes his wife, 1468, with groups of
three sons and eight daughters. There are also 18th
century monuments to the Canon family. In the
south transept, surrounded by an iron railing, is a large
monument commemorating Sir John Dormer (d. 1627)
and Jane his wife, daughter of John Giffard of Chillington, Staffordshire (d. 1605). The inscription records
that they had four sons (Robert, John, GyfFord and
William) and two daughters (Elizabeth and Dorothy).
Their recumbent figures, the knight in armour, are
placed in a panelled recess flanked by Tuscan columns
and surmounted by an entablature and shield of arms.
In the chancel are floor slabs to Jane wife of John
Burnham (d. 1686) and William Langbaine (d. 1672).
The tower contains a ring of eight bells, all by
Lester & Pack of London, 1768, and a small bell by
George Chandler, 1719. Five of this ring are said
to have been brought from Nutley Abbey about
1540, (fn. 226) three were added in 1632, and the whole
ring was recast in 1768. (fn. 227)
The plate consists of a cup of 1590 and a flagon
and plate of the 18th century.
The registers begin in 1559.
Advowson
The church of Long Crendon,
now dedicated in honour of St. Mary
the Virgin, (fn. 228) appears to have been
originally granted by the second Walter Giffard to
St. Faith Longueville, (fn. 229) but later resumed and given by
his son to the abbey he had founded at Nutley, (fn. 230)
remaining in its possession until the Dissolution. (fn. 231)
The church afterwards followed the descent of the
manor of Crendon, once of Nautly Abbey (fn. 232) (q.v.),
remaning in Lord Churchill's gift after he had parted
with the manor. He was patron until 1883; from
1884 to 1888 the advowson belonged to the executors
of R. Cottman, from 1889 to 1891 to D. B. Chapman.
The Rev. F. E. Ogden, vicar from 1887 to 1901, was
also patron from 1892; from 1901 to 1903 the living
was in the gift of Miss Ogden and Mrs. Barclay Chapman; from 1904. to 1906 of Mr. W. Toone, since
which year the Bishop of Oxford has been patron. (fn. 233)
Lands given for the keeping of lights in the church
of Crendon and for the maintenance of an obit were
included in a grand to Sir Edward Bray and others
made in 1552. (fn. 234)
Charities
The following charities are regulated by a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners, dated 24 July 1906,
namely:—
Charity of Sir John Dormer, founded by deed
1 May 1620, consisting of a rent-charge of £30
(less land tax) issuing out of land at Piddington,
Oxfordshire.
Thomas Westbrooke's Charity, will 1630, being an
annuity of 15s. issuing out of Downe Lane Close at
Littlemore, Oxfordshire.
Thomas Canon's charity, deed 23 December 1648,
trust fund £40 2½ per cent, annuities, arising from
the redemption in 1902 of rent-charge of £1.
John Hart's charity, will proved in the P.C.C.
15 May 1665, being a rent-charge of £5 (less land tax)
issuing out of land at Easington, Oxfordshire; and
Trott's charity, being an annuity of 10s. issuing
out of North Down Field, date of foundation unknown, but mentioned in the Parliamentary Returns
of 1786.
It is directed by the scheme that out of the income
of Sir John Dormer's charity the yearly sum of
£2 10s. shall be applied in keeping in repair the
tomb and monument of the founder and the aisle of
the church in which it is situated, and payment of a
yearly sum of 12s. to the person so employed; also a
sum not exceeding £6 to be applied every third year
towards the cost of a dinner on the day kept as the
court day for the lord of the manor, with 15s. to the
steward.
The income of John Hart's charity is to be applied
in apprenticing or in prizes or exhibitions for children
attending a public elementary school, the residue of
the income of the charities being applicable for the
benefit of the poor of not less than sixty years of age
during the winter season. The distribution is usually
made in coal.
The church lands, the origin of which is unknown,
consist of 16 acres, let at £15 a year, which is applied
in aid of the general church expenses.
The poor's allotment, also known as Deiman's
charity, consists of 12 acres, let at £12 a year, which
is applied in the distribution of coal.
The Wesleyan Methodist chapel, comprised in deed
2 July 1829, was by an order of the Charity Commissioners, 6 January 1911, vested in trustees thereby
appointed upon the trusts of the Skircoat Model Deed,
dated in 1832.