LOWER HEYFORD or HEYFORD BRIDGE
This parish of 1,765 acres (fn. 1) lies midway between
Oxford and Banbury and 4½ miles from the ancient
market-town of Deddington. It is bounded on the
west by the Cherwell (fn. 2) and on the east by the
Romano-British earthwork, Aves Ditch. (fn. 3) Until
about 1545, when the mills were moved and the
course of the Cherwell was diverted to the east, the
main river, and not a subsidiary stream as now,
formed the parish's north-western boundary. (fn. 4) From
the river the ground rises sharply to the plateau of
the Great Oolite: (fn. 5) the parish is mostly within the
300-foot contour, but in the centre reaches nearly
400 feet. The low hedges and the comparative scarcity of trees add to the plateau's upland character.
While the Cherwell meadows suffer from flooding (fn. 6)
the plateau with its one small stream suffers
from drought. (fn. 7) The stonebrash soil, however, is
suitable for both pasture and arable. There is little
woodland: Coopers Spinney is the main survivor of
woods in the south-west of the parish which were
cut down in the mid-19th century. (fn. 8)
The main Bicester-Enstone road, which became
a turnpike in 1793, (fn. 9) crosses the river and enters the
parish by Heyford Bridge. Part of the bridge,
notably the chamfered vaulting-ribs of the arches at
the eastern end, probably dates from the late 13th
century; there are 19th-century additions on the
north side. Records of numerous bequests for its
upkeep in the 16th century have survived. In 1544,
for instance, William Carter gave 2 bushels of malt
towards its 'mending and reparation', and in 1564
the Rector of Rousham bequeathed 3s. 4d. (fn. 10) Levies
on the parish were also made for its upkeep. In 1840,
partly as the result of the heavy traffic on the turnpike, the bridge was in ruins and the county sued
the parish for neglect. Judgement was given against
the county, which accordingly became liable for the
upkeep of the bridge, and in 1842 had it repaired
by William Fisher of Oxford at a cost of £209. The
county was also responsible for the upkeep of the
causeway which crossed the low-lying land between
the bridge and the village. (fn. 11) A second road, which
crosses the parish from north to south, follows the
line of the Portway, (fn. 12) and a third connects Heyford
village with Upper Heyford and Somerton. The
course of these roads has changed little since they
were mapped by Thomas Langdon in 1606, (fn. 13) but
the pattern of the other old roads and tracks was
greatly altered by the inclosure of the open fields in
1802. (fn. 14) Church Way vanished and the courses of
Southway and 'Fordrowe Way' were changed. (fn. 15)
The Heyford section of the Oxford Canal was
completed in 1790 and a wharf was built on it. (fn. 16) The
British Transport Commission acquired them in
1946 and by 1954 traffic had practically ceased,
although the wharf was still used as a coal-yard and
the canal continued to be the resort of anglers. The
Oxford and Banbury branch of the old G.W.R.,
opened in 1850, runs parallel to the canal for some
way. (fn. 17) Unfortunately the engineers failed to provide
sufficient culverts beneath the embankment so as to
prevent an increase in flooding. (fn. 18) One of the three
original intermediate stations was built at Lower
Heyford.
The village lies above the river in the north-west
of the parish, and just off the main Bicester-Enstone
road. (fn. 19) Until the mid-13th century it was called
Heyford, 'the ford used at hay harvest'. After the
construction of the bridge, first recorded in 1255, it
was commonly called Heyford ad pontem or Heyford
Bridge, although Lower Heyford and even Little or
Parva Heyford were sometimes used. (fn. 20) No explanation has been found of the use of 'Heyforde Porcells'
by the rector in 1634. (fn. 21) The village appears on Plot's
map of 1677 as Heyford Purcell and was frequently
called that in the 19th century. (fn. 22)
A small square used as a market-place in the mid19th century forms the centre of the old part of the
village. Here are the Bell Inn, mentioned in 1819, (fn. 23)
and the school. The manor-house, now a farm-house,
the church and the old Rectory lie along a lane to the
west. The stocks and the pound (removed in 1878)
once stood on the west side of the churchyard. (fn. 24)
Langdon's map of 1606 shows houses round and
in the middle of the square, with the 'Town House'
and other houses along the main village street which
runs eastwards. (fn. 25) The largest of the 18 houses listed
in the hearth-tax returns of 1665 were the Rectory
(7 hearths), the manor-house (6 hearths), the house
of Gabriel Merry, one of the tenants of the demesne
(5 hearths), and the mill house (4 hearths). (fn. 26) In 1742
the total number of houses was reported to be forty. (fn. 27)
Three of them had been licensed as ale-houses in
1735, of which one may have been the 'Red Lion',
first mentioned by that name in 1784 (fn. 28) and subsequently used in 1801 as the meeting-place of the
Heyford landowners, when they resolved to inclose
the open fields. (fn. 29) By 1800 at least seven new cottages
had been built, and others had been divided. (fn. 30) With
the coming of the turnpike, toll gates had been
erected at each end of the village, (fn. 31) and it was along
the road to the eastern toll-gate and along the turnpike itself that the main early 19th-century building
took place. By 1841 there were 87 inhabited houses. (fn. 32)
Among the chief 19th-century additions were a
Methodist chapel (replaced in 1906), the school, and
the railway station. In 1888 the Deddington, Heyford, and Aston Permanent Building Society was
established, (fn. 33) and though population was falling
there was much new building to replace old cottages.
In the 20th century the village continued to extend
eastwards. Between 1939 and 1954 38 council houses
were completed. (fn. 34) A noteworthy addition to the social
life of the village was the combined club room and
library, built in 1926 to house the War Memorial
Library which had been founded after the First
World War. (fn. 35)
Caulcott, first mentioned in 1199, (fn. 36) lies about a
mile to the east. Almost all the houses, including
Caulcott Farm, lie along one side of the village street.
There is an inn, the 'Horse and Groom', and the
former Methodist chapel, now a garage. The incumbent estimated 14 houses in 1742 and in 1771,
and in 1841 the census recorded twenty-nine (fn. 37)
In about 1900 a piped water-supply was brought
to Heyford village and three farms. In 1926 many
houses in Heyford and the whole of Caulcott still
depended on wells. (fn. 38) A main water-supply was laid
to the village and Caulcott in 1954, and electricity
supplies were made available in about 1932. (fn. 39)
The old houses and cottages in the village are
mainly of two stories and are built of the local ironstone. The better ones such as the manor and Rectory
have ashlar quoins; some are thatched and others
are roofed with stone slates, or Welsh slate. Among
the oldest is the manor-house, rebuilt in 1669 on an
L-shaped plan with two stories and an attic dormer. (fn. 40)
It apparently stands on the same site as its predecessor, which is shown on Langdon's map of 1606, but
is said to be less extensive. Its many original features
include a 17th-century window of three lights with
a moulded wooden frame; and a stone with the date
of rebuilding, 1669, and the initials W.E.B.—William
and Elizabeth Bruce. A part of the former Rectory—
the east side—dates back to the 16th century, (fn. 41) but
most of the oldest parts were pulled down in 1867,
when extensive modernization was undertaken. A
relic of the medieval house is still preserved in the
form of a small wooden carving of a shield, inscribed
I H S within a crown of thorns, (fn. 42) perhaps from
the oratory built in the Rectory in 1337. (fn. 43) Before the
house was enlarged by Thomas Greenway in the
second half of the 16th century, it was said to consist
of a panelled hall with a chamber above. A piece of
stained glass with Greenway's initials together with
the figure of a pelican (the crest of Corpus Christi
College) and the words 'Gracia Dei mecum (15)69'
was removed from the Rectory in 1867 and is now
in a window of the vestry. (fn. 44) The house fell into disrepair during the Civil War, (fn. 45) but by 1679 it was said
to have eight or nine bays. (fn. 46) In 1731 the rector added
the present northern wing. (fn. 47) The house was sold in
1949 when the present Rectory was built. (fn. 48)
Other substantially 17th-century houses are the
Bell Inn, originally rectangular in plan, Glebe Farm
with its thatched roof, and Knapton's Farm. An
interesting feature of the 'Bell' is the staircase projection on the east side, which rises to the attic level
and contains an ancient newel staircase lighted by
a single rectangular window. The Mill house with
its three stories and original rectangular plan may
also date from the late 17th century, though its
sash windows and inside shutters were 18th-century
insertions.
There are several outlying farm-houses, but none
of them appears to have been built before the inclosure of the open fields in 1802.
Despite its position near one of the crossings of the
Cherwell, Heyford has been scarcely touched by
events of national importance. During the Civil War
it is recorded that royalist troops went over the
bridge en route for Banbury in 1643, but no skirmishes in the parish have been recorded. (fn. 49) Heyford's
historian William Wing listed six Heyford worthies
in 1877, (fn. 50) but none save William Filmer, the early
19th-century 'experimental farmer', had more than
local fame. (fn. 51)
Heyford men had their own version of a Mumming Play, figuring King George and Bonaparte, at
least until 1885, and John Fathers of Heyford was
one of the last players of the 'whittle and dub', the
traditional Oxfordshire instruments for dancing. (fn. 52)
Manors.
In 1086 a certain Ralph held 5 hides of
Miles Crispin in LOWER HEYFORD, which had
been freely held by Besi before the Conquest. (fn. 53) The
overlordship of this estate followed that of the honor
of Wallingford. (fn. 54) In the 12th century the De la
Mares of Steeple Lavington (Wilts.) (fn. 55) appear as
tenants of the manor. In 1166 Peter de la Mare was
holding 3 fees in Oxfordshire of the honor of
Wallingford, (fn. 56) one of which was in Heyford. (fn. 57) By
1173 he had been succeeded by his son Robert, (fn. 58)
who was Sheriff of Oxfordshire from 1187 to 1190, (fn. 59)
and served King John overseas before 1205. (fn. 60) He is
known to have been still in possession of his Heyford manor in 1201, (fn. 61) but was dead by 1211 when
his lands were in the hands of Warin Fitzgerold of
Fritwell, presumably the guardian of Robert's
son Peter, to whom Fitzgerold surrendered the
property in the following year. (fn. 62) Peter (II) was
followed after his death in 1254 by his son Robert,
then aged 40, (fn. 63) a partisan of Simon de Montfort. (fn. 64)
Robert died in 1272 and was succeeded by his son
Peter (III), (fn. 65) who could not do homage for his lands
because of Edward I's absence on crusade, but who
was allowed to exploit them until Edward's return. (fn. 66)
In 1291 Heyford and Marsh Baldon were included
among the lands which Roger de Somery, lord of
Dudley, had held; (fn. 67) the reason for this is not
apparent, for Peter de la Mare held both manors on
his death in 1292, (fn. 68) when he was succeeded by his
son Robert, who was given seisin of his father's
estates in 1296 when he attained his majority. (fn. 69) In
1306 Robert was given licence to lease £20 worth of
land in Heyford (i.e. the manor) to Walter of Aylesbury, then keeper of the honor of Wallingford, (fn. 70) since
he was going to the Scottish wars. (fn. 71) Robert died in
1308 when his son Peter was still a minor; (fn. 72) in the
same year a rent of 6s. 8d. a year in Heyford was
granted to Robert's widow Lucy, as part of her
dower. (fn. 73) Peter's wardship was committed to Hugh
Despenser the elder. (fn. 74) He was of age by 1318 when
he was granted free warren at Heyford. (fn. 75) During the
troubles of Edward II's reign Peter twice forfeited
his lands for armed opposition to the Despensers
and their allies, (fn. 76) but he obtained a final pardon for
his rebellion in 1324, when his lands were again
restored. (fn. 77) Thereafter he rose steadily in importance and held a number of royal offices. (fn. 78) He
married Joan Achard of Aldermaston (Berks.), and
the reversion of that manor was settled upon him in
1342. (fn. 79) By 1345 he had acquired the Lisle manor
(see below) in Heyford, (fn. 80) and by 1348 had been
rewarded for his services to the house of Lancaster (fn. 81)
by the office of steward of the Earldom of Lancaster. (fn. 82)
Peter died in 1349 (fn. 83) and was succeeded by his son
Robert, (fn. 84) who like his father was an important
official of Henry, Duke of Lancaster. (fn. 85) On Robert's
death in 1382 (fn. 86) both Heyford manors were assigned
to his widow in dower, (fn. 87) but on her death in 1405 (fn. 88)
they were once more divided. The De la Mare manor
passed to Robert's heir male, his nephew Robert,
son of Thomas de la Mare of Aldermaston and
Sparsholt (Berks.), who had died in 1404. (fn. 89) In 1431
Robert de la Mare died in possession of the manor.
He had previously settled it on his eldest son William
and Katherine his wife, but they were dead by 1431
and the manor passed to Robert's grandson,
Thomas, (fn. 90) who was probably the son of Richard de
la Mare. (fn. 91) Thomas came of age in 1448. (fn. 92) Although
he was at first a Lancastrian, he was pardoned by
Edward IV, under whom he was three times Sheriff
of Oxfordshire and Berkshire. (fn. 93) He was attainted
after his rebellion in 1483, but his estates were
restored to him in 1485. (fn. 94) When he died in 1490 (fn. 95)
he had been predeceased by his son John, and was
therefore succeeded by his grandson Thomas, who
was still a minor on his own death in 1493. (fn. 96) His
heirs were his sisters, Elizabeth, the wife of George
Foster, and Frideswide (later the wife of John
Moreton), who died in 1497. (fn. 97) Heyford had been
assigned in dower to Thomas's mother, Joan, and
was held by her until her death in 1517. (fn. 98) Elizabeth
and George Foster then succeeded, and before the
death of his wife in 1526 Foster had settled the manor
on himself and his son Humphrey. (fn. 99) In 1527 Edward
Baynton, the tenant of the Lisle manor, claimed the
manor on the ground of descent from the Peter de
la Mare who held it in fee tail in 1340. (fn. 100) In 1528
judgement was given in Baynton's favour and he
reunited the manors. (fn. 101)
Before the Conquest an estate had been held in
LOWER HEYFORD by Edwin, son of the thegn
Burred, (fn. 102) who also held Barton Seagrave and other
lands in Northamptonshire. (fn. 103) In 1086, assessed at
5 hides, it was in the hands of Geoffrey, Bishop of
Coutances. (fn. 104) It subsequently passed to the earls of
Gloucester, perhaps through Robert FitzHamon,
to whom William II may have granted certain lands
forfeited by Geoffrey's nephew and heir, Robert de
Mowbray. (fn. 105) Richard de Clare died seised of the
overlordship in 1262, (fn. 106) and it descended with the
Earldom of Gloucester to the last male of the line,
Gilbert, on whose death at Bannockburn in 1314
it was given in dower to his widow Maud. (fn. 107) From
the Clares the overlordship passed through Hugh
Audley to Ralph Stafford, (fn. 108) thereafter following the
descent of the Earldom of Stafford. (fn. 109) The overlordship was last mentioned in 1460 when it was held by
Humphrey, Duke of Buckingham and Earl of Stafford, at his death. (fn. 110)
By 1262 the Champernowne family, whose main
estates were in Devon, were the tenants of Heyford
under the Clares, (fn. 111) to whom they were related. (fn. 112)
William de Champernowne was the mesne lord of
Hampton Gay in 1235 (fn. 113) and his heir was the Clare
tenant at Heyford in 1262. (fn. 114) Presumably this was
Joan, his daughter, who was mesne tenant in 1275
and 1284, (fn. 115) and was apparently still alive in 1314. (fn. 116)
Joan married Sir Ralph de Willington, (fn. 117) and the
mesne lordship of Heyford descended to John de
Willington, probably their son, who held lands in
Cornwall in 1302 (fn. 118) and died in 1339, (fn. 119) when he was
succeeded by his sons, Ralph (d. 1348) and Henry
(d. 1349). (fn. 120) Henry's son and heir John came of age
in 1361, (fn. 121) but was never mentioned in connexion
with Heyford. To judge from the vague reference to
'the heirs of William Champernoun' in 1392 and
1398, (fn. 122) the mesne lordship had by then become
extinct.
In 1086 a certain Robert held under the Bishop of
Coutances (fn. 123) the 5 hides in Heyford which had
formerly belonged to Edwin, but until the 13th
century no tenant of this manor is mentioned. In
1218 William de Moreton conveyed to Richard
Henred ½ fee in Heyford and Caulcott, receiving
in exchange I hide of land in Caulcott. (fn. 124) The
Henreds appear in West Hendred (Berks.) early in
the 12th century, (fn. 125) and in Northamptonshire, where
they later held a manor at Barton Seagrave, in the
mid-12th century. (fn. 126) The history of Heyford follows
closely that of Barton Seagrave from the late AngloSaxon period until the end of the 13th century, so it
is likely that the Henreds had been under-tenants of
Heyford before 1218. Richard Henred (fn. 127) was dead
by 1242 when his widow Lucy was holding the manor
in dower. (fn. 128) She was apparently succeeded by their
son Richard, who was imprisoned at Northampton
for murder in 1264, (fn. 129) and was a royalist in the
baronial wars. (fn. 130) In 1274 Richard exchanged Heyford
with William de Lisle for North Brampton manor
(Northants). (fn. 131) He died in 1275 seised of a mesne
lordship over William de Lisle in Heyford, (fn. 132) leaving
a son William, who obtained seisin later in the same
year. (fn. 133) The Henred mesne lordship became extinct
in 1293 when William was hanged for the murder of
the parson of North Brampton. (fn. 134) William de Lisle,
who had been custodian of Oxford castle in 1270, (fn. 135)
died in 1277 (fn. 136) and his son Roger was given seisin
in the next year. (fn. 137) In 1297 he settled the manor on
his son John and his wife Amice, the daughter of
Richard de Shulton, (fn. 138) and they conveyed the manor
to Peter de la Mare in 1330. (fn. 139) In 1345 Katherine
de Lisle confirmed the transaction. (fn. 140) The manor
then followed the descent of the De la Mare manor,
being assigned in dower to Maud, the wife of Robert
de la Mare, on the latter's death in 1382. When
Maud died in 1405 it was again separated from the
De la Mare manor and passed to Willelma, daughter
of Robert and Maud, the wife of Sir John Roches
of Bromham (Wilts.). (fn. 141) The latter died in 1400 and
Willelma in 1411, when the family estates in Wiltshire passed to her elder daughter Joan, the wife of
Nicholas Baynton, and Heyford to the younger
daughter Elizabeth, wife of Sir Walter Beauchamp. (fn. 142)
Sir Walter was closely connected with the royal
household, being a king's esquire in 1403, (fn. 143) one of
the retinue of Henry V at Agincourt and an executor
of Henry's will. (fn. 144) He died in 1430 (fn. 145) and was
succeeded by his son William, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Gerard de Braybrook, in whose
right he became Lord St. Amand. (fn. 146) In 1448 the
manor was settled on William, his wife and his heirs
in tail male, (fn. 147) and when he died in 1457 it was held
under the settlement by his wife for life. (fn. 148) In 1458
Elizabeth married as her second husband Roger
Tocotes, who was knighted in 1461. (fn. 149) In 1484 he was
attainted and his estates forfeited for his part in the
Duke of Buckingham's rising. (fn. 150) They were granted
to the royal favourite Sir Thomas Everingham, (fn. 151)
but Sir Roger's attainder was reversed in 1485 (fn. 152) and
he continued to hold the manor until Elizabeth died
in 1491. It then reverted to Richard, Lord St. Amand,
the son of Elizabeth's first husband, on whom
the manor had been settled in 1475. (fn. 153) Richard
died in 1508 without legitimate children, and by
1511 Heyford passed to John Baynton of Fulstone
(Wilts.), (fn. 154) the descendant of Nicholas Baynton and
his wife Joan. (fn. 155) In 1528 John's son and heir, Sir Edward Baynton, acquired the De la Mare manor,
and in 1533 sold both Heyford manors to Corpus
Christi College, Oxford, for £709. (fn. 156) In 1956 they
were still in the college's possession.
For the greater part of the 16th and 17th centuries
Corpus Christi's demesne lands in Heyford were
mostly divided into two estates held by the yeoman
families of Bruce and Merry. John Bruce was
'farmer and receiver' of Heyford in 1535, (fn. 157) and was
followed by Richard Bruce, (fn. 158) and William, who died
at the Black Assizes in Oxford in 1577. (fn. 159) Another
descendant, a William Bruce, rebuilt the manorhouse before his death in 1683. (fn. 160) In 1685 his son
William settled the estate upon his only daughter
Elizabeth and her husband Robert Kenricke of
Oxford. (fn. 161) In 1737 after Elizabeth's death her son
James Kenricke sold the estate, by then mortgaged,
to William Leigh, (fn. 162) who was succeeded as the
college's lessee by his brother, the Revd. Thomas
Leigh (d. 1744). In 1765 his widow (fn. 163) assigned the
remainder of her lease to Sir Charles CottrellDormer of Rousham. (fn. 164)
Simon Merry was farmer of the other part of the
demesne by 1548 and died in 1588. (fn. 165) A Mrs. Merry
was farmer in 1598, and she was succeeded by the
long-lived Gabriel Merry (1591–1684). (fn. 166) The last of
the family to be a lessee of the college seems to
have been John Merry. His farm was leased by
Corpus Christi to John Macock in 1740. (fn. 167) Macock's
son Richard was the lessee (fn. 168) until 1787, when he
sold the remainder of his current least to Sir Clement
Cottrell-Dormer of Rousham. (fn. 169) The CottrellDormers had acquired a leasehold estate of some 310
acres in all, (fn. 170) and this they held until the early 20th
century. (fn. 171)
Lesser Estate.
One large freehold estate in
Caulcott did not belong to Corpus Christi's manor,
and was reputed to be a separate manor in the 18th
century. (fn. 172) At the beginning of the 17th century it
was held by Bartholomew Tipping of Stokenchurch: (fn. 173) its earlier history is unknown, though it
may be conjectured to have originated in the lands
held direct of the manor of Wallingford by Geoffrey
de Browman in 1279. (fn. 174) In 1605 Tipping conveyed it
to Richard Brangwyn of Kingsey (Bucks.), (fn. 175) whose
descendants held it until 1795, (fn. 176) when John Brangwyn, son of John Brangwyn of Middle Barton, sold
it to John Churchill of Woodstock. (fn. 177) The latter's son
Benjamin succeeded him about 1797, and in 1809
conveyed his Caulcott estate to George Villiers, Earl
of Jersey. (fn. 178) About the time of the inclosure of Lower
Heyford in 1802 the Churchill family acquired a
number of copyhold estates in the parish. (fn. 179) These
were also purchased by Lord Jersey, who thereby
obtained an estate of 191 acres freehold and 131 acres
copyhold. (fn. 180) The earls of Jersey held these lands
throughout the 19th century and in 1871 the 7th earl
bought the freehold of the 131 acres from Corpus
Christi. (fn. 181)
Economic and Social History.
The
evidence found in excavating Harborough Bank, (fn. 182)
a Saxon burial mound to the south-east of the
village, and other nearby graves makes it probable
that Heyford has been continuously settled since
the 6th century. Its name probably means 'the
ford used at hay harvest'. (fn. 183) Linguistic reasons are
strengthened by the fact that much of the meadowland lay on the far side of a loop of the Cherwell. (fn. 184)
The river was presumably fordable somewhere near
Heyford Bridge, while farther downstream another
ford gave access to the island meadow of Cotmeadham. (fn. 185) While these fords probably led the Saxons
to settle at Lower Heyford, the siting of the village
and, at a later date, of its hamlet of Caulcott, was
clearly influenced by the necessity of securing a
good water-supply. Heyford village, unlike the rest
of the parish, lies on the Marlstone with impervious
Lower Lias Clay beneath, and Caulcott lies by a
stream in a depression in the Oolitic Limestone.
Even when the stream dries up water can be reached
by wells near its course. (fn. 186)
Heyford was the only recorded settlement in 1086
and all its available arable was not under cultivation.
The two estates there held by Ralph and Robert each
had land for 6 ploughs, but on Ralph's estate there
were 2 ploughs in demesne and the peasants had 3,
while on Robert's there were 3 ploughs in demesne
and the peasants had two. Each estate had 30 acres
of meadow and a mill, the one worth 10s., the other
20s. The total value of each estate was £6, as it had
been before the Conquest. In all there were 11 villeins (villani), 12 bordars, and 5 serfs. (fn. 187)
The survey of 1279 records considerable development. (fn. 188) There were still two principal estates in Heyford. Roger de Lisle held 1½ carucates in demesne,
with 9 cottars each holding a cotland for 2s. 6d. a
year and working at his will; Peter de la Mare held
1½ carucates in demesne and 10 cottars with cotlands
of 11 acres each paid 2s. 6d. a year and worked at
Peter's will. A free tenant held a messuage and 2
acres of Roger de Lisle for 1d., as well as 3 acres and
a park of Geoffrey de Browman for 3s. In the new
hamlet of Caulcott, Roger had 8 villein virgaters, who
each paid 5s. a year and worked at his will. Peter de
la Mare held 17 virgates, of which 15 were held by
16 villeins who owed only labour services. Hugh de
Broke, whose father Lawrence had acquired lands
in Caulcott in the 1240's, (fn. 189) had an estate of 12
virgates, which was held of him by a free tenant, who
held 3 virgates for 19s. 6d. a year, and 9 villein
virgaters, who owed 5s. 6d. a year and labour services.
Another free tenant held 2 virgates of Geoffrey de
Bromwam for 15s. a year. Both the Heyford rectors
held 2 virgates each. As in 1086 two water-mills
were recorded—one held by the rector of the
Eynsham moiety of the church (fn. 190) and the other by
Roger de Lisle, who also had the fishery in the
Cherwell.
The most notable changes recorded in this survey
were the new settlement at Caulcott, the extended
cultivation, and the increased population. Whereas
Heyford was a riverside village, the new hamlet (if
indeed it was new and not merely accounted for in
Domesday as part of Heyford) was an upland one.
Its name 'the cold cottages' (OE ceald cote) was
no doubt a reference to its comparatively exposed
position. (fn. 191) The names of many of its late-13thcentury inhabitants suggest that it had been
colonized by men from the neighbouring villages—
Rousham, Middleton, Souldern, Northbrook, Fencott, and Murcott, (fn. 192) and since its lands mostly belonged to the two Heyford manors the De la Mares
and the predecessors of the De Lisles may have
either taken the initiative in its foundation or at least
encouraged its growth. As for the area of cultivation,
rather less than 22 virgates of arable (fn. 193) were recorded in Heyford and 39 in Caulcott, making, with
4½ virgates for the rectory lands, a total of 65½ virgates, compared with a possible 48 virgates (i.e. land
for 12 ploughs) in 1086. The Heyford virgate was
20 'field acres', (fn. 194) so in 1279 the fields of Heyford and
Caulcott may have covered an area of at least 1,300
field acres or about 850 statute acres. (fn. 195) In population Caulcott had outgrown Heyford, having 33
villeins to the 19 cottars recorded in the mother
village. A possible connexion between the early 13thcentury field name Coldhememere, 'boundary of the
people of Caulcott', and the modern Cold Harbour
farm, which lies on the boundary of Heyford with
Kirtlington, suggests that by the early 13th century
cultivation had here reached the frontier of the
parish. (fn. 196)
In 1292 the De la Mare manor was worth £190s. 7d.
a year. There were 80 acres of arable, worth 4d.
an acre, in the demesne, with pasture worth 8d. an
acre, meadow, and a dovecote. The water-mill and
the fishery brought in 16s. a year. (fn. 197) In 1308 the
manor comprised a capital messuage with dovecote
worth 6s. 8d. a year, 200 acres of arable worth 33s. 4d.
at 2d. an acre, 20 acres of meadow worth 40s. at 2s.
an acre, a separate pasture worth 10s., a water-mill
worth 13s. 4d., and a fishery worth 12d. The whole
was valued at £5 4s. 4d. a year. The rents of 6 free
tenants amounted to 42s. 8d. There were 14 virgaters
and 8 half-virgaters, whose rents amounted to 47s.
and dayworks and other customary payments to
68s. 0½d. Thirteen of the virgaters each owed 2s.
rent, 3 hens and a cock worth 6d. at the feast of St.
Martin, and works at the time of hoeing, mowing,
and reaping worth 3s. 2d. Seven half-virgaters made
payments for brewing in addition to their rent of
money and poultry. There were 3 cottars, of which
2 held for a rent of 2s. and a hen and a cock worth
2½d. The third paid 6d. (fn. 198) By 1349 the customary
works of the unfree tenants were said to have been
commuted. (fn. 199) In the 1420's, however, a half-virgater
still owed two autumn works with two men besides
a rent of 8s. a year. (fn. 200)
Fourteenth-century tax lists suggest that Caulcott
maintained its lead in population and show it to have
been the wealthier of the settlements. In 1316 it had
28 contributors compared with Heyford's 13, and
an assessment of £3 16s. 9d. as against Heyford's
£2 0s. 9d.; in 1327 it had 28 contributors compared
with Heyford's twenty. (fn. 201) The parish as a whole was
evidently one of the most prosperous in Ploughley
hundred, for its assessment of £5 13s. 4d. from 1334
onwards was the seventh highest in the hundred. (fn. 202)
The joint return for the two villages for the poll tax
of 1377 (fn. 203) shows a total of 84 contributors, a comparatively high number for the hundred. There may,
however, have been a fall in the number of inhabitants about this time, as later evidence points to a
decline in the area of arable land.
Much of the land brought under cultivation
between 1086 and 1279 must have formed the 'New
Breach' in Caulcott, for in the late 13th century
Caulcott lands were much more extensive than those
of Heyford and had to support a larger population.
It is probable that the Breach was maintained as
arable until after the Black Death at least, when it
may have fallen out of cultivation. Langdon's map
shows that in 1606 most of the Breach was rough
pasture, (fn. 204) but that the two Caulcott fields were then
still as large as those of Heyford. Two remaining
furlongs of the Newbreach lay in Caulcott fields
and rents were being paid for strips in them in the
late 16th and early 17th centuries. (fn. 205) The decline of
the hamlet was greater than the map alone would
indicate, for its land was poorer than Heyford's. (fn. 206)
It seems likely that still more land had reverted to
rough pasture by the end of the 18th century. It was
then thought, for instance, that the 'Newbreach
rents' had been paid for waste land. (fn. 207) If Davis's map
of 1797 is sufficiently accurate to be used as evidence,
there was then no arable between Caulcott closes and
the parish's eastern boundary, while the Moors,
immediately north-east of Heyford village, and the
Cleeves, the Linches, and Briar Furlong in the west
had fallen out of cultivation. Like the South Cow
Pasture, which had turned into scrub land called
High Bushes, (fn. 208) they may have become covered with
scattered trees and undergrowth. The inclosure
award of 1802 recorded 125 acres of waste ground,
but there may have been a good deal more among the
1,383 acres said to be open-field arable and meadow. (fn. 209)
Judging from later evidence, Heyford and its
hamlet had separate systems of two open fields each
in the Middle Ages. (fn. 210) It is probable that by the 16th
century these four fields had been united into one
system: the agricultural ordinances of the Elizabethan courts clearly applied to the whole parish,
and the majority of copyhold tenants of Corpus
Christi College who appear in the court rolls held
yardlands in both Heyford and Caulcott. (fn. 211) Experiments in cropping may have been started by 1600,
when it was said that of the 12 yardlands of Caulcott
farm—which lay entirely in the two Caulcott fields (fn. 212)
—8 might be sown in a year, pointing to a threecourse rotation. (fn. 213) Seventeenth- and 18th-century
terriers show that a redivision of the Heyford fields
took place. In a terrier of 1679 the rector's lands in
Heyford were arranged in three groups—the first
and second headed North Field and the third headed
South Field. The first group of lands lay entirely in
the furlongs north of Bicester Way. (fn. 214) Terriers of
1761 and 1775 call these furlongs 'the North side
of the Field', while the remainder of the old North
Field, with perhaps the northernmost furlongs of
the old South Field, were called Middle Field. (fn. 215) On
this evidence it can be argued that Heyford fields
were being rearranged into three by 1679. At that
date Caulcott still had two fields. (fn. 216)
As elsewhere, good pasture land was scarce at Heyford, and so in the late 16th century there was a lengthy
controversy between Heyford and Steeple Aston
over rights in Broadhead meadow. The meadow had
been awarded in 1575 to Corpus Christi College,
who as lords of Heyford claimed both the hay and
rights of common after hay harvest. The dispute
with Aston arose largely because Aston men could
get their beasts into Broadhead in time of flood when
Heyford men could not. Up to some 30 years before,
witnesses said, Broadhead had been clearly divided
from Aston mead by the old course of the Cherwell,
but the main water course had been altered when the
mills had been moved. (fn. 217) A compromise was eventually reached, for in the 17th century one of the
farmers of the Heyford demesne had the hay, while
the meadow was common to Heyford between hay
harvest and 8 September, and common to Aston
between 8 September and 25 March. (fn. 218)
Another indication of the shortage of pasture is
the alteration in the usual stint. In 1600 the stint was
3 cattle and 30 sheep to the yardland, (fn. 219) but in 1637
this was reduced by one-fifth. The rector was
allowed to graze 8 cattle and 160 sheep on the common pasture instead of 10 cattle and 200 sheep, and
the stints of the farmers and customary tenants were
reduced to 3 cattle and 20 sheep, and 2 cattle and
20 sheep respectively. (fn. 220)
No woods are mentioned in early records and
none are shown on Langdon's map of 1606, but
Heyford's timber acquired a moderate importance
in the 17th century owing to the general scarcity.
Small quantities were sold by the college throughout
the century, increasing in the second half. It received
over £25 a year from sales in 1659, 1670, 1674, and
1679, and in 1687 174 trees—57 elms and 117 ashes
—on the copyhold lands were marked for sale. (fn. 221) Not
until after the inclosure of 1802 was there any further
felling except for repairs. (fn. 222) Some £520 worth of
timber was then sold and over £400 worth in 1810. (fn. 223)
The only woodland to survive was the High Bushes,
but this was cut down partly in 1846–7, when the
railway was being built, and partly in 1851. (fn. 224)
Copyhold was the predominant form of tenure
from the 16th to the 19th century. In the 17th
century copyholds, as elsewhere in Oxfordshire,
were frequently granted for two lives only, (fn. 225) but by
the 18th century it was the custom for each copyhold
to be for three lives and a widowhood. (fn. 226) From time
to time the copyholders nominated new reversioners
to fill up the three lives on their copies. (fn. 227) Towards
the end of the 18th century it was the custom of the
college to require two years' purchase for a third
life and four years' purchase for a second; and one
year's value with a heriot for a change from one
living person to another. (fn. 228)
In 1598 there were seventeen copyholders with
holdings varying from a cottage only to two cottages
and 5 yardlands. Eleven of them had an average of
4 acres in the Newbreach. Their rents, amounting to
£5 2s. in all, changed little in the 17th century. By
1685 24 copies were held by 22 tenants, and in 1750
26 by twenty-three. The customary lands decreased
from about 36 yardlands in 1598 to 30 (21 of them in
Caulcott) in 1750, when the majority of the copyholders paid rents between 10s. and £1: only two
paid more than £1. Entry fines rose considerably in
the 18th century and although there were still 640
acres of customary lands in 1832, Lord Jersey, who
had acquired a number of copies, held 131 acres of
them: only 3 out of 16 other copyholders had more
than 50 acres. (fn. 229) Copyhold died out soon after 1840,
when Corpus Christi began to replace copies which
had fallen in by leases for 20 years.

SKETCH MAP OF LOWER HEYFORI IN THE 17th CENTURY
The above map is based on documents cited in the text and on Thomas Langdon's maps of 1606
The demesnes were held in 1598 by two farmers
and the miller, who paid £4 8s. 9d., £4, and £1 6s. 8d.
respectively, plus corn rents, which had been introduced soon after 1526: the miller paid a third of his
total rent of £2 with 1 qr. wheat and 3 qrs. malt. (fn. 230)
From about 1590 the tenants of the demesne paid
a corn increment. (fn. 231) In 1717 there were still three
leaseholders: the appearance of a fourth, the rector,
by 1750 accounts for the decrease in the area of
customary lands. By 1802 some five-sixths of the
leasehold lands were held by the Cottrell-Dormers
of Rousham. There were three freeholdings by 1832,
of which Lord Jersey held 191 acres out of a total of
220 acres. There were then three large estates, Lord
Jersey's, Lady Cottrell-Dormer's, and the rector's;
the last increased to about 460 acres after the inclosure of 1802. (fn. 232)
The manorial courts, combining the business of
courts leet and customary courts, were held regularly until 1712, and afterwards infrequently until
1832: (fn. 233) none was held between 1782 and 1796. (fn. 234)
Tithingmen and constables were elected and 2s.
'head-silver' a year was paid at the courts. (fn. 235) In the
16th and 17th centuries business included public
health, village morals, highway repairs, keeping the
ditches and backwaters of the Cherwell clear, repairs
to the ford at Cotmeadham, and the unsuccessful
encouragement of archery; but the court's most
important functions were the election of officers, the
making and enforcement of agricultural by-laws,
and the admission of new copyholders. Every year a
hayward and three fieldmen were elected to regulate
husbandry. By-laws were enrolled in English from
the 1620's, whereas the formal records of the court
remained in Latin except during the Commonwealth. (fn. 236) Typical of the court's orders in the 1660's
was the instruction that all tenants should meet at
Caulcott in mid-October to view and set out the
furze of Astmore and Newbreach by lots. (fn. 237) A fine of
5s. was imposed on anyone who carried away his
furze with a horse or wagon, and of 1s. a bundle for
carrying furze from the wrong lot. By the early 19th
century admissions were the only remaining function of the court, (fn. 238) and with the abolition of copyhold
the court lost its reason for existence.
Although inclosure of Broadhead meadow had
been proposed in 1575 it was not undertaken, and
by the early 17th century there had been little inclosure save immediately around the two villages. (fn. 239)
Inclosure was again suggested in 1734 by the rector,
Thomas Leigh, on condition that his tithes and glebe
were exchanged for 8 acres and £150 a year for himself and £200 a year for his successors. (fn. 240) This may
have been considered too much, for nothing came of
the idea. As late as 1797, apart from an apparent
considerable increase in the number of small closes
round Caulcott, there seems to have been little more
inclosure. (fn. 241) In 1801 an inclosure act was obtained, (fn. 242)
and the award was made in 1802. (fn. 243) Corpus Christi
College received a little over an acre for manorial
rights. The largest awards were 280 acres to Sir
Clement Cottrell-Dormer, 177 acres to Benjamin
Churchill, and about 90 acres to the Revd. William
Filmer, not as rector but as one of the leaseholders.
The Rector of Steeple Aston received an acre in
exchange for the tithes from part of Broadhead
meadow—a last echo of the old controversy. None
of the cottagers had any stock, so that only the larger
proprietors received allotments of common grazingland. The expense of the inclosure to the proprietors
was £2 an acre. (fn. 244)
Inclosure gave the experimental farmer his
opportunity, and in Lower Heyford the rector,
William Filmer, led the way. Arthur Young, who
commented favourably on many of his innovations,
noted that he used the Staffordshire two-wheeled
plough and the Kentish one-row drill. Filmer
introduced a six-course rotation of crops, was fully
aware of the value of swedes and sainfoin, grew lentils
for hay, and bred Leicester sheep and Berkshire
pigs. (fn. 245) At this time agricultural labourers at Heyford
were getting 9s. a week and beer in winter; 12s. a
week and no beer at hay harvest; and 21s. a week and
beer at corn harvest, while women's wages varied
from 7d. a day for weeding to 1s. a day and beer at
corn harvest—this when bread was 9d. the quartern
loaf, and mutton 7d. a pound. (fn. 246)
Improved farming had been necessary to feed the
increasing population. It appears to have been rising
in the late 16th century, despite occasional visitations
of the plague in summer and the 'blouddy flix' in
winter, and the Compton Census (1676) recorded
148 adults. (fn. 247) According to 18th-century estimates
the number of inhabitants rose from 220 (40 of them
in Caulcott) in 1729, to 290 (63 in Caulcott) in
1760, but had declined to 247 by 1771. (fn. 248) At the
official census of 1801 the combined population was
346, and by 1861 it had increased to 625; (fn. 249) while at
Caulcott itself numbers rose from an estimated 57
in 1771 to 146 in 1841. The opening of the canal and
the improvement of the roads evidently changed
the occupational pattern of the two villages, for by
1811 27 families were engaged in trade compared
with 68 in agriculture. (fn. 250) Heyford itself was becoming
a local market centre, a trend confirmed by the
coming of the railway. A corn market had been
started in 1845, and there were six cattle and sheep
fairs, and an agricultural show every year. (fn. 251) Of the
nine farmers of 1851 in the parish one was also an
inn-keeper, one a coal-merchant, and one the miller.
There were three boatmen, a carrier, a corn-merchant, a maltster (Heyford was famous for its malting
barley), a blacksmith, a mason, two carpenters, a
canal porter, a timber merchant, a road contractor,
and four railway workers, besides a hurdle-maker and
a wheelwright. (fn. 252) In 1831 a local Fire Engine Society
had been established (fn. 253) and in 1836 the Heyford and
Aston Friendly Society had been founded. The
latter was dissolved in 1875 but successfully revived
before 1879. (fn. 254)
There were two water-mills in Heyford in the
Middle Ages, (fn. 255) but only one by 1535. (fn. 256) Copyholders
still had to have their corn ground at the lord's mill
in 1548, (fn. 257) and when repairs were necessary the lord
provided the millstones and the 'great timber'. (fn. 258)
In the 18th century one wheel of the mill was used
for grinding hemp. (fn. 259) New machinery had been
installed by 1858, when there were four pairs of
stones. The fall of water was 6 feet, but the flow was
insufficient to drive more than two pairs of stones at
once. By 1873 a steam-mill had been built beside
the road to Upper Heyford. (fn. 260)
About 1860 Heyford's fortunes began to decline.
It is significant that in 1850 three of the inhabitants
were assisted to emigrate to Canada. (fn. 261) By 1864 the
cattle and sheep sales were not held at regular fairs,
although sheep sales certainly continued until about
1900, the number of tradesmen dwindled, and by
1887 regular markets were no longer held. (fn. 262) The
canal wharf and the railway station were still busy,
but the Bicester, Heyford, and Enstone Turnpike
Trust had been ruined by the competition of the
railways by 1870, and the Heyford turnpikes were
taken down and the toll-houses sold in 1877. (fn. 263) Of the
Heyford inns the 'Red Lion' and the 'Bell' survived
the decline of road traffic but the 'White Horse' had
closed by 1887. (fn. 264) The steam-mill appears to have
stopped work in the 1890's. In 1871 there had been
131 agricultural labourers in the population: in
1926 there were only 45. (fn. 265) In 1920 there were still
two coal merchants and the water-mill was still at
work, and besides a carrier the village had a haulier
and a 'motor engineer, agricultural machinist and
wheelwright'. (fn. 266) Population declined from the 625 of
the peak years 1861 and 1871, to 494 in 1901. By
1951 it had fallen to 398. (fn. 267) In 1956 there were
twelve farmers in the parish, of whom two each
farmed about 300 acres, three over 170 acres each,
and the rest between 70 and 15 acres. (fn. 268)
Church.
The church was dedicated in the mid11th century by Wulfwig, Bishop of Dorchester
(1053–67). (fn. 269) During most of the Middle Ages the
living was divided into two parts and there were two
rectors. This arrangement probably began in the 12th
century, when Peter de la Mare and his son Robert
between the years 1168 and 1173 granted half the
church to Eynsham Abbey. (fn. 270) Eynsham held the advowson of its rectory until the 15th century, when
the two rectories were united.
The advowson of the second rectory belonged to
the lords of the Henred manor. (fn. 271) In 1251 or 1252
there was a dispute over the right to present between
Lucy de Henred, who held the manor in dower,
and Richard de Henred, her son. She finally admitted that the right was his. (fn. 272) From 1279 the De
Lisles and from 1349 the De la Mares presented. (fn. 273)
Maud de la Mare, who held both manors in dower,
was patron in 1400, but after her death, when the
original Henred manor passed to her daughter, the
advowson followed the descent of the De la Mare
manor, Robert de la Mare presenting in 1407 and
Thomas de la Mare in 1450. (fn. 274)
In 1453 the Bishop of Lincoln united the two
rectories, (fn. 275) and the lord of the De la Mare manor and
Eynsham presented in turn. Thomas de la Mare did
so in 1474, Eynsham in 1492, and Edward Baynton
in 1527. When the manor was sold to Corpus Christi
College in 1533, the manorial half of the advowson
went with it. (fn. 276)
When Eynsham was dissolved in 1539, its half of
the advowson went to the Crown, and was sold in
1543 with much other property to Richard Andrews
and Nicholas Temple, two speculators in monastic
lands, who immediately sold it. (fn. 277) It ultimately went
to Corpus Christi College. During these transactions,
James Edmund presented to the rectory in 1544,
having bought the presentation for one turn. (fn. 278)
The college has held the advowson since that time,
but not without friction. President Morwent considered it his private property, and on his death in
1558 he left it to the college. (fn. 279) Thomas Greenway,
a later president and Rector of Heyford (1563–71),
was accused of buying the advowson for £30 of
college money from the rector, James Warner. (fn. 280) In
the course of the legal disputes which followed
Greenway's death his family alleged that he had the
right of next presentation to Heyford. (fn. 281)
Since 1931, when the rectory was united to that of
Rousham, the college and the Cottrell-Dormers of
Rousham Park have presented in turn. (fn. 282)
The division of the rectory into two made the
livings poor. In 1254 the double rectory was valued
at £6 13s. 4d., and in 1291 each half was worth £5. (fn. 283)
The rector of the Eynsham half had to pay a pension
of £1 a year to the abbey. This payment probably
began with the gift of the advowson to Eynsham,
but it is first mentioned in an episcopal confirmation
of 1197–8. (fn. 284)
Each rector had his own glebe. That of the Eynsham rector—said to have been given to the church
at the time of its dedication in the 11th century—
comprised in the 12th century a virgate, a cotland,
8 acres, and some pasture. (fn. 285) In 1279 he was said to
hold 2 virgates and 2 tenements, a mill rented for 4s.,
some meadow-land, and a rent of 5s. The other
rector, presented by the De Lisle lords, held 2
virgates in Heyford and Caulcott, besides 10 acres
which had been given by Richard de Henred in
1220, when his brother William became rector. (fn. 286) The
gift was to keep a lamp always burning before the
high altar, and these lamplands, 'lamp litts', or
'lamplights' are marked on Langdon's map of 1606
as lying in Heyford North Field. (fn. 287) They are mentioned as late as the inclosure award of 1802. (fn. 288)
By the mid-15th century the system of having two
rectors had broken down. In 1453, when the halves
of the rectory were united, the De la Mare rectory
had been vacant two years because of its poverty.
Both rectories, in fact, had been decreasing in value,
because of the poverty and small numbers of the
parishioners and the infertility of the land. The
revenue, it was said, was barely enough for one rector
'in these days', and because of this the church was
being deprived of services. (fn. 289) After the union the
rector, in addition to the pension to Eynsham, had
to pay one of 2s. to the bishop and one of 1s. to
the archdeacon. (fn. 290) In 1535 the value of the living
was £10 13s. (fn. 291)
By this time the chapel at Caulcott had fallen into
disuse. It is not clear whether it had once been a
chapel of Heyford, which ceased to be used as Caulcott declined, (fn. 292) or whether it was a private chapel.
The Crown considered it the latter, for about 1575
it confiscated it as a chantry. (fn. 293) After making an
inquiry, the answers to which have not been found,
about the existence of such a chapel, its services, its
tithes and lands, the queen sold Caulcott chapel,
with Chapel Yard, a field called Church Meade, and
all appurtenant buildings and tithes, for £106. 6s. 8d.
to Sir John Parrott. (fn. 294) The chapel itself was later
thought to have been pulled down. (fn. 295)
After the Reformation Heyford was a wellendowed living, said in the 18th century to be worth
£110. (fn. 296) Its income came partly from all the tithes in
the parish, which at the inclosure award in 1802
were commuted for 269 acres, (fn. 297) and from the
unusually large glebe, (fn. 298) including commons for 8
beasts and 160 sheep, which was exchanged at the
same time for 91 acres. In addition, the rector of the
day, William Filmer, received personally about
90 acres for leasehold lands, which he added to the
rectory lands. (fn. 299) In 1831 the rectory, valued at £496,
was one of the richest in the deanery. (fn. 300) The Caulcott
part of the glebe was sold in 1926 and the rest in
1949. (fn. 301)
In the 13th century the rectors of both halves of
the living were sworn to personal residence. (fn. 302) It is not
clear how they divided the services, but one may have
served the main church and the other the chapel at
Caulcott. Some of them are worthy of note: Master
Robert Bacon (1218/19–27) was a distinguished
Dominican scholar and a close friend of St. Edmund;
Sampson Brassard (1240–52) was a physician, (fn. 303) and
Simon de Welles (1290–1) became a Dominican. (fn. 304)
Master Alexander de Wheplade, another graduate,
was excommunicated and suspended for granting the
king the large tax he had demanded without papal
consent. (fn. 305)
Fourteenth-century rectors were not at all
notable, except for the short periods during which
they held the living. Between 1292 and 1369 there
were ten known incumbents. (fn. 306) One was accused of
neglecting to keep the chancel in repair. (fn. 307) His
successors, however, must have had the necessary
work carried out, for much of the present work in the
church is of 14th-century date. A clerk instituted in
1349, the year of the plague, had resigned by 1350.
The evidence for the state of the church in the 15th
and 16th centuries is scanty. At the visitation of 1530
there were minor complaints. The rector, Master
William Man (1527–44), who had been an Augustinian canon, (fn. 308) was non-resident and had a curate, The
lessees of the rectory aired their grain in the churchyard, the walls of which were dilapidated, and Richard
de Henred's lamp was not kept burning in the
church. (fn. 309) Man's successor, John Warner (1544–63),
was presumably also non-resident for at least part of
the year, for he was the first Regius Professor of
Physic at Oxford, was for many years Warden of All
Souls College, (fn. 310) and moreover, according to Anthony
Wood, was 'a great intruder into ecclesiastical benefices and dignities'. (fn. 311)
After the acquisition of the advowson by Corpus
Christi College, the rectors were appointed from
among its Fellows, and in the latter half of the 16th
century two presidents held the living. Thomas
Greenway (1563–71) built a rectory house at Heyford and resided there after his resignation from the
presidency in 1568 until his death in 1571. (fn. 312) Though
the charges that Greenway had embezzled college
money and consorted with 'infamous women', two
of them Heyford villagers, (fn. 313) may not have been true,
he cannot be regarded as a model rector. William
Cole, on the other hand, at one time a Protestant
exile at Zurich and made President of Corpus
Christi by Elizabeth I, (fn. 314) seems to have been so.
From 1572 until 1598 he spent a part of his year at
Heyford, where he was responsible for opening a
market or shop. (fn. 315) His family appears to have lived at
the parsonage all the year; his children were baptized and married in the church; (fn. 316) and his son
Thomas Cole succeeded him as incumbent in 1600. (fn. 317)
'Blameless' and 'very diligent in ye discharge of his
duty' though Thomas may have been, (fn. 318) he appears
to have suffered from melancholia, for he several
times entered his own burial in the parish register.
He became unpopular in the village for failing to
keep up the ancient custom of giving all his
parishioners bread, cheese, and beer at his house on
Christmas Day, and of providing a Christmas dinner
to all householders. He was presented in the bishop's
court in 1621 for his neglect and ordered to restore
the custom, and furthermore to continue the provision of straw for the seats in the church on St.
Thomas's Day from the grass in Church Mead. (fn. 319)
He was ejected by the Parliamentary Commissioners
in 1646, (fn. 320) and the Christmas feast probably ended
with him. When the parishioners tried to revive it
in 1732 and sent someone to search the registers
at Lincoln, they could find no evidence for the
custom. (fn. 321)
Two of his Puritan successors are interesting
examples of country clergy in this troubled time:
one—Thomas Butler—an army preacher, who lived
at Deddington, was alleged to keep 'strumpets' and
preach in 'coat and Sworde'; (fn. 322) the other, an intruded
Fellow of Corpus named John Dod, resided at Heyford from 1651 to 1662, but did not once administer
the sacrament to his parishioners, 'alledging that they
were not fit for it'. (fn. 323) But the chief distinction of
Heyford rectors both in this century and the next
was that they resided in their parish for the greater
part of the period. (fn. 324) Indeed of one, John Franklin,
it was lamented that he had 'in a manner buried' his
profound knowledge of philosophy by retiring to so
lonely a place. (fn. 325) Franklin is also to be remembered
for his toleration of dissent in his parish; he was one
of the five ministers in the county to read in church
James II's declaration about liberty of conscience in
1688. (fn. 326)
At least one of the 18th-century parsons, Thomas
Leigh (1728–44), was active in good works. He
began the custom of keeping a record of communicants, (fn. 327) and as he said his parish was 'one of the
poorest in the diocese' and his parishioners unable
to give money for church repairs, he got his church
restored and had the parsonage partly rebuilt. (fn. 328)
Several of the 19th-century rectors were also
notable for their work in the parish. There was
William Filmer (1797–1830), the son of Sir Edmund
Filmer, who was an agricultural expert. (fn. 329) He farmed
the glebe himself and improved its value, notably by
tree-planting. (fn. 330) He was followed by George Faithful
(1830–66), 'clergyman, schoolmaster, and farmer'; (fn. 331)
Charles Fort (1866–8), a man of saintly character,
who was responsible for the restoration of the church,
the rebuilding of the rectory, and the building of the
school; and Henry Furneaux (1868–92), a wellknown classical scholar. (fn. 332) These men attracted
congregations of as many as 300 persons, though
they were still thought small in proportion to the
size of the parish. Many labourers and their families
were usually absent, and many who were not professed dissenters went to the chapels as a result of
the 'liberalism of the age'. (fn. 333) In the 1860's, nevertheless, there were about 50 communicants—a definite
improvement, even after allowing for the increased
population, on the 20 to 35 communicants common
in the 18th century. Seventy children attended the
Sunday school, and there was an evening school for
boys, (fn. 334) both of which had been closed by 1897. (fn. 335)
The church of ST. MARY is a stone building of
mixed styles, comprising a chancel, clerestoried
nave, two aisles, south porch, and western tower.
The only remains of 13th-century work are the
built-up responds of a former south arcade, a lancet
window in the north wall of the chancel, and a
trefoil-headed piscina in the south wall. In 1338 the
chancel was reported to be in a very dilapidated
state, owing to the neglect of the last rector, William
de Balleby, and the executors of his will were ordered
to pay for the necessary repairs. (fn. 336) The chancel was
largely rebuilt some time after this, and the present
east window, the timber roof, and three remaining
windows in the north and south walls are 14thcentury work.
The nave has two bays on either side, which
together with the north and south aisles probably
date from the 14th century. The east window of the
north aisle appears to be early 14th century, so that
it seems probable that the north aisle was added
before the south aisle; the capitals on the south side
of the nave are later than those on the north side,
and the east window of the south aisle, which is
similar to the east window of the chancel, probably
belongs to the second half of the 14th century. On
either side of it are two 14th-century niches.
The tower, which has a plain parapet, was probably completed in the late 14th century. Further
work on the church was carried out in the 15th
century when a nave clerestory with eight windows,
a new nave roof of somewhat lower pitch than the
former one, (fn. 337) and a south porch were added. At the
same time the walls of the aisles were partly rebuilt
and the large square-headed windows inserted.
Above the south porch there is a sun-dial with the
motto 'Nil nisi caelesti radio'.
When Rawlinson visited the church in the early
18th century (fn. 338) he found it in a good state of repair,
but a report by Bishop Secker of 1739 shows a less
satisfactory picture. The porch, he said, was in
danger of falling down, the paving uneven, the pews
ruinous, the walls in need of whitewashing, the west
door and church gate in a bad state, and the boards
supporting the leads rotten. He ordered the churchwardens to take action. In 1741 and 1742 some minor
sums were spent (fn. 339) and in 1757 further repairs, including the walling-up of the northern door, were
ordered. (fn. 340)
The 19th-century revival of interest in ecclesiastical buildings led to considerable repairs to the
fabric. In 1848 the nave and north aisle were reroofed at a cost of about £270 (architect H. J.
Underwood). A sketch of 1867 shows a western
gallery approached by a wooden staircase; (fn. 341) the date
of this addition is not known. In 1867 and 1868
restoration work carried out by the architect C.
Buckeridge cost £1,240 and included relaying the
floor of the nave and south aisle, renewing the roof
of the south aisle, and removing the plaster ceiling of
the chancel. Later in the century an organ was installed and an altar reredos erected. (fn. 342) In 1922 the
piscina was restored, and an altar erected in the south
aisle as a memorial to the men killed in the First
World War. (fn. 343)
Heating was first put in in 1868.
Part of the staircase to the rood-loft remains, and
the chancel screen, although much restored, is
medieval; the tracery and trail on top are exceptionally good. (fn. 344) The octagonal font is inscribed 1662,
although the base is probably medieval. (fn. 345) A clock,
doubtless placed in the tower in 1695 (the date on
the oak frame), was removed during the 1868
restoration. (fn. 346)
Of the three medieval glass shields described in
1574, two somewhat damaged ones survive in the
west window of the south aisle. The west window
of the north aisle also has a quarry with the initials
T.G., a pelican (the crest of Corpus Christi College)
and the date [15]69, for Thomas Greenway, rector
(d. 1571). (fn. 347)
There is a small brass to Elizabeth, wife of William
Bruce (d. 1683); a stone cartouche with coat of arms
to Gabriel Myrry (d. 1684) and his wife; and a
memorial with arms to the rector William Filmer (d.
1830). Inscriptions to Castell Brangwin (d. 1710)
and family; to Rachael the wife (d. 1738/9) and
children of Henry Hester of Withill, Tackley; and
to the rectors, Ralph Pomfret (d. 1728), William
Bradley (d. 1768), William Harrison (d. 1796), and
George Thorpe (d. 1784), were illegible or untraceable in 1955. (fn. 348)
In 1552 the church had a chalice, two copes, and
three vestments. (fn. 349) In 1955 it owned an Elizabethan
chalice and paten cover, and a chalice, paten, and
flagon given by William Filmer in 1825. (fn. 350)
There were three bells and a sanctus bell in 1552.
The bells were ordered to be recast into five bells,
for a sum not exceeding £31, in 1766. In 1955 there
were six bells, two of them of 1766, (fn. 351) and a set of
hand bells.
The registers date from 1539. Those of baptisms
and burials (1644–64) and of marriages (1607–64)
appear to be extracts and incomplete. (fn. 352) There are
churchwardens' accounts from 1763 to 1858.
Nonconformity.
Three infrequent attendants
at church are mentioned in the recusant roll of 1577, (fn. 353)
but in other returns of the late 16th and early 17th
centuries there is no record of Roman Catholicism.
The 18th-century episcopal returns mention one
papist woman. (fn. 354)
In the 17th century there was a small Quaker
community in the village. It was agreed at a Quarterly
Meeting of the Friends at Oxford in February 1678
that a meeting should be held there every fortnight. (fn. 355)
At the time of Bishop Fell's visitation in the 1680's
about seventeen Quakers attended meeting at John
Marsh's barn. (fn. 356) He and John Day were presented
in 1694 for not having paid tithes. (fn. 357) According to the
Quaker records Richard Day had had £6 worth of
corn and grain taken from him by the rector in 1693
and £4 worth in 1694 on his refusal to pay tithes. (fn. 358)
The Quaker influence was not maintained, and by
1738 there was only one left, another dissenter
being a Presbyterian. (fn. 359)
In the early 19th century Methodism took root.
In 1804 Joseph Hockmore's house was registered as
a meeting-place. (fn. 360) It was soon superseded by a
chapel built by Thomas Rose, (fn. 361) the miller, who often
preached himself. Circuit preachers also came. (fn. 362) The
congregation in the second half of the century
belonged to the United Methodists (fn. 363) (formed in
1857 and joined to the Wesleyan Methodists in 1932).
In 1906 a new chapel, still in use in 1955, was built
at a cost of £700. (fn. 364) In 1954 it had six members. (fn. 365)
Another Methodist centre, which remained
Wesleyan, was started in Caulcott with the registration of Thomas Gee's house in 1830. (fn. 366) A chapel was
built there in 1841 (fn. 367) and was in use in 1955, but
since it had only four members, regular services
were not held. (fn. 368) In 1878 the number of Methodists
in the whole parish was estimated at nearly a hundred. (fn. 369)
Schools.
In 1808 two dame schools provided
instruction in reading, writing, and knitting for 60
children. (fn. 370) These schools still existed in 1819 but
were inadequate for the needs of the poor. (fn. 371) In 1833
there were two fee-paying schools, one of them a
'ladies' boarding school' attended by farmers'
daughters. (fn. 372) These were attended by 26 boys and 35
girls, while at a third school there were 12 children
of whom 4 received free instruction out of a legacy
of £50 left in 1826 by Thomas Rose. (fn. 373) There were
still three schools in 1854, when the rector paid for
7 children and the Rose bequest for 3, while 38 were
paid for by their parents. (fn. 374)
In 1867 a National school was opened in a house
in Lower Heyford adjoining the present Church of
England school, which was built in the following
year. It comprised one schoolroom and one classroom. There was one teacher, (fn. 375) and the average
attendance was 71 in 1871, 57 in 1889, and 84 in
1906. (fn. 376) The school was reorganized as a junior
school in 1932, when the senior pupils were transferred to Steeple Aston, and it became a controlled
school in 1952. The number of pupils was 28 in 1937
and 48 in 1954. (fn. 377) The Rose bequest was vested in the
school at its foundation, and in 1955 was used to
provide school prizes. (fn. 378)
By 1833 the Countess of Jersey was supporting
a school in Caulcott for 12 children. (fn. 379) This number remained unchanged in 1871, (fn. 380) but by 1887
when it had 20 pupils it had become an infants'
school. (fn. 381) The older children of Caulcott were then
going to school at Middleton Stoney. (fn. 382) There were
10 pupils in 1906 and the school continued to be
supported by successive earls of Jersey. (fn. 383) It had
closed by the 1950's. (fn. 384)
Charities.
Abigail Merry or Malpas, born at
Heyford in 1594, by will of unknown date left to the
poor a rent-charge of £1 a year on tenements in
Cripplegate, to be distributed annually at Christmas. (fn. 385) The money appears to have been first received
in 1680. (fn. 386) From 1795 onwards 4s. was deducted for
land tax. In the early 19th century 16s. was still
being paid, (fn. 387) but the income of the charity was only
8s. 10d. (fn. 388) in 1954.
Susannah Bruce (d. 1706) by her will left £10 to
the poor, the interest (10s.) to be distributed each
year after Christmas. In 1797 the interest was some
years in arrears, but £7 10s. was then paid, and
together with money raised by subscription was
added to the principal, bringing it up to £20. From
1801 this sum was held by the rector, who paid £1 a
year interest. In 1824 the income from the Malpas
and Bruce Charities, together with money collected
at the sacrament, was distributed by the rector each
sacrament day in sums of 1s. to 2s. 6d. to the most
needy among the poor. (fn. 389) The income of the charity
in 1954 was 12s. 4d.
In 1738 it was reported that a small charity worth
10s. a year was being distributed annually by a Mr.
Macock. (fn. 390) It had been lost by 1771. (fn. 391)
The inclosure award of 1802 set aside 32 acres,
Poor's Land, to be held in trust for the poor, in
lieu of their right to cut furze for fuel. (fn. 392) In 1852 the
land brought in £30 a year in rent (fn. 393) which was
distributed to the poor in coal at Christmas. (fn. 394) In
1954 the land was let at £24 a year, and the rent,
together with the income from the Malpas and
Bruce Charities, was distributed in money just before
Christmas. The recipients had to be old-age
pensioners with at least three years' residence in the
parish, and only one payment could be made to
one household. Thirty-seven poor people received
11s. each.
Louisa Julia Evans (d. 1935) left £336 8s. 5d. in
stock. Four-fifths of the income was to be spent on
tea for the poor. The first distribution was in 1938.
At Christmas 1954 58 quarter-pound packets of tea
were given to old-age pensioners. (fn. 395)