Origins and Growth of the Town.
By 1086 Banbury was one of the administrative
centres of the Bishop of Lincoln's large north
Oxfordshire estate, but in Domesday Book there
is no mention of a borough there and the lesser
tenants of the estate were villani and homines villae. (fn. 1)
The site and extent of the Anglo-Saxon vill may
only be guessed at. There was almost certainly an
important church although none was mentioned
until the late 12th century; (fn. 2) and the original vill
may well have had a market, for in 1138–9 the
Bishop of Lincoln was able to grant away as much
as £5 from the market tolls (fn. 3) and it is unlikely that
a market granted to the 'planted' town, even if it
existed as early as the 1130s, would have developed
so quickly.
There is no reason to suppose that the AngloSaxon church was anywhere but on the site of
the medieval parish church and its successor. The
considerable distance between the church and the
centre of the medieval borough strongly suggests
that the church's site was chosen with regard to
the original vill: the vill evidently lay close to the
junction of north-south and east-west routes, some
distance from the important ford on the River
Cherwell. The terms in which the later planted
town was described (fn. 4) suggest that much of the area
between the church and the ford was agricultural
land until the 12th century. Certain problematical
features—the exclusion from the later borough of
the Calthorpe Lane area, which thus made a large
inroad into the shape of the borough at that point;
the fact that medieval customary holdings in the
arable fields around the town were attached to
tenements in Calthorpe and Neithrop, and not in
Banbury; (fn. 5) and the unlikelihood of a hamlet
(Calthorpe) developing in the pre-Conquest period
so close to the vill of Banbury—suggest a possibility
that Calthorpe Lane represents part of the original
vill, later acquiring the name and appearance of
a hamlet. Whilst solving some of the topographical
problems of Banbury, however, such an explanation
leaves unanswered questions, notably the earlier
application of the name Calthorpe, which is first
recorded in 1279, and is probably a combination of
thorp with an Old English element col, meaning
charcoal. (fn. 6)
The first recorded development of the vill was
the building of the castle by Alexander, Bishop
of Lincoln (1123–48). (fn. 7) There is no direct evidence
that he founded a new borough at the same time,
but later evidence points to that conclusion. The
first reference to Banbury as a borough is in 1167,
although a deed of between 1163 and 1166 confirmed
an earlier grant by Alexander of a house in 'free
burgage'. (fn. 8) In 1170 and 1172, when accounting for
the revenues of the vacant see of Lincoln, the reeves
of Banbury were allowed to deduct from the sum
traditionally due from them 30s. 'in default of
rent from Banbury from the demesne land where
the market-place (forum) now is'. (fn. 9) In 1168 the 30s.
had been allowed 'for the land of the old borough',
which could mean that development of the original
borough had already taken place, or could be
simply a loose application of the word borough to
denote the earlier vill. (fn. 10) In any event it is clear that
before 1168 the establishment of a market-place
had reduced the area of agricultural demesne, and
the allowance of so large a sum suggests that land
not only for a market-place but for a sizeable town
had been granted out.
A list of the bishop's tenants in 1279, headed 'of
the old feoffment' (de vetere feoffamento), probably
described all the borough tenements created before
1200, since there is an almost exact correspondence
between the total rents due from the 'old feoffment'
of 1279 and the rents of burgages listed in a rental
of c. 1225, if those created after the time of Hugh of
Avalon, Bishop of Lincoln (d. 1200), are excluded. (fn. 11)
In 1279 tenants' holdings were described in terms
of acre, 192 in all, (fn. 12) which seem to have been the
strips, presumably of arable land but not necessarily
a statute acre in size, of which the building plots
were formed when the town was laid out: the rent
due was at the standard rate of 12d. an acre. (fn. 13)
There are indications that the earliest house-plots
lay to the west of the market-place up to the
farther side of the Oxford–Coventry road. (fn. 14)

BANBURY BOUNDARIES AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Thus by 1200 a new borough had been laid out,
mainly between the church and the river, the
process of creating burgages having begun at least
in the time of Bishop Alexander. Alexander is known
to have created boroughs elsewhere on his estates,
and at Sleaford (Lincs.) he was responsible for the
joint foundation of a castle and borough; (fn. 15) there is
a strong likelihood that he carried out a similar
plan at Banbury. The rental of c. 1225 makes it clear
that the foundation was successful and that the
original site became cramped. Unlike the list of
1279 the rental does not describe properties in the
town in terms of the original acre holdings but lists
(omitting the feoffments of named grantors mentioned below) 220½ burgage tenements, which paid
from 2d. to 20d. each. (fn. 16) The increase in the number
of holdings was in fact greater than from 192 to 220½,
since the first figure includes 30 holdings held in free
alms that are not included in the second. The
increase had occurred by subdivision of the original
plots, for it is clear from comparison of the two lists
that the burgages represent changes in the 'acres'. (fn. 17)
The rental of c. 1225 also described 12½ burgage
tenements, two workshops (selde), and 21½ stalls
(scamella) granted out by Bishop Hugh of Avalon
(1186–1200) (fn. 18) and a further 8 burgage tenements
granted by Bishop Hugh of Wells (1213–35). The
site of the stalls may be identified with the block of
buildings lying between the later High Street and
Butcher's Row, and the other properties granted by
Hugh of Avalon were probably also in that area. (fn. 19)
Thus the town was being extended in the late 12th
and early 13th centuries probably by the building
up of the southern side and south-west corner of the
market-place.
There is no evidence of further subdivision of
holdings before 1279 but a planned extension of
the borough seems to have taken place probably
in the mid 13th century. The name Newland, first
recorded in 1285, (fn. 20) applied to the modern Broad
Street and is still preserved in the name Newland
Road. By 1441 there were 52 tenements there, and
their rents show traces of an earlier uniform rent of
6d. a year, (fn. 21) while traditional customs in that part of
the town in the early 19th century, suggesting a sense
of separate identity, (fn. 22) strengthen the likelihood that
Newland was developed as a planned suburb in the
fields and the meadows to the south of the marketplace. Properties in Newland carried a low standard
rent, and two were described in early deeds as
cottages, (fn. 23) suggesting that houses or plots in Newland were smaller than elsewhere in the town.
A spring called 'Holewelle' (i.e. spring in a hollow)
was in the Newland area, (fn. 24) and by 1321 at the
latest a house (manerium) from which Eynsham
Abbey administered its Banbury estate. (fn. 25)
A rental of the bishop's property in 1441 listed
297 tenements and 52 other properties in the
borough, an increase of from 20 to 25 per cent
since c. 1225. The increase is accounted for by the
development of Newland and there is no evidence
of any further subdivision of plots, or of growth
elsewhere, apart from a reference to a croft containing 8 tenements in West Bar Street. (fn. 26) Since
the town had not expanded much after the early
13th century, the rental reveals the town's earlier
plan. The streets may be identified as Bridge Street,
Broad Street (Newland and Colebar), George Street
(Frog Lane), High Street (Guler Street and forum
ovium), South Bar Street, West Bar Street ('Shokersford'), Horse Fair or the north end of South Bar
Street (alta strata), North Bar Street, Church Lane
('Pybyllane'), Cornhill and the north side of the
Market Place (Barkhill), and Butchers Row and the
west side of the Market Place (Cookrow with
Shoprow); Mill Street was also mentioned. (fn. 27) There
are earlier references to Bridge Street in 1393, (fn. 28)
George Street (Frog Lane) in 1396, (fn. 29) Mill Lane
(Mill Street) in 1407, (fn. 30) Church Lane (Paternoster
Lane) in 1431, (fn. 31) and North Bar Street and South
Bar Street (St. John's Street) in 1431. (fn. 32) The earliest
indisputable reference to any part of the modern
High Street by that name occurs in 1478. (fn. 33) Its
position in relation to other street names in the
rental makes it almost certain that the alta strata of
1441 was either the north end of South Bar Street
of Horse Fair; (fn. 34) it was probably the altus vicus de
Bannebur' mentioned in 1350. (fn. 35) It was evidently
so called either because of its breadth or because
of its importance as a route through the town. The
Market Place seems to have been the centre of the
town's trade from the 12th century, and in its
vicinity the rows of butchers' stalls and the cattle
market and sheep market were to be found: the
cattle market (forum bovinum), first mentioned in
1319, (fn. 36) was probably the east end of the Market
Place and the sheep market (forum ovium), first
mentioned in 1441, (fn. 37) the east end of the modern
High Street. Omitted from the 1441 rental was one
of the principal streets of the central area, Parsons
Street, first recorded as Gropecunt Lane in 1333
but referred to as Parsons Lane in 1410. (fn. 38) Some of
the properties there may have been held of the
Bishop of Lincoln by the Prior of Chacombe or
the Hospital of St. John of Banbury, tenants whose
holdings are given block entries in the rental of
1441, not entered under the streets where they lay.
Much of Parsons Street, however, probably belonged to the estate of the prebendary of Banbury, (fn. 39)
and was therefore not included in the bishop's
rental. Apart from the prebendal estate the only
other properties in the town not paying rent to
the bishop were probably very small, namely the
estates held in free alms by Eynsham Abbey and
Clattercote Priory, and possibly property held by
the Lovel family. (fn. 40) Presumably many of the narrow
alleyways leading off the principal streets were
medieval in origin, and, as in other towns, were
often built to provide access to dwellings erected
behind those fronting the street once the available
building plots in the centre of the town were full;
Softwater Yard and Pepper Alley were probably the
result of such development. (fn. 41) The paving of the
town's streets was aided in 1328 and 1330 by royal
grants of tolls on goods coming into the town for
sale. (fn. 42)
About 1540 John Leland declared that there was
'neither any certain token or likelihood, that ever
the town was ditched or walled'. (fn. 43) The only
evidence of medieval fortification is a reference in
1219 to the town ditch (fossatum ville) (fn. 44) and again
in 1608 ('a ditch of ancient time called the town
ditch'); (fn. 45) the latter lay west of St. John's Street, but
the property concerned in the deed of 1219 probably
lay near the mill in the north-east of the town.
There are traces of an outer lane linking the sites of
the town's gates or bars. (fn. 46) The earliest evidence of
the bounds of the borough is the location of the
town's four bars, which probably were built at its
limits in the early 13th century. North Bar and
South Bar are first mentioned in 1268, (fn. 47) and the
latter was later also known as Easington Bar (1441,
1510), (fn. 48) St. John's Gate (1393, 1554) (fn. 49) and Oxford
Bar (1839); (fn. 50) the bars stood immediately south
of the junctions of the Warwick road with North
Bar Street and of St. John's Road with South Bar
Street respectively. West Bar is first mentioned as
such in 1351, (fn. 51) as Shokersford Bar in 1431, and as
Shookewell Bar in 1483. (fn. 52) Later the name was
Sugarford Bar or Gate. (fn. 53) From the 17th to the
19th century the bar was also known as the Bull
Bar, from the name of a near-by inn. (fn. 54) It stood at the
junction of the Shades with West Bar Street. An
East Bar, mentioned in 1351 and 1355, (fn. 55) may have
stood at the bridge over the Cherwell, (fn. 56) but is more
likely to have been the Cole Bar of 1441. (fn. 57) Broad
Street was called Cole Bar Street (with variants)
from the 16th to the 18th century, (fn. 58) so the gate
probably stood somewhere between its junctions
with George Street and Marlborough Road. Presumably the gates were intended for collection of
tolls rather than for defence. All four were apparently
standing in Leland's time for he referred to the
stone gate at either end of the main street from
north to south, and to 'other gates besides these'. (fn. 59)
Cole Bar had probably been removed by 1712.
South Bar, then a 17th-century structure with
a 12-foot arch, was demolished c. 1785, when an
obelisk was put up to mark its site. West Bar was
demolished soon after 1789, apart from the base of
one side of the arch which remained until c. 1812;
a carved inscription on it was dated 1631, probably
the year when it had been rebuilt. The North Bar,
which probably dated from the late 17th century,
was demolished c. 1817. (fn. 60)
Although the four gates were probably built at
the limits of the town, expansion outside them
certainly occurred during the Middle Ages. The
grant in 1312 of a house lying between two others
'beside the highway to Easington' (fn. 61) may point to
development outside South Bar. Newland certainly
lay beyond Cole Bar, while in 1441 11 gardens, a
half-acre, a croft, and a second croft containing
8 tenements lay outside West Bar. (fn. 62) There may
have been further expansion before 1554, when the
borough's first charter defined the boundaries,
naming the North Bar and South Bar but not Cole
Bar or West Bar; the western limit of the borough
was marked by a white cross 'outside Sugarford
Gate', (fn. 63) and probably lay 200 yards south-west of
West Bar, near the junction of Bear Garden Road
with the Broughton Road. (fn. 64) Parts of the boundary
were described with great precision in 1608,
perhaps because disputes had arisen over them,
and although its course cannot be identified throughout, the description could well apply to the boundary
as it lay in the 19th century. (fn. 65) The boundary is
first fully shown on a map of 1881, but the tithe
map drawn in 1852 marks with crosses 37 points
along the boundary which may have been points
where it was marked on the ground; large white
arrows painted on walls and renewed at the beating
of the bounds every three years marked the limits
of the borough at that time. (fn. 66) In one or two places
the crosses on the tithe map do not lie exactly on
the boundary shown in 1881, (fn. 67) presumably because
alterations had been made when plots were changed
or new buildings erected. The changes suggest
that detailed adjustment of the boundary may have
been made from time to time, but basically the
boundary was probably still that of the late Middle
Ages, and it is worth noting that the sites of the
castle, the Bishop of Lincoln's Mill (Banbury Mill),
and the hamlet of Calthorpe (Calthorpe Street)
were all excluded from the borough.

BANBURY 1969
The white cross mentioned in 1554 was described
in 1606 as 'the great stone called the White Cross'; (fn. 68)
probably it was the base or shaft of an ancient cross
that had worn away through exposure. Two other
medieval crosses are recorded in Banbury. One,
known from at least 1548 as the High Cross (fn. 69) and
also referred to, in 1558, as the Market Cross, (fn. 70)
stood in or beside the Market Place, probably at the
southern end of Cornhill. (fn. 71) The earliest indisputable reference to it was by Leland, c. 1540, (fn. 72) but it
was probably also the 'stone cross' mentioned in
a will of 1478. (fn. 73) It consisted of a tall shaft with
a crucifix and other carvings at the top; its base
was a stone block at the top of eight steps which
surrounded it on all four sides. (fn. 74) The other cross
was a stone market cross, roofed with slate, which
stood at the junction of Butcher's Row with High
Street. (fn. 75) It is first mentioned in the survey of 1441, (fn. 76)
and from at least 1549 was known as the Bread
Cross, (fn. 77) probably because bakers (as well as butchers)
had their stalls there. Both the High Cross and the
Bread Cross were demolished in 1600. (fn. 78) There is no
evidence that a medieval cross stood in the Horse
Fair, but this was probably selected as the site for
the cross built in 1859 because Alfred Beesley,
writing in 1841, considered that it had been the
site of 'the principal Cross at Banbury'. (fn. 79)
The principal buildings in the Middle Ages were
the castle and the church: the castle, just outside
the borough boundary, was clearly large enough
to prevent the expansion of the town on the north
side; the church was 'rather like a cathedral than
a common parochial church'. (fn. 80) The vicarage-house
adjoined the churchyard from at least 1441 (fn. 81) and
in the churchyard were houses for chantry priests,
probably belonging to the Guild of St. Mary, (fn. 82) and
the almshouse mentioned in 1443. (fn. 83) A small chapel
of the Holy Trinity, which may have belonged to
the Trinitarian friars, was built about 1321 probably
in the eastern half of the later High Street. (fn. 84)
Another small chapel, of unknown origin, dedicated
to St. Sunday (St. Dominic) stood in Church Lane;
in 1560 it was ruinous; the name survived in 1650
(when it was said, perhaps in error, to apply to the
site of the former rectory-house), (fn. 85) and into the
18th century. (fn. 86) St. Leonard's Hospital for lepers
was founded by 1265 and is last mentioned in 1391; (fn. 87)
it probably stood at the east end of the bridge over
the Cherwell, and its site is commemorated in the
name Spital Farm, although none of its buildings
survive. The hospital of St. John the Baptist was
built by 1225 on the east side of the Oxford road,
both its site and dedication suggesting that it was
intended to dispense hospitality to travellers. (fn. 88) A
distinguished grammar school run in connexion
with the hospital from 1501 onwards was probably
on the same premises in 1548, but earlier may have
been elsewhere in the town. (fn. 89) Although most of the
Bishop of Lincoln's courts were held in the castle,
a borough portmoot was held in a hall of pleas
which in the 15th and 16th centuries comprised
a room above some workshops probably not far
from the castle and possibly in the Market Place. (fn. 90)
Manorial centres in the town were the Abbot of
Eynsham's manerium in Newland, chiefly a tithecollection centre, and the prebendal or rectoryhouse, which seems to have been one of a group of
buildings, including a tithe barn, in an enclosure
east of the churchyard: (fn. 91) neither the rectory-house
nor the tithe barn have survived. Just outside the
town lay a grange or farm-house at Easington, on
the west side of the Oxford road, from which was
administered the Bishop of Lincoln's demesne in
Calthorpe and Neithrop; (fn. 92) and Calthorpe House,
at the centre of a considerable estate, was almost
certainly in origin a medieval building. (fn. 93) Through
the centre of the town ran the Cuttle Brook, 'the
prile of fresh water' described by Leland. (fn. 94) The
stream flowed eastwards along the south side of
the castle and through the Market Place into the
cucking pool; another stream apparently flowed
down Parsons Street and into the Cuttle Brook;
and a third stream flowed through West Bar,
Sheep Street, Scalding Lane, Parson's Meadow
Lane, and into the Cherwell. (fn. 95)
The important bridge over the River Cherwell
was first recorded in 1294. (fn. 96) In the early 16th century it was called East Bridge, but seems usually
to have been called simply Banbury Bridge. (fn. 97)
Although some 13th-century stonework survives
there is no indication whether there was an earlier
bridge or simply a ford. By the 18th century the
bridge was c. 258 feet long and contained seven
pointed arches, three over the main stream, two
over the mill stream, and between the streams two
small arches which were usually dry; a level causeway connected the arches and on the north side
the cutwaters were carried up to parapet-level to
provide recesses for the safety of pedestrians. (fn. 98)
About 1540 the bridge was said to have only four
arches. (fn. 99) When the canal was built a 'disgraceful
brick arch' (fn. 100) raised the height of the bridge at the
town end, and the old bridge was finally destroyed
when the building of the railway led to the diversion
of the main stream of the river, the erection of a
new bridge, and the construction of an embankment
in which some of the old arches were apparently
buried. (fn. 101) On the old bridge in 1694 and 1730 (fn. 102)
was an elaborately decorated post, marking the
county boundary and probably 17th-century in
origin. Bequests for the bridge's repair occur from
1505 onwards. (fn. 103) In the 16th century there was
a bridge hermit who lived probably at the
Northamptonshire end, 'at the bridge foot'. (fn. 104)
There is no evidence that the town expanded in
the 16th century. Internally there were minor
changes when some of the important medieval
buildings, particularly the Trinity chapel and the
hospital of St. John, were closed or used for other
purposes, (fn. 105) but the incorporation of the borough
probably had little immediate effect on the town's
topography. No new town hall appears to have
been built in the 1550s, although small payments
were made for various work about 'our hall', which
was sometimes referred to as 'the court hall'; (fn. 106)
probably the hall of pleas mentioned above was
taken over by the corporation. A new town hall,
stone-built and of three bays, was built in Cornhill
probably c. 1590. (fn. 107) Its successor was built of timber
and plaster on an island site in the Market Place in
the 17th century, probably following a bequest of
£100 by William Taylor in 1633 for the building
of a market-house or public hall in Banbury; (fn. 108) it
was in serious disrepair by 1800 and a new brickbuilt town hall of two stories, of which the lower
was open, was built on the same site; (fn. 109) the first
floor served as a council chamber. The hipped
roof was surmounted by a cupola. The building was
removed in 1860 from the Market Place and reerected as a warehouse at Old Town Hall Wharf on
the west bank of the canal. (fn. 110) The Gothic town hall
in Bridge Street, designed by Edward Bruton of
Oxford, and built by Chesterman of Abingdon, was
opened in 1854. The move from the Market Place
was urged because of congestion and the opportunity that the new building would present of
improving the Bridge Street site, prominent, but
covered in old and dilapidated buildings. The town
hall is of Oolitic limestone, and has a symmetrical
façade to Bridge Street, with a centrally placed
entrance porch surmounted by a staircase tower
originally open at the top for ventilation. The clock
and finial were not included in the original design.
Inside, the accommodation on the first floor comprised a hall 60 ft. by 40 ft., with a wooden barrel
roof; it was to seat 600 people and to serve additionally as a magistrates' court. Below were a magistrates'
room, police room and cells, witnesses' room, and
an office for the Board of Health. Additions were
built at the south-west in 1891 to contain a Council
Chamber and offices. Since 1930 the municipal
offices and council chamber have been in part of
the former Mechanics' Institute in Marlborough
Road. (fn. 111)
Other public buildings provided by the corporation in the late 16th and early 17th century included
a Leather Hall, a Wool Hall, and a house of correction; (fn. 112) there was a workhouse in Scalding Lane
from 1643, replaced in 1707 by a workhouse on the
east side of South Bar. (fn. 113) The town gaol, which
from 1705 until 1817 shared a building with the
Blue Coat school, stood in the Market Place and
may be identified with the former Wool Hall. (fn. 114)
The 17th century saw the destruction by fire and
siege of a great deal of the earlier town. The fire of
1628 was said to have destroyed about a third of
the town, amounting to 103 dwellings and 660 bays
of other buildings (including 20 malt-kilns). (fn. 115)
William Whately, living in the Vicarage, 'only felt
the wind of the stroke, as it were, and not the smart
of it'. (fn. 116) Beesley, writing in 1841, was persuaded by
the character of surviving houses that the southern
part of the town from West Street to George Street
and Broad Street was chiefly affected, (fn. 117) and certainly surviving early buildings lie mostly north
of the line running through West Bar Street and
Bridge Street. Further demolition occurred during
the Civil War. During the first siege of the castle, in
1644, some 30 houses near the castle were burnt,
presumably because they were giving cover to the
besiegers' operations, (fn. 118) and after the siege further
properties in and near the Market Place were
pulled down to make way for an extension of the
castle fortifications. (fn. 119) Destruction occurred as the
result not only of military operations but also,
probably, of looting and burning by a royalist
garrison which had little support in, or respect for,
the town. (fn. 120) In 1643, moreover, there was a great
fire in which according to a contemporary (but
probably exaggerated) report 'near upon 100
dwelling houses (some say 200) were burnt down
to the ground'; (fn. 121) and in 1644 Parliamentary troops
at Cropredy Bridge 'spied that side of Banbury
next to us on fire'. (fn. 122) In both cases Parliamentary
sources alleged that the fires were started by the
garrison.
In 1647 it was said, perhaps with exaggeration,
that the town had 'scarce the one half standing to
gaze on the ruins of the other'. (fn. 123) Of 43 tenements
listed in a survey of Crown property in the borough
in 1653, 10 were described as plots either still
vacant or only partly rebuilt after being burned in
the war; probably others were by this time wholly
rebuilt, so were not specially mentioned in the survey.
Of the 10 mentioned 3 were in North Bar Street,
2 in Calthorpe Lane (later Calthorpe Street), and
5 in the Beast Market (i.e. the east end of the
Market Place). (fn. 124) Parliament aided the reconstruction of Banbury by allocating for the purpose £300
of timber sequestered from a royalist and subsequently, in 1648, the stone and timber from the
demolition of the castle. (fn. 125) After the war, therefore,
a great deal of rebuilding was carried out and most
of the surviving dated buildings are of the late
1640s and early 1650s. (fn. 126) There is no evidence for
any change in building plots or street alignment, (fn. 127)
although, if the destruction of Banbury was as
extensive as it seems, such changes may have
taken place. One major topographical change was
the pulling down of the castle, a task so thoroughly
executed that by 1685 the site had been converted
into gardens and closes and there were only two
small buildings, formerly within the castle, and
a row of 13 houses on the north side of what later
became Factory Street. (fn. 128) Although there is no
direct evidence of expansion of the town beyond
the limits reached by 1441 it is noticeable that from
the mid 17th century the inhabitants of Neithrop
and Calthorpe were no longer predominantly
agriculturists; artisans and others were starting to
settle there, which may be symptomatic of overcrowding in the borough itself. (fn. 129)
The town expanded little in the 18th century.
A number of commercial and industrial buildings
were erected close to the town centre after the
coming of the canal. (fn. 130) Public building activity
included the removal of the three surviving stone
bars or gates, the destruction and rebuilding of the
parish church, and the erection of a new town hall
at the turn of the century. (fn. 131) In 1785 Banbury was
described as 'a dirty, ill-built town'. (fn. 132) The increase
in population and the 'industrialization' of Banbury
from the late 18th century onwards led to the
intense building activity which has given the town
its characteristic appearance. It should be noted,
however, that the process was gradual and was
already far advanced before the coming of the
railway and the development of agricultural
implement-making: the Britannia and Cherwell
works were built in a part of the town already in
the course of development, and did not in themselves start its expansion. The areas where new
houses were built within the borough in the early
19th century were probably near the sites of the
North and South Bars, along West Bar Street, in
the Castle Street area, and at the north end of Broad
Street. By 1841 it was claimed that there was
no land unbuilt on within the borough. (fn. 133) To the
south of the borough, following the sale of the
Calthorpe estate in 1833, Dashwood Road, St.
John's Road, Calthorpe Road, and the east side of
the Oxford road were laid out and built up with
some 40 middle-class houses. (fn. 134) West of South Bar
Street the 80 smaller terraced houses which lay
between Crouch Street, Bear Garden Road, Monument Street, and New Road in 1881 (fn. 135) were probably
built c. 1839 when Crouch Street was made, (fn. 136)
while on the Broughton road the terraces on the
north side of Constitution Hill had been built by
1851. (fn. 137) Around Neithrop village there seems to have
been a good deal of expansion before 1850. (fn. 138)
Already by 1833 Neithrop had been described as
'a populous and disorderly suburb' (fn. 139) and by 1850
it was clearly a predominantly working-class area:
some 1,500 of the 1,700 inhabitants were described
as poor by the vicar, William Wilson, and in its
amenities (shops and public-houses) Neithrop was
relatively badly provided for. (fn. 140)
Further expansion in Neithrop occurred after
1850; thus St. Paul's Terrace and the houses on
the west side of Paradise Road were among several
small terraces that had been built in Neithrop village
before 1881, besides some 50 houses in the newly
laid out Park Road and Queen Street. (fn. 141) Another
50 houses were built between 1852 and 1881 along
the borough's northern boundary, when Back Lane
was converted into Castle Street West, and Castle
Street East was laid out. (fn. 142) The town's principal
expansion in the mid 19th century was to the east.
In the area known as Cherwell between Broad
Street and the canal, lying partly within and partly
outside the borough, development began along the
canal; Upper and Lower Cherwell Streets and
Windsor Street had been built before 1851, (fn. 143) and
there followed building between Windsor Street
and Broad Street so that by 1881 there were some 350
modern houses in the whole area. (fn. 144) A slightly later
development still further east in Grimsbury was of
larger houses. There had been some suburban
development there by the early 19th century. 'A
lot of cottages called Waterloo' which apparently lay
just east of Banbury Bridge to the north of the road,
housed 'a lot of disreputable inhabitants, lodginghouses and otherwise, of the lowest character'. (fn. 145)
In 1841 Waterloo was described as 'the modern
and most populous part of Grimsbury'. (fn. 146) The
principal 19th-century building development within
Grimsbury occurred between 1852 and 1881, when
some 500 houses were built, partly south of the
Middleton road in Causeway, Merton Street, and
Duke Street, but mostly to the north between the
Middleton road and North Street. (fn. 147) When meadows
and a race-course at Grimsbury were sold to the
Great Western Railway, the same owner sold his
land to the north of the Middleton road to the
Banbury Freehold Land Society, which was backed
by Cobb's Bank; many of the early houses built
were middle-class in character, but development
was slow and some plots were never built upon. (fn. 148)
New public buildings built in the 19th century,
besides the churches, chapels, and schools noticed
elsewhere, included the Union workhouse in
Neithrop (1835), the Mechanics' Institute in Church
Passage (1836), the town hall (1854), two corn
exchanges (1857), the cross in the Horse Fair
(1859), the Horton Hospital (1869–72), the Temperance Hall (1875), and the Mechanics' Institute in
Marlborough Road (1884). (fn. 149) Land for the Union
workhouse was purchased in Neithrop from a member of the Board of Guardians (at what appears to
have been an inflated price) and Sampson Kempthorne, (fn. 150) whose specimen designs had been approved
by the Poor Law Commissioners and circulated
with their reports, was summoned by the Banbury
Guardians to prepare a design for them and to
supervise the works. The contractors were Danby
and Taylor of Banbury. The workhouse was
designed on the modified panopticon principle
which made for ease of supervision of the inmates
and for clarity of 'classification' of the different
types of pauper by age and sex—regarded by the
Commissioners as essential. (fn. 151) It is to the credit of
the Banbury Guardians that they approved plans
slightly more spacious than those originally proposed
by Kempthorne. Additions were made at the end of
the 19th century to designs by W. E. Mills of Banbury. The Cornhill Corn Exchange was designed
by W. Hill of Leeds (fn. 152) and built by Kimberley of
Banbury, (fn. 153) with a separate contract with Thorpe
and Ponder for stone carving. (fn. 154) The facade is
classical with an entrance through a shallow portico
formed of a giant order of four sets of coupled
Corinthian pilasters beneath a heavy entablature
and pediment. This was originally surmounted by
a standing figure of Ceres, now lost. The hall inside
is 85 ft.×65 ft., larger than any but the most
optimistic of the exchange's promoters could have
thought necessary, so perhaps it scarcely mattered
that when open for business the roof was only half
on. (fn. 155) The Central Corn Exchange was also built
in 1857, though the front to the Market Place is
later than the main hall. The hall is of brick, with
appropriate decoration in pressed brick, the detail
loosely derived from 17th-century France. The
building has been attributed to James Murray of
Coventry. (fn. 156) The site chosen was obscured until
1860 by the old town hall, which no doubt led to
the delay in completing the facade. There was
considerable (and notorious) rivalry between the
two exchanges, which were promoted by the Banbury Corn Exchange Co. Ltd., and by the Central
Corn Exchange for Banbury Co. Ltd., respectively. (fn. 157)
Neither was complete when opened on the same day,
3 September 1857, when they were recorded in the
national press as 'utterly unfit for business'. (fn. 158) The
Cornhill Corn Exchange, probably for political
reasons, never functioned effectively as such and
the Central Exchange did not succeed particularly
well. (fn. 159) The Central Exchange became subsequently
the Palace Cinema and later a shopping arcade;
the Cornhill became the Vine Tavern.
The surviving Banbury Cross results from the
wish of a number of citizens to commemorate the
marriage of the Princess Royal with the Crown
Prince of Prussia. It is of Eleanor Cross type, with
niches for figures beneath a tall finial. It has six
sides, and steps forming a small plinth. It was
designed in competition by J. Gibbs of Oxford, and
the competing designs were exhibited locally. Contractors were Cowley of Oxford. Statues of Queen
Victoria, Edward VII, and George V designed
to celebrate the coronation of 1911 were not put
in place until late in 1914. They were carved by
Boulton & Sons of Cheltenham, with Sir T. G.
Jackson acting as consultant. (fn. 160)
Banbury's relative economic stagnation from the
1870s until the 1920s (fn. 161) slowed down the rate of
expansion. The council in that period built houses
in King's Road and on the Easington estate. (fn. 162)
Between 1881 and 1930 other working-class houses
were built at the south end of Britannia Road and
the area to the east, and also in Old Grimsbury Road
and Gibbs Road in Grimsbury, and rather larger
houses were built in the Marlborough Road area and
in Bath Road, Kings Road, Park Road, and Queen
Street in Neithrop. (fn. 163) The increased population
between 1931 and 1949 was accommodated by
the expansion of the town in three main areas, in
each of which houses were built both by the corporation and by private companies. The three
areas were between the Oxford and Bloxham roads,
where about 500 houses were built before 1939 to
form the suburb of Easington; in the area of the
older village and suburb of Neithrop, where before
1939 some 500 houses were built both around the
earlier houses and further west in new streets on
either side of the Warwick road, a development
which was extended to the south-west after 1945;
and around the 19th-century suburb of Grimsbury,
where about 300 houses were built after 1945 in
the areas of Grimsbury Square, Fergusson Road,
Howard Street, School View, and Edward Street. (fn. 164)
Since that date the increasing industrialization of
the town has led to a great enlargement of the builtup area, the chief features being extension in the
north-west, north of the Warwick road, westwards
between the Warwick and Bloxham roads, and in
the south at Easington and on the west bank of the
canal. Industrial building has continued on both
sides of the Southam road, and in the late 1950s the
council acquired 86 a. of land on the west side of
the road for an Industrial Estate. Major changes in
the central area, apart from the building of many
large shops, included the provision of a bus station,
and a large car-park north of Castle Street. In
1969 proposals for the redevelopment of the central
area were in hand. (fn. 165)
The population of the town was roughly 1,300 in
the early 13th century and 1,600 in 1441. (fn. 166) There
is no direct evidence of depopulation in the plagues
of the 14th century but for the poll-tax of 1377–80 only 523 inhabitants over 14 years old were
assessed: (fn. 167) even allowing for omissions there seems
to have been a considerable reduction. Moreover, in
1441 as many as 26 stalls and 9 workshops were said
to be vacant, and there is evidence of a decline in the
bishop's rents at some period in the past, perhaps
after the Black Death. (fn. 168) In 1545 there were said
to be 1,400 communicants in the whole parish. (fn. 169)
Accounts of fire damage in 1628 imply that there
were about 300 houses in the town before the fire. (fn. 170)
In 1665 138 people were assessed for tax on 456
hearths, 20 were discharged tax on 35 hearths on
grounds of poverty, and 4 owners of presumably
unoccupied property were assessed on 23 hearths. (fn. 171)
The population probably began to increase in the
decades before 1800, and in 1801 there were 2,755
inhabitants in the borough, and only 1,055 in the
Oxfordshire hamlets. (fn. 172) In the borough there was
a 3 per cent rise before 1811 and a 17 per cent rise
in the following decade bringing the total population
to 3,396. Over the next 50 years the population of
the entire parish rose steadily, in exact proportion
to the rise of population in the whole of England
and Wales, from 5,673 in 1821 to 11,725 in 1871. (fn. 173)
At first in that period the rise in population was
shared by both the borough and the hamlets, but
in the decade 1831–41 the population in the Oxfordshire hamlets increased by 838 and in the borough
by only nine. In the following decade the population of the hamlets surpassed that of the borough,
and thereafter the gap widened. The largest increase
(20 per cent) in the population of the parish came
in the decade 1841–51, before the establishment of
the railway or the large factories. (fn. 174) Some part of
the increase before 1851 was due to immigration,
for in Neithrop in 1851 41 per cent were born
outside the parish but in the Banbury region, and
13 per cent came from further afield. (fn. 175)
Between 1871 and 1921 the population rose by
only 12 per cent, very much less than the national
average, doubtless because of the agricultural
depression. Between 1911 and 1921 the population
decreased slightly, and it is clear that the town,
instead of acting as an urban centre to attract rural
immigrants, had become a place from which people
emigrated to areas less dependent on an agricultural
economy. There was insufficient industrial expansion to attract very much immigration even from the
surrounding countryside. The revival of the market
and the arrival in the town of large-scale industry independent of agriculture brought immediate results.
From 1921 to 1931 (the year when the construction
of the aluminium factory began) the town's population rose only by 4 per cent, but from 1931 to 1951
it rose from 13,953 to 18,916, an increase of 36 per
cent which was well above the national average. (fn. 176)
The majority of the immigrants, unlike those who
had come into Banbury before the First World
War, came from outside the Banbury region, many
from London and the Home Counties. After 1935
immigration increased, even fewer came from the
surrounding area, many came from the industrial
Midlands, while in the late 1930s large-scale resettlement from depressed areas, organized by the
Ministry of Labour and other bodies, accounted for
particularly heavy immigration from the north and
north-east of England. (fn. 177) Since 1950 immigration
into the town has continued, with the full support
of the borough council: an agreement was made,
for instance, with the Greater London Council
whereby the borough council would provide some
2,000 homes for London families coming into the
area to find work, and a similar arrangement was
made with Birmingham City Council at the time of
the move to Banbury from Birmingham of Alfred
Bird & Sons Ltd. In 1969 the population was 28,000,
having increased from 19,430 in 1957, and the
council had plans for a further increase to 40,000. (fn. 178)
The hamlet of Neithrop lay on the Lower Lias clay
c. ⅓ mile north-west of Banbury church, at a height
of c. 350 ft. (fn. 179) It was first mentioned in 1224; most
of the early forms of the place-name suggest a combination of thorp with nether, although the earliest
form suggests heath. (fn. 180) Neithrop was probably
always the most populous of Banbury's Oxfordshire
hamlets, but the evidence is slight because from the
14th century Neithrop and Calthorpe were usually
treated as a single unit for taxation purposes, and
from the mid 16th century Neithrop township
included the other hamlets. Calthorpe, too, lay
very close to the borough boundary, about ¼ mile
south of Banbury church, on the Lower Lias and
Middle Lias clay between the 325 ft. and 350 ft.
contours. (fn. 181) Whether or not the Calthorpe hamlet
recorded from 1279 onwards was the successor of
an Anglo-Saxon hamlet of that name is discussed
above. (fn. 182) Close to Calthorpe, on the hill to the south
of the borough, lay Easington, which may never
have been a settlement until it became the administrative centre of the Bishop of Lincoln's demesne in
the combined fields of Neithrop and Calthorpe. (fn. 183)
The place-name, first recorded in 1279, is a combination of the personal name Esa with dun or denu
(hill or valley). (fn. 184)
In 1327 27 people in Neithrop and Calthorpe
were assessed for the subsidy, and in 1377 98
people were assessed for the poll-tax. (fn. 185) In 1524
20 people from Neithrop and 8 from Calthorpe
were assessed. (fn. 186) Presumably most of the 24 people
assessed on 98 hearths in the Oxfordshire hamlets
in 1665 (fn. 187) lived in Neithrop and Calthorpe, since
Wickham and Hardwick were shrunk settlements. (fn. 188)
By that date Calthorpe House stood in sizeable
inclosed grounds, (fn. 189) and the other houses in the
hamlet were probably physically, though not technically, absorbed in the town. Neithrop retained its
identity longer, and even in the 19th century, when
it became part of the rapidly expanding town, (fn. 190)
it remained notoriously distinct in character. (fn. 191)
The earlier, stone-built cottages of Neithrop are
a forlorn little group swamped by the red-brick
development of the early 19th century. Originally
they were all, except for Orchard House, merely
good-quality, two-storied buildings in the regional
vernacular style of the 17th century, lacking the
dormer gables and other elaborations which characterise the town houses and better-class farm-houses.
No. 16 Bath Road (dated 1626 and with the initials
R: IM), and Nos. 1–5, 12A, and 18–19 Boxhedge
Lane are basically of this type, although some
have been greatly altered. No. 3 Boxhedge Lane
differs from the rest in having a sizeable rear wing,
while No. 2 has a two-light traceried window of the
15th century, apparently unrelated to any other
feature of the building. Orchard House, a large,
formerly free-standing building in Foundry Square,
must have been of at least superior farm-house
status. It has had the Vulcan Foundry built on to
one side of it in the 19th century, and has been
considerably altered, both internally and externally,
but much of its original form remains. It is of two
stories, with a cellar (original) below the east end
and a roof-garret lit by dormer gables. The plan
is L-shaped, with three rooms to a floor, and a square
stair turret in the angle of the L. The open-well
staircase is its most remarkable feature, with heavy,
angularly carved balusters, suggesting a late-16thor early-17th-century date. (fn. 192)
The hamlet of Wickham presumably lay within
the later Wickham Park, c. 2 miles south of Banbury
church, on Middle Lias clay and on the marlstone
rock bed, at a height of c. 400 ft. To the south the
ground falls away to the Sor Brook, to the north it
rises towards Crouch Hill and Easington. (fn. 193) The
place-name, first mentioned in 1086, is a combination of ham and the Old English wic, meaning
village or dairy farm. (fn. 194) In 1279 there were 8 tenants
of the Wykeham family there, and in 1327 8 people
were assessed for the twentieth. (fn. 195) For the poll-tax
of 1377 24 adults were assessed, but in 1524 only 3
were assessed for the subsidy. (fn. 196) The date of or
reason for the depopulation of the hamlet is not
known, but it may have been linked to the creation
of the park which in the 17th century amounted to
some 80 a. around the manor-house. (fn. 197) Many of the
Wickham fields were still farmed as arable, but the
tenants, except for those at the manor-house and
Wickham Mill, lived elsewhere. By the mid 18th
century the hamlet was inclosed and there were
several isolated farm-houses. (fn. 198)
Hardwick lay close to the surviving manor-house,
Hardwick Farm, (fn. 199) about 1½ miles north of Banbury
church, at c. 375 ft. on the southern slope of Hardwick Hill; it stood at a junction between the Lower
and Middle Lias clays in an area plentifully supplied
with springs. (fn. 200) The place-name, first mentioned in
1224, derives from Old English heordewic, implying
that it was a sheep farm or shepherd's croft. (fn. 201)
Five people were assessed for the twentieth of 1327,
and as many as 35 for the poll-tax of 1377–81. (fn. 202)
The hamlet was depopulated at the end of the 15th
or beginning of the 16th century when William
Cope, who leased the manor from 1496 until his
death in 1513, turned the township lands into a single
enclosed farm. (fn. 203) In 1524 only one man was assessed
at more than the landless labourer's rate of 4d., and
7 were assessed at 4d. (fn. 204) There are visible remains of
the medieval hamlet. (fn. 205)