SANDFORD ST. MARTIN
Sandford St. Martin, (fn. 1) known simply as
Sandford until c. 1884 when the suffix, from the
church dedication, was added to distinguish it
from Sandford on Thames and Dry Sandford (in
Abingdon), (fn. 2) lies 14 miles (20 km.) north-west
of Oxford and 10 miles (15 km.) south-west
of Banbury. It is a long, narrow parish, covering
2,292 a. (977 ha.) and containing two villages,
Sandford St. Martin and Ledwell; Grove Ash,
the northern end of the parish, contained a third
village in the Middle Ages and for much of its
history has been a separate township. The parish
boundaries for the most part follow field boundaries, although the road from Deddington to
Chipping Norton forms part of the short northern
boundary, parts of the eastern boundary follow
small streams, and part of the southern boundary
follows the line of an old road from Great Tew to
Wootton. (fn. 3)
The land slopes down from 155 m. in the
south-west to 125 m. in the Dorn valley, then
rises again to 180 m. in the centre of the parish,
near Ledwell. It falls steeply to 100 m. at the
Worton brook, which divides Grove Ash from
the rest of the parish, and then rises sharply,
reaching 165 m. at the Deddington road. The
high ground at Ledwell marks the change from
the limestone of the Chipping Norton or great
oolite series in the south to clay in the north,
upper lias clay on the high ground and lower lias
clay on the lower ground, giving way to a band
of alluvium along the Worton brook. Both the
villages lie mainly on the Chipping Norton
limestone. (fn. 4)
The northern part of the parish is drained by
the Worton brook which flows east into the river
Cherwell, the southern by the river Dorn and its
tributaries the Cockley brook and the Tyte which
flow south-east into the river Glyme. The Cockley
brook rises in Ledwell, it or its source presumably
being the loud stream or spring which gave the
village its name, (fn. 5) and flows east, out of the
parish, to join the Dorn in Steeple Barton. The
Tyte rises between Sandford and Ledwell and
flows west into the Dorn through the artificial
lakes in Sandford Park. A spring in Cow ground,
north-east of Sandford village, was reputed in
the 17th century to cure sores, ulcers, and eye
diseases. (fn. 6)
Grove Ash was inclosed in the 16th century,
but over much of the rest of the parish the open
fields survived until parliamentary inclosure in
1768, farmed from houses in the villages. There
are only two outlying farms, Hobbs Hole, built
c. 1770, and Flighthill recorded in 1815. (fn. 7) A large
park south of Ledwell, Ledwell Park, was created
in the 18th century and abandoned in the 19th. In
Sandford village, Sandford Park was created in
the 18th century and reduced in size early in the
20th. (fn. 8)
Minor roads and footpaths connect Sandford
and Ledwell with each other and with neighbouring villages. No major road passes through
the parish, but the road from Deddington to
Chipping Norton, turnpiked in 1770 and disturnpiked in 1871, runs along its northern edge,
and the road from Bicester to Enstone, turnpiked
in 1792–3 and disturnpiked in 1876, (fn. 9) along its
southern edge. A road from Banbury to Oxford
which ran through the parish in 1691 (fn. 10) was
presumably the road through Grove Ash and
Sandford village; its southern part was called Old
Cow Lane in 1768 when it was the only road
respected by both pre- and post-inclosure field
boundaries. (fn. 11) It remained the main road from
Sandford to Banbury until the early 19th century
when the road through Nether Worton assumed
equal importance. In 1857 the occupier of Flighthill farm was allowed to divert the southern end
of the Grove Ash road away from his land. (fn. 12) By
1886 the road had become a cart track, (fn. 13) and by
1980 it had almost disappeared. In the south of
the parish the line of the Bicester-Enstone road
was slightly altered after it was turnpiked in
1793. (fn. 14)
Its name implies that there was an early ford
in or near Sandford village. (fn. 15) Village tradition
asserts that it was on the northern edge of the
village, over the Tyte, but there is no evidence to
support the belief, and the ford is perhaps more
likely to have been at one of the crossing points of
the Dorn. By 1279, when the surname 'at bridge'
was recorded, (fn. 16) it had presumably been replaced
by a bridge. Sandford bridge in the South field,
probably on the Woodstock road, was recorded
in 1706. (fn. 17) Both it and the bridge at the mill were
footbridges c. 1770. (fn. 18) A new bridge was built at
the mill in 1842, a cart bridge at Sandford bridge
in 1847, an 'arched bridge' over the Tyte in 1840,
and a bridge over the Worton brook in 1869. (fn. 19)

Sandford St. Martin, c.1770
In the later 19th century carriers' carts usually
ran twice a week to Banbury and once a week to
Oxford. (fn. 20) The nearest railway station is Upper
Heyford, 4 miles to the east, opened in 1850. (fn. 21)
There was a post office in the village by 1847. (fn. 22)
There is no evidence of prehistoric or RomanoBritish settlement in the parish, although concentrations of flint implements have been found
near the boundary with Great Tew, and a coin of
Valens near the manor house. (fn. 23) Both Sandford
and Ledwell were established by 1086 when 39
men, 2 of them serfs, were recorded on the main
Sandford manor. (fn. 24) In 1279 there were on that
manor 26 unfree and 3 free tenants in Sandford
and 14 unfree and 5 free tenants in Ledwell; (fn. 25) the
tenants of c. 8 yardlands were not recorded, but
the total population of the two villages may have
been c. 250. Sandford and Ledwell, like Steeple
Barton, apparently suffered badly in the Black
Death, and in 1377 only 71 people in Sandford
and 31 in Ledwell paid poll tax. (fn. 26) Much of the
population loss may have been in Ledwell, where
traces of deserted houses and lanes remain north
of the village. (fn. 27)
The population had risen by 1641 when 65
men took the protestation oath and 3 refused. (fn. 28)
In 1676 there were 178 adults, and vicars estimated the population at c. 70 families in 1738 and
c. 85 families in 1768. (fn. 29) The population seems to
have declined in the 1770s and 1780s; (fn. 30) in 1801,
when it had started to rise again, it was 312, and it
rose to 534 in 1831. Almost all the newcomers
were agricultural workers, and the increase may
have been due partly to a change from pasture
to arable farming. Ledwell, away from the
domination of the manor house and Sandford
Park, probably grew more than Sandford; in
1768 c. 30 per cent of the population of the parish
lived in Ledwell, in 1841 c. 40 per cent. The
population remained over 500 in 1841 and 1851,
but fell thereafter, to 443 in 1891 and to 340 in
1901, and to 254 in 1961. It rose slightly, to 259 in
1971, as new houses were built. (fn. 31)
Grove, Grove Ash, or Welcombe Grove, was
first recorded in 1217. (fn. 32) In 1279 there were 16
villeins there, and 34 people paid poll tax in 1377,
suggesting that the township was then about the
same size as Ledwell. (fn. 33) It was alleged c. 1503 that
10 people had been driven off the land as arable
was converted to pasture, but nevertheless 8 men
were assessed for subsidy in 1524, compared with
12 in Ledwell. In 1543 only 2 men were assessed,
and one of them lived in Chipping Norton. (fn. 34)
Three farmhouses survived in the 17th and 18th
centuries. One, with a hall, buttery, kitchen, and
at least five chambers, was occupied in the earlier
17th century by Edward Rainsford, formerly of
Great Tew, but in 1662 it had only three
hearths. (fn. 35) Another was often uninhabited and by
1796 had been reduced to a cow shed. (fn. 36) Two
houses, Upper and Lower Grove Ash Farm,
survived in 1980; Lower Grove Ash seems to
have been built originally in the 18th century,
Upper Grove Ash in the later 17th century, but
both have been much altered. Traces of house
platforms remain in the field between the two
surviving houses, and a large fish-pond, recorded
in 1774, below Upper Grove Ash Farm. (fn. 37)
Sandford village reflects the dominance, from
the late 18th century to the early 20th, of the Park
and Manor estates. The manor house stands
beside the Dorn, hidden from the village street
by trees and by a steep fall in the ground, but the
Park, on high ground opposite the church, is the
most prominent house in the village. Several
smaller houses, particularly on the Barton road,
are 19th-century estate cottages, but there are
also some 17th- and 18th-century limestone
rubble cottages with slate roofs, among them the
former inn, a slightly larger house on the south
side of the Barton road. The village also contains
a few substantial 17th- and 18th-century farmhouses, built by prosperous yeomen or gentry.
The largest, Brandon Farm on the corner of the
Barton and Ledwell roads, has an irregular plan,
suggesting that it was built in two stages. The
north wing is of the early 17th century and has a
panelled room with an overmantel bearing the
initials P/IK, presumably for John Parsons,
whose family owned the great tithes of the parish,
and his wife. (fn. 38) The house was the largest in the
village in 1662 when it was taxed on seven
hearths. (fn. 39) The south end of the house was largely
rebuilt in 1705 and bears the initials of William
Parsons and his wife Elizabeth. (fn. 40) Southfield
Farm, east of Brandon Farm, is a 17th-century
rubble house with stone mullioned windows and
a slate roof. Clover Hall, dated 1715 and 1808,
the last house in the village on the Barton road, is
the only old house in the village of dressed stone.
In the centre of the village is a small triangular
green, largely a 19th-century creation, on which
is a medieval cross base and shaft, restored and
given a new head by G. E. Street in 1856. (fn. 41) In
1927 the former school from Ardley was erected
east of the Ledwell road as a village hall. (fn. 42) The
only other 20th-century additions to the village
are five detached houses and a group of six
council houses north of the village.
Ledwell was described as late as 1952 as a
tumbledown hamlet of 'patched farmsteads' and
'battered cottages', (fn. 43) but in 1979 the village,
largely inhabited by professional people, was well
kept and prosperous. The houses lie along a
winding street, once the start of a road to Over
Worton, and around a small green on which is the
village well, removed from its former site higher
up the street in the 1920s or 1930s. (fn. 44) Manor
Farm, at the entrance to the village, is an
imposing, early 18th-century house of ashlar
with a Welsh slate roof, its front decorated with
pilasters of full height. It may have been built by
the Appletree family. (fn. 45) Adjoining the farmhouse
on the east are four cottages of similar date.
Ledwell House, approached by a drive from the
green, appears to have been built in the 17th
century as a relatively small house and enlarged
in the 18th century and the later 19th. In the later
17th century it belonged to the Lock family; later
owners included Vice-Admiral James Sayer
(d. 1776) who played a prominent part in the
naval campaigns of the Seven Years War, and
James Paxton, a noted surgeon and medical
writer. (fn. 46) The large house or mansion, Ledwell
Park, built on the southern edge of the village in
the 17th century, was demolished c. 1800. (fn. 47)
For much of the later 18th century and the
early 19th there was one public house in Sandford
and one in Ledwell. That in Sandford, successively the Silver Tavern (1774, 1784), Taylor's
Arms (1785–7), and the Crown (from 1788),
stood near the manor house gates. It was closed
between the 1880 and 1883, according to village
tradition by Edward Marshall of the manor
house, who objected to a public house so close to
his gates. (fn. 48) That in Ledwell, known in the 20th
century as the Plough, remained open until the
1960s. (fn. 49)
Sandford wake or feast was kept on the Sunday
after St. Martin's day (11 November), and on the
Sunday after 22 November from 1752. It survived
into the later 19th century. (fn. 50) A small fair at
Ledwell, held on 22 July, the feast of St. Mary
Magdalene, patron of the medieval chapel, died
out in the late 19th century. (fn. 51)
During the Civil War a dispute over a moiety
of the mill in Sandford St. Martin village erupted
into violence, and one claimant, assisted by
soldiers, broke into the premises. (fn. 52) The uncertainty of the times is also demonstrated by the
large hoard of coins of James I and Charles I
discovered in 1762 in an old outbuilding. (fn. 53)
Manors and other Estates.
In 1086
Adam son of Hubert de Ryes held 14 hides less
1 yardland in Sandford of Odo of Bayeux. (fn. 54)
The estate, which included land in Ledwell and
Grove Ash, (fn. 55) formed part of Steeple Barton
manor until the mid 16th century and was held by
the St. Johns, and their successors until it was
sold to John Blundell in 1552. At the division of
Blundell's lands in 1559 SANDFORD AND
LEDWELL was treated as a separate manor (fn. 56) but
followed the descent of Steeple Barton, being
divided in the early 17th century between
Gresham Hogan, who held two thirds, and
Gerard Croker, who held one third. (fn. 57) Hogan's
share passed with Steeple Barton to his daughter
Elizabeth Waller and to her heirs the James
family, and was sold in 1726 to Joseph Taylor. At
Taylor's death in 1732 Sandford and Ledwell
manor was separated from Steeple Barton, being
devised to his nephew, another Joseph Taylor. (fn. 58)
The younger Joseph died in 1760 and was
succeeded in turn by his brother William
(d. 1780), and William's sons James (d. 1814) and
William (d. 1828). (fn. 59) Joseph did not exercise any
manorial rights, and the elder William received
no compensation for any at inclosure in 1768, but
James appointed gamekeepers and called the
estate a manor. (fn. 60) William devised it to his cousin
Edward Marshall who had assumed the
additional surname Hacker. From Edward
Marshall Hacker (d. 1841) the manor passed to
his son Edward Marshall (d. 1899), to Edward's
son Edward Henry Marshall (d. 1909), and to
Edward Henry's son Edward Ralph Marshall
who in 1937 sold it to A. J. Edmondson. (fn. 61)
Edmondson, created Lord Sandford of Banbury
in 1945, gave the manor in 1948 to his son J. C.
Edmondson, who sold it in 1957 to Mrs. S. C.
Rittson-Thomas. (fn. 62)
The manor house, a much altered 18th-century
building, is presumably the house built by Joseph
Taylor c. 1715, before he acquired the manor. (fn. 63)
The north-west front, of three storeys and five
bays with a central pediment, survived in 1979.
E. Marshall Hacker added west and east wings,
and Edward Marshall made further additions
and reversed the main entrance, moving it to the
south-east front and making a new drive from the
village street. In 1924 the south-east front was
enlarged and altered to conform with the Cotswold style of building. (fn. 64)
The other third of the manor remained in the
Croker family, descending from Gerard Croker
(d. 1577) and Mary Blundell to their son John
(d. 1610), to John's son Gerard (d. 1620), and to
Gerard's sons John (d. 1629), Gerard (d. 1647),
and Henry (d. 1651). (fn. 65) Henry was succeeded by
William Croker, younger son of John (d. 1610),
who died c. 1653. The manor then descended to
his son John (d. by 1666), to John's son William
(d. 1709), and William's son Gerard (d. 1733). (fn. 66)
Under the terms of Gerard's will it passed to his
sisters Anne (d. 1741) and Stuart (d. 1746)
Croker, to their nephew Samuel Wilmot (d.
1772), and to Wilmot's daughter Mary Heywood.
Mrs. Heywood was succeeded in 1797 by her
cousin Samuel Cox (d. 1809) and by his son
Samuel Fortnum Cox. (fn. 67) On S. F. Cox's death in
1849 the estate, then known as Sandford Park,
was sold to Edwin Guest, master of Gonville and
Caius College, Cambridge, who died in 1880.
Guest's widow Anne (d. 1900) devised Sandford
Park to her nephew E. F. Chance. The estate was
split up in 1920 and 1923. (fn. 68)
Sandford Park is an early 18th-century house,
perhaps built by Gerard Croker (d. 1733), to
which additions were made on the west side later
in the century. The main house has an east front
of five bays and a balustraded parapet, and a west
front of three bays with venetian windows and
central porch. A north wing, added in the early
20th century, was demolished in 1954. (fn. 69) The
service quarters and stables north-west and north
of the house appear to have been built at various
dates in the 19th century. The earlier 18thcentury park lay west of the house and had along
its north side a wooded valley with a stream and
small lakes, crossed at one point by a sevenarched bridge. Following inclosure in 1768 the
park was extended northwards where some
clumps of trees survived in 1979. A new entrance
was made from the Ledwell road through the
extended park and across the bridge over the
lakes. Beside the road to the mill is a circular
mound ascended by a spiral path; it is of 17thcentury character and may have formed part of
the garden of the Crokers' earlier house, taxed on
5 hearths in 1662. (fn. 70)
One hide and 1 yardland in Ledwell belonged
in 1086 to the royal, formerly comital, manor of
Bloxham and Adderbury. (fn. 71) The estate was
probably the 1 hide given to St. George's in the
Castle, Oxford, before 1135 which passed with
the rest of St. George's endowments to Oseney
abbey. (fn. 72) Oseney added 4 yardlands and 140 a. to
its holding in 1350 and 1357 by exchange with the
justice William Shareshull. (fn. 73) Shareshull had
acquired land in Sandford by 1338, and perhaps
by 1334 when his brother John Shareshull held
land there. (fn. 74) In 1354 he bought a further 140 a.
from John le Duddere of Ledwell, who had
acquired them from the St. John family. (fn. 75) Oseney
abbey retained its property in Sandford and
Ledwell until the Dissolution, when it passed to
Leonard Chamberlain (fn. 76) and was absorbed into
the manor estate.
The property later known as Ledwell Park
belonged to Thomas Parsons in 1635. (fn. 77) In 1666
Francis Smith, Lord Carrington, enlarged the
estate, and in 1682 lived in the house there. (fn. 78) He
sold it in 1685 or 1686 to Richard Brideoak (fn. 79)
from whom it passed before 1717 to Henry Scott,
earl of Deloraine, son of the duke of Monmouth,
who created a park. (fn. 80) He also rebuilt and refurnished the house at a cost of over £9,000. (fn. 81) In
1732 his son Francis, earl of Deloraine, sold
Ledwell Park to Sir Robert Dashwood of Northbrook who settled it on his younger son Richard
and his wife Elizabeth. (fn. 82) Elizabeth and her
second husband Charles Armand Powlett enlarged the park in 1739 and in 1750 bought from
William Cartwright of Aynho a further 5 yardlands and several closes bought by his grandfather
John Cartwright from William Croker (d. 1709).
Elizabeth Powlett died in 1756 and was succeeded
by her grandson Charles Vere Dashwood who
in 1774 sold the Ledwell property to Mary
Heywood. (fn. 83) The house, 'a smart hunting seat',
was uninhabited and dilapidated in 1759, and
was demolished c. 1800. (fn. 84) A range of 18thcentury outbuildings survives, much altered, as
Upper Close Farm; a range of contemporary
buildings to the south was probably coachhouses.
Some distance to the east is the dovecote, converted into a cottage.
Much of Grove Ash was alienated by the St.
Johns and their successors in the later Middle
Ages. Richard Page of Nether Worton (d. 1375)
held an estate, later 4 yardlands, (fn. 85) which
descended with his Nether Worton manor until
1598 when Philip Babington sold it to Richard
Fermor of Tusmore, whose descendants sold it in
1716 to the executors of Anthony Keck of Great
Tew. (fn. 86)
An estate of c. 2 yardlands sold by the St. Johns
to William Dene in the earlier 14th century
passed to John Busby of Grove, to another John
Busby (d. 1351), to the second John's son
Nicholas, and to Nicholas's son John who sold
it c. 1416 to Richard Busby and Richard
Thurston. (fn. 87) The later descent of that and other
small freeholds, such as the 4½ yardlands leased
by the Chamberlains to Robert Busby in the early
16th century, and sold to him in 1518, (fn. 88) or the
estate held by Sir Thomas Englefield (d. 1537), (fn. 89)
is obscure, but one or more of them may have
been acquired by the lords of Great Tew who
held an estate in Grove Ash by 1550. (fn. 90)
By 1537 Richard Andrews of Yarnton held
land in Grove Ash; he sold part of it to Brasenose
College in 1538 and exchanged the remainder
with the Crown in 1541. (fn. 91) The Crown land was
leased in the late 16th century to Henry and
William Rainsford who assigned the leases to
their father Edward Rainsford of Grove Ash
(d. 1624). (fn. 92) The freehold was presumably later
acquired by the lords of Great Tew.
From 1716 the Great Tew estate owned the
whole of Grove Ash except for the c. 48 a. held by
Brasenose College. That estate was leased to the
owners of Great Tew from 1798 and exchanged
with them in 1848 for land in Postcombe in
Lewknor. (fn. 93)
The great tithes of Sandford St. Martin formed
part of Steeple Barton rectory in the Middle Ages
and passed after the Dissolution to John Blundell
and his heirs. Richard Champneys acquired two
thirds of the tithe of Sandford and in 1602
granted them to Richard Parsons, in whose
family they remained until they were commuted
for c. 248 a. at inclosure in 1768. Most of the land
was sold to Mary Heywood in 1783. (fn. 94) A sixth of
the tithe passed from Richard Freston to Gerard
Croker who in 1617 sold it to Thomas Giles.
Giles settled it on his daughter Alice wife of John
Croker (d. by 1662) from whom it descended,
with a third of the manor, to Mary Heywood who
received c. 52 a. for it at inclosure. (fn. 95) The remaining sixth of the tithe presumably descended with
the Hogan share of the manor; it was held at
inclosure by William Taylor who received c. 48 a.
for it. (fn. 96)
A third of the tithe of Grove Ash was among
the endowments of Sandford vicarage. (fn. 97) The
remaining two thirds were granted to Oxford
cathedral in 1542 and sold in 1546 to Leonard
Chamberlain and John Blundell, from whom
they passed to Gresham Hogan. (fn. 98) Hogan's
successors Thomas and Elizabeth Waller sold
them in 1661 to Henry Fermor, from whose
family they passed to the owners of Great Tew.
When the tithe of Grove Ash was commuted in
1849 the impropriator was M. P. W. Boulton of
Great Tew. (fn. 99)
Economic History.
Sandford and Ledwell shared a field system, but Grove Ash was
separately cultivated even before its inclosure in
the earlier 16th century. In 1310 the arable of
Sandford and Ledwell was divided into north
and south fields. (fn. 100) By the early 15th century the
two-field system had apparently been modified;
the demesne had been consolidated and inclosed
and an area of c. 50 a. east of Ledwell was
described as a field (campus). (fn. 101) Down quarter,
Fosthill quarter, Dean quarter, and Beacon
quarter were recorded in 1697, but they were
only four among ten divisions of varying sizes. (fn. 102)
The south field, south of Sandford village,
remained, often divided into three parts, and
strips in the area north of Ledwell village were
identified only by furlong names. (fn. 103) In 1767 the
arable was said to be divided among 'several open
common fields', and in 1768 there seem to have
been four major divisions: North or Lower field
north of Ledwell (c. 675 a.), Down quarter in the
east (c. 350 a.), Beacon quarter in the west
(c. 300 a.), and South field (c. 335 a.). (fn. 104) In practice
the arable was presumably divided into more or
less flexible groups of furlongs, rather than into
fixed fields or quarters.
The demesne, 2 ploughlands in 1279, was still
7½ yardlands in the later Middle Ages. (fn. 105) Before
1413 it had been consolidated and inclosed in two
Berry fields on either side of the road from
Sandford to Ledwell, but in the 16th century it
was leased to tenants in yardlands scattered
among the furlongs of the Berry fields. (fn. 106)
The parish was well supplied with meadow, as
much as 100 a. being recorded in 1086. (fn. 107) In the
16th century some was attached to individual
holdings, the rest was lot meadow. (fn. 108) There was
also in 1086 pasture 4 furlongs by 3 furlongs, and
more had been added by the late 17th century
when between a fifth and a quarter of each
customary yardland was composed of greensward, mainly leys. (fn. 109) Most of the leys lay in
blocks of a furlong or more, almost half of them in
the north field. (fn. 110)
In the early 16th century, and presumably in
the Middle Ages, Grove Ash was divided into an
upper and a lower field. (fn. 111) Its inhabitants had no
intercommoning rights in the fields of Sandford
and Ledwell. (fn. 112) The township was not named in
1086, but the furlong of spinney and some of the
meadow and pasture on Sandford manor were
probably there. (fn. 113) If Grove Ash was an early
medieval assart, it was well established by 1279
when its tenants were villeins holding ordinary
yardlands, mostly by labour services. (fn. 114)
The field names 'flax hill' (1359), 'linland' (flax
land, 1413), and oat croft (1686) in Sandford and
Ledwell and ryeland (1537) in Grove Ash presumably reflect the more unusual crops grown. (fn. 115)
In the 17th century the most common crops were
barley, wheat, and peas, with some maslin, which
suggests that the normal four-course rotation of
(1) wheat or maslin (2) peas, beans, or vetches
(3) barley (4) fallow was followed. (fn. 116)
At least two of the three wool producers from
an Oxfordshire Sandford, recorded in 1342 (fn. 117)
bore the names of Sandford St. Martin families,
and in Oseney abbey's bailiwick of Barton, which
included Sandford, there were several flocks of
c. 200 sheep. (fn. 118) The largest recorded flock in the
parish in the 17th century or the early 18th was
that of 220 owned by John Parsons in 1702, but
several others contained between 90 and 125. (fn. 119) In
1450 the mill with 2 yardlands had rights of
pasture for 6 oxen, a bull, and a draught horse; in
the 17th century the stint for a yardland seems to
have been 4 cows or else 2 cows and 16 sheep. (fn. 120)
In 1086 Adam's estate, with land for 16
ploughteams, supported 3 ploughteams and 2
serfs on the demesne and 13 ploughteams owned
by 24 villeins and 13 bordars on the tenants' land.
The king's 1 hide and 1 yardland at Ledwell was
land for 1 ploughteam, but none was recorded. (fn. 121)
In 1279 Adam's estate was held by John of St.
John as part of his manor of Steeple Barton. (fn. 122) He
held 2 ploughlands in demesne; in Sandford 26
villeins held a total of 27 yardlands and 15 a.,
individual holdings ranging from 2 yardlands to
3 a., and in Ledwell 13 villeins and a cottar held a
total of 18½ yardlands, individual holdings ranging from 2 yardlands to ½ yardland. There were
only three free tenants in Sandford, two of them
holding 2 yardlands each for money rents, and
the third holding a yardland for ½ lb. of pepper.
In Ledwell five free tenants held a total of 10
yardlands, 4 yardlands of which were held by one
man, Henry of Ditchley. The 22½ yardlands in
Grove Ash were held by 16 villeins who held 2, 1½
or 1 yardland each; there were no free tenants,
but four of the villeins paid only money rents. All
the other villeins on the manor owed services,
rents, and customary payments like those of
Steeple Barton. There is no record of the tenants
or services on Oseney abbey's estate in 1279, but
the abbey was still exacting some labour services
in 1359 although they had been commuted on the
St. John estate before 1353. (fn. 123)
Sandford St. Martin village, although the
largest settlement in the parish, has not, for most
of its history, been the wealthiest. In 1306 Grove
Ash had both the highest average assessment to
the subsidy (1s. 3d.) and the largest individual
assessment, William Swet's 4s. In 1316 the
average assessment in Ledwell and Grove Ash,
3s. 8d., was again higher than the average 2s. 2d.
in Sandford, and Joan of Ledwell's 12s. was by
far the highest assessment in the parish. In 1327
Ledwell's average assessment of 2s. 11d. was the
highest in the parish, and the highest individual
assessment was Nicholas le Mayster's 7s. there. (fn. 124)
Among those assessed in Grove Ash in 1327, at a
slightly below average 2s. 2d., was John Bisseby,
presumably an ancestor of the Busby family who
were prominent in the parish until the 17th
century. The assessments suggest that although
there was no resident lord of the manor or other
large landowner, several men, among them the
descendants of some of the villeins of 1279, were
comparatively prosperous, and in the earlier 14th
century Henry Stertup, Nicholas son of William
of Ledwell, Simon of Ditchley, and John Franklin
each bought small freeholds from John of St.
John (d. 1322) or from Catherine, relict of his son
John. (fn. 125)
In 1524 the highest assessments to the subsidy
were those of 2 Ledwell men, Richard Thorpe
(6s.) and John Taylor (4s.), but the village also
had the highest proportion of men assessed on
wages, 6 out of the 12 men assessed. In Sandford
15 men were assessed, 5 of them on wages, the
highest assessments being those of John and
Thomas Giles, 3s. 6d. each. In Grove Ash too the
highest assessment was 3s. 6d. and only 3 of the
8 men assessed were wage labourers. (fn. 126)
In 1550, shortly before the division and consequent disintegration of the manor which covered
the whole parish except for Grove Ash, there
were 64 yardlands, 32 held by 13 copyholders and
1 freeholder in Sandford, and 32 held by 9 copyholders in Ledwell. In Sandford, John Buller and
his son Edmund held the mill and 9 yardlands
which had earlier formed three separate holdings,
and Richard Giles held 8 yardlands, 6 of which
he had only recently bought. In Ledwell, Jane
Taylor held 6 yardlands and Richard Andrews 5
yardlands. (fn. 127) Few of the large holdings survived
for long; much of the Bullers' property had been
dispersed by the early 17th century and in 1614
Richard Andrews held only a cottage and a
close. (fn. 128) Thomas Giles held 5 yardlands in 1614
and bought a sixth of the great tithes in 1617; he
described himself as a gentleman and was alleged
to have left a personal estate of c. £3,000 at his
death in 1638. (fn. 129) The Lock and Appletree families
survived for longer. Richard Lock held 2 yardlands in Sandford in 1550. (fn. 130) John Lock of
Ledwell left goods worth just over £200 at his
death in 1612; his son Humphrey held 4 copyhold
yardlands in 1614 and Humphrey's son John
acquired part of the freehold from Gerard Croker
in 1617. (fn. 131) Another John Lock bought part of the
freehold of 5 yardlands in Ledwell from William
Croker in 1656; his son John acquired the
remainder of the freehold in 1723, but by 1727
was heavily in debt to Joseph Taylor to whom he
sold much of the property. (fn. 132) Richard Appletree
held 3 copyhold yardlands in 1611 and acquired
the freehold in 1614. (fn. 133) In 1698 Anthony Appletree of Ledwell seems to have held a substantial
estate in the parish, including the mills, and the
family were still in Ledwell in 1744; in 1768 they
held only ½ yardland and 2 cow commons. (fn. 134)
Between 1707 and his death in 1732 Joseph
Taylor bought a total of 15 yardlands and several
smaller pieces of land, much of it from the Lock
family. His nephew and successor, another Joseph
Taylor, added a further 3½ yardlands bought in
1743 and 1745 from John Appletree. (fn. 135)
In 1413 Oseney abbey inclosed its demesne in
the field called Heath and Linland, with the
agreement of both its own tenants and those of
the manor. (fn. 136) The resulting inclosure, later called
Abbot's Heath, was an area of c. 50 a. on the edge
of the parish, east of Ledwell. In 1550 the manor
estate included four small closes in Sandford and
three in Ledwell, as well as Abbot's Heath. (fn. 137)
Flighthills Close, north-east of Ledwell, was
recorded in 1614, and Berry Close, next to the
little Berry field, in 1686. (fn. 138) In 1768, when c. 1,686
a. in Sandford and Ledwell were inclosed by Act
of parliament, there were c. 255 a. of old inclosures, including Ledwell Park and Sandford
Park. The largest allotment of former open field
made under the Act, c. 583 a., was made to
William Taylor, lord of the manor, in lieu of a
sixth of the great tithes and 25¾ common and
3 Berry yardlands. Thomas Parsons received
c. 386 a. for two thirds of the great tithes and
6¾ common yardlands; Charles Vere Dashwood
of Ledwell Park received c. 197 a., and Mary
Heywood of Sandford Park c. 150 a. There was
one other allotment of over 100 a., five of between
10 a. and 99 a., and seven under 10 a. (fn. 139)
Grove Ash was inclosed and converted to
pasture in the 16th century. Robert Busby, a
woolman of Chipping Norton, was accused of
turning the men off a ploughland of arable soon
after 1503, and by 1543 the hamlet was largely
depopulated. (fn. 140) The whole of the Brasenose
College estate was inclosed by 1537; the name of
one of the closes, Great Steps leynes in 1537 and
Great Steps leys in 1556, indicates that it was
former arable which had been laid down to grass.
In 1538 the college estate comprised c. 10 a. of
arable, c. 10 a. of meadow, c. 100 a. of pasture,
and c. 2 a. of wood. (fn. 141) In 1659 most of the
township was pasture closes, and one farmer's
stock included c. 20 fattening cows, 2 or 3 milk
cows, and c. 60 sheep. (fn. 142) By the end of the 18th
century some pasture had been converted back to
arable, and 41 a. out of the 47 a. of the Brasenose
College estate was arable, albeit hilly and poor
and in a bad state of cultivation. (fn. 143)
In the years after the inclosure of Sandford and
Ledwell Mary Heywood enlarged her estate
there until in 1789 she paid 42 per cent of the land
tax in the parish. (fn. 144) On her death in 1797 most of
the estate descended to the Cox family, but
Hobbs Hole farm (c. 198 a.) was sold to G. F.
Stratton of Great Tew. (fn. 145) In 1815 William Wilson
of Over Worton bought 236 a., the later Flighthill
farm, from William Taylor. (fn. 146) Throughout the
19th century the parish was divided between the
four estates. In 1868 the Park estate comprised
c. 700 a., the Manor and the Great Tew estates
c. 500 a. each, and Flighthill farm c. 240 a. (fn. 147) Most
of the land was leased to tenants, usually in 10
farms, which in 1895 were: Upper Grove Ash
(167 a.), Lower Grove Ash (152 a.), and Hobbs
Hole farm (206 a.) on the Great Tew estate;
Ledwell farm (265 a.) and Manor farm (225 a.) on
the manor estate; Southfield farm (91 a.), Brandon
farm (282 a.), Tite farm (131 a.), and Park farm
(265 a.) on the Park estate, and Flighthill farm
(246 a.), owned and farmed by Henry Painter.
From 1901 Southfield and Brandon farms were
farmed together. (fn. 148)
In 1801 there were c. 875 a. of arable, c. 1409 a.
of permanent grass, and c. 24 a. of woodland in
the parish. (fn. 149) In 1868 the agriculture was 'chiefly
arable', although the five shepherds recorded in
1871 indicate that several farmers also kept
sheep. (fn. 150) In 1914 there were c. 600 sheep and c.
200 cattle on the 54 per cent of the land which was
permanent grass: the main crops on the arable
were wheat (22 per cent of the arable), barley
(19 per cent), and oats (10 per cent). (fn. 151) Wheat
and barley were still the main crops in 1977,
and sheep and cattle were kept. (fn. 152)
One man in Ledwell in 1316 was surnamed
tailor and others in Sandford were named weaver,
smith, and butcher, all perhaps denoting occupations. (fn. 153) A carpenter, a mason, two weavers, two
broadcloth weavers, and two fullers were recorded in the 17th and 18th centuries, and a
sieve-maker in the earlier 19th. (fn. 154) In 1841 a
commercial traveller, a plasterer, a druggist, and
a leather dresser lived in the parish, but over half
(57 per cent) of the working population were
farmers or farm workers, and that percentage
increased to 63 per cent in 1851, to 65 per cent
in 1861, and to 61 per cent in 1871. (fn. 155) The land
drainer in Ledwell in 1861 should perhaps be
included among agricultural workers, and the
machinist in the same village in 1871 may have
operated the agricultural machinery which had
recently been introduced. (fn. 156) Less than half the
agricultural labourers were permanently employed on farms in the parish, only 59 out of 147
in 1851, only 58 out of 132 in 1861, but 83 out of
121 in 1871. The chief form of employment after
agriculture was domestic service, including
coachmen, grooms, and gardeners employed at
the Manor and the Park. In 1851 there were 9
glovers in Sandford and 6 in Ledwell, all of them
wives or daughters of agricultural labourers;
none was recorded in other years, although the
industry flourished in the neighbouring parishes
of Westcott and Steeple Barton.
There was a mill in Sandford in 1086; in 1279 it
was held, with a pasture close and 2 yardlands, by
Thomas of the mill, a free tenant of John of St.
John. (fn. 157) In 1307 Thomas conveyed the mill and its
property to Richard Batyn. (fn. 158) In 1350 William
Shareshull the younger granted it to Oseney
abbey. (fn. 159) At the Dissolution it passed, with the rest
of the abbey's land, to Leonard Chamberlain,
and in 1550 it was held of John Blundell by John
Buller and his son Edmund. (fn. 160) Another John
Buller in 1617 acquired the freehold, and in 1626
he divided the property between his wife Elizabeth
and his son John. After a dispute in the 1640s
the younger John Buller recovered the whole
property. (fn. 161)
In 1698 Anthony Appletree settled both the
water mill and a windmill, apparently in Ledwell,
on his son Richard. The windmill had gone by
1771 when Richard's grandson, another Richard
Appletree, mortgaged the water mill. He sold it
in 1772 to John Gardner who in 1780 sold it to
Mary Heywood. (fn. 162) After Mrs. Heywood's death in
1797 the mill was sold to Thomas Hollis of
Middle Barton who sold it in 1811 to George
Andrews of Spelsbury. In 1861 Andrews's
grandson George Andrews sold it to Edward
Marshall, and the mill remained part of the
manor estate until it was sold in 1918. (fn. 163)
The mill and mill house were rebuilt by
Oseney abbey's tenants in the late 14th century. (fn. 164)
In 1626 it seems to have been a double mill, and it
was still described as water corn mills in 1811. (fn. 165)
The mill was equipped with modern machinery
at the time of its sale in 1918, but the buyer
removed it and converted the mill into a private
house. (fn. 166)
Part of the mill may have been a fulling mill in
the late 16th century and the early 17th, for
Richard Buller (d. 1602), presumably one of the
family who owned the mills, was a fuller. (fn. 167)
Local Government.
In the Middle Ages
tenants of the manor in Sandford St. Martin
presumably owed suit to the court in Steeple
Barton. In 1279 free tenants owed suit to the
hundred court at Wootton. (fn. 168) In the 16th and 17th
centuries and the early 18th, courts baron were
held for Sandford manor by John Blundell's
heirs; the only surviving records are grants of
land. (fn. 169) Oseney abbey held a court for its tenants
in Sandford, the Bartons, and other neighbouring parishes. The surviving rolls, of the mid 14th
century and the late 15th, deal with grants of land
and with such offences as allowing animals to
stray, leaving the manor without permission, and
failing to perform labour services. (fn. 170)
The usual parish officers were elected in the
18th century and the early 19th. In 1842 the
vestry agreed to the appointment of a paid
constable for Sandford and some of the neighbouring parishes, and in 1881, after 'riotous
proceedings' there, a separate constable was
appointed for Ledwell. (fn. 171) In 1894 many of the
vestry's functions were taken over by the newly
formed parish council.
Expenditure on poor relief was c. £126 in 1776,
and rose to an average of £179 a year between
1783 and 1785 and to £463 or £1 9s. per head of
population in 1803, the second highest rate in the
area. It reached a peak of £667 or £1 14s. a head
in 1814, an unusual peak year. Expenditure
remained high until 1820 but fell to a low point
of £398 or 16s. a head in 1821. In 1831 the
parish spent a total of £451 or c. 17s. a head
of population, rather less than most parishes in
the area. (fn. 172)
There were 42 adults on regular out-relief in
1803; the number rose to between 50 and 55 in
1813 and 1814 but fell thereafter to between 20
and 30. There was no workhouse; the £10 spent
on rent in 1776 was presumably used to pay
paupers' rents. The roundsman system seems to
have been in use from 1802 to 1816 or later. In the
winter of 1815 at least 20 roundsmen worked for
9 employers. (fn. 173)
After 1834 Sandford St. Martin was included
in the Woodstock poor law union. In 1932 it was
moved from the Woodstock rural district to the
Chipping Norton rural district, and in 1974 was
included in West Oxfordshire. (fn. 174)
Church.
In the late 12th century Sandford
church was a chapel of Steeple Barton. Its status
was disputed in 1217 but confirmed as that of a
chapel, although it paid all episcopal and
archidiaconal dues as a parish church. (fn. 175) It
remained officially a chapel throughout the
Middle Ages although, as it had an endowed
vicarage and a dependent chapel in Ledwell, it
was often called a church. After the Reformation
it was treated as an independent church. In 1977
the benefice was united with Westcott Barton,
Steeple Barton, and Duns Tew. (fn. 176)
Ledwell was also a chapelry of Steeple Barton
in the late 12th century. In 1217 it was served
from Steeple Barton or Sandford, in 1225 from
Sandford, but in 1240 the rector of Great Tew
was censured for taking tithes and other dues in
the township. (fn. 177)
The advowson followed the descent of Steeple
Barton, and in 1559 was divided among John
Blundell's coheirs. (fn. 178) Grants of a turn had been
made in 1608 and 1610; in 1635 Thomas and
Elizabeth Waller held a moiety of the advowson,
and for the remainder of the century their
descendants presented alternately with the
Croker family. (fn. 179) At least three out of the four
early 18th-century vicars were presented by the
Wallers' successors the Taylors. The descent of
the Crokers' share of the advowson is obscure,
but at least an interest in it seems to have passed,
with the advowson of Steeple Barton, to the duke
of Marlborough. (fn. 180) In 1784 a third of the advowson
was confirmed to the duke by an agreement
reached between James Taylor and Mary
Heywood after Mrs. Heywood had claimed it
as belonging to her share of the tithes. (fn. 181) The
Taylors' two turns passed, with the manor, to
the Marshalls in 1828, to Lord Sandford in 1937,
and to Mrs. S. C. Rittson-Thomas in 1957. (fn. 182)
A vicarage, comprising the small tithes, 4½ a. of
land, all obventions, and altar fees, was ordained
in 1217 when Oseney abbey appropriated Steeple
Barton rectory; a third of the tithes of Grove Ash,
assigned for the maintenance of a chaplain at
Ledwell, formed part of Sandford vicarage by
1225. (fn. 183) The vicarage was valued at 15s. in 1254
and £7 0s. 4½d. in 1535. (fn. 184) By 1635 the glebe had
increased to ½ yardland, and in 1675 the living
was worth £22 15s. 5d. (fn. 185) Henry Meads (d. 1755)
gave £100 for four sermons; his executrix, Anne
Roberts, and the vicar, John Blake, gave a further
£100, and in 1757 Queen Anne's Bounty met
the benefaction with a further £200. In 1761
the £400 was invested in land in Barford St.
Michael. (fn. 186) At inclosure in 1768 the vicar received
c. 12 a. for glebe and c. 56 a. for tithes. His third of
the tithes of Grove Ash had already been commuted for a modus of £20 a year. (fn. 187) In 1814 the
living was worth c. £185 net, but in 1831 the
average income was only £175 a year; in 1831
the endowments in land were worth £205 a year,
fees £2. (fn. 188)
There was a vicarage house on the south side of
the church in 1258. (fn. 189) By the late 18th century it
was used only as a source of income, the vicar
complaining that when he had been forced to
spend a night there it had been far too cold. (fn. 190) In
1814 the house was largely rebuilt, and a new
wing added. It was further enlarged in 1842 when
the original house was demolished and replaced
by a square, two-storeyed house of rubble with
ashlar quoins and lintels, facing west on the
village street; the wing of 1814 remained as
servants' quarters and offices. (fn. 191) It was sold in
1975.
At least nine of the later 15th- and early 16thcentury vicars held university degrees, but such
men presumably spent much of their time in
Oxford. (fn. 192) The vicar c. 1520 was apparently
resident, but he was reported to have two women
living in his house, and he was also censured for
saying mass twice a day. The inhabitants of
Grove Ash were criticized for attending Sandford
church only four times a year; they presumably
went to Ledwell, or perhaps Nether Worton, at
other times. (fn. 193) William Medyn of Deddington, by
will dated 1499, left £5 6s. 8d. for a chantry for
a year in Sandford church, £6 13s. 4d. for a
portable breviary for the church, and 3s. 4d. to
the vicar. (fn. 194)
The chapel of St. Mary Magdalene in Ledwell,
in existence by the late 12th century, was last
recorded in 1499 when William Medyn left it
6s. 8d. The surname 'by the graveyard' recorded
in Ledwell in 1279 suggests that it had burial
rights. (fn. 195) It is thought to have stood in the centre
of the village, on the east side of the road which
once went to Worton.
The 16th century and the early 17th were
marked by a series of short incumbencies.
Robert Foster, 1560–3, had subscribed to the
Elizabethan settlement in 1559 as rector of Over
Worton. (fn. 196) Tange or Tangind Beale, 1566–78,
died in office bequeathing 6d. to each poor
household and 12d. to the parish poor box. (fn. 197) In
1601 the vicar, who held Steeple Barton in
plurality, was deprived for adultery. (fn. 198) In 1605
the church was served by a curate, and William
Payton, vicar 1618–c. 1624, continued his studies,
presumably in Oxford, during his incumbency. (fn. 199)
Thomas Belcher, vicar c. 1624–c. 1656, retained
the living throughout the Civil War, although he
was deprived of Westcott Barton, which he had
acquired in 1640, in 1646; he was still living in
Sandford in 1659. (fn. 200) His successor at Sandford
was Hannibal Potter, the deposed president of
Trinity College, Oxford, who was appointed in
1658. (fn. 201) In 1663 the vicar was Edward Cockson,
vicar of Steeple Barton 1661–1712; he was succeeded in 1678 by his brother Henry Cockson
who held the living until his death in 1695. (fn. 202) He
was accused c. 1685 of not catechizing, and in
1694 he was excommunicated for performing an
irregular marriage in Great Tew, where he was
vicar. (fn. 203)
In 1738 the usual services were morning and
evening prayer with one sermon on Sundays;
holy communion was administered three times a
year, at the great festivals. (fn. 204) By 1768 the number
of communion services had risen to four a year,
and there were prayers, with Henry Meads's
sermons, on Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, 1
January, and 5 November, (fn. 205) but otherwise services remained the same throughout the 18th
century. Many vicars, notably John Blake, 1750–
84, who lived in Warwickshire, and Edward
Walker, 1784–1807, also vicar of Steeple Barton, (fn. 206)
were pluralists, and the church was served by
curates, often themselves non-resident. (fn. 207) Nevertheless, Sandford seems to have been comparatively well served until 1801 when a group of
parishioners complained to the bishop that
Walker's curate, who served three other churches,
had abandoned weekday services, reduced the
number of Sunday services to one in the winter,
and ceased to catechize. The trouble may have
been exacerbated by ill feeling between the
Taylors at the Manor and the Coxes at the Park;
although Walker was Taylor's brother-in-law,
the objectors were led by James, William, and
Catherine Taylor, while the curate's chief supporter was Samuel Cox. The new curate, licensed
in 1801 on the bishop's instructions, was the
Taylors' cousin Edward Marshall (later Edward
Marshall Hacker). (fn. 208) Under him and his brother
and successor Nicholas Marshall, both of whom
lived in Enstone, church life improved somewhat,
the number of communicants rising from 14
in 1802 to c. 20 in 1805 and 1811; the number
fell again to c. 15, after Nicholas's departure in
1813. (fn. 209)
William Thorp, vicar 1807–35, lived in Sandford from 1814, but the living was too poor to
support him, and in 1818 he served South
Newington as curate, and in 1827 Westcott
Barton. (fn. 210) The comparative neglect which Sandford suffered was reflected in Thorp's frequent
complaints that many of his parishioners attended
other churches or conventicles, or were inclined
to Methodism. (fn. 211) Thorp seems to have died in
poverty, and Edward Marshall Hacker, who
presented himself to the living in 1835, appointed
his son Charles as his curate and gave him the use
of the vicarage house. (fn. 212)
After Marshall Hacker's death in 1839 there
was a vacancy until 1841 when the bishop
presented, by lapse, Thomas Curme, the duke of
Marlborough's chaplain, who was already serving the church. (fn. 213) Curme was a sincere and
staunch Evangelical who increased the number
of communion services to one a month and
preached twice each Sunday. His ministry was
popular in the parish and neighbourhood. In
1851 congregations averaged 210 in the morning
and 220 in the afternoon, and in 1854 Curme
reported that the church was sometimes full on
Sunday evenings. (fn. 214) Curme was antagonistic to
the Oxford movement, and the leader of a group
of North Oxfordshire clergy opposed to Bishop
Wilberforce. The bishop, while considering him
a 'man of piety' and 'devout', clearly found him
disruptive, and protested strongly at some of his
activities, notably his public support in 1848 of
a clergyman who had become a nonconformist
minister, and his interference in 1853 in Steeple
Aston parish. (fn. 215)
On Curme's death in 1884 Edward Marshall
presented himself to the living and held it until
his death in 1899. (fn. 216) His high church views were a
complete contrast to Curme's; he increased the
number of communion services to one a week in
1886, and introduced daily prayers. In 1896 he
was able to report an increase in the number of
communicants. (fn. 217) A further increase was reported
by his successor in 1902. (fn. 218)
The church of ST. MARTIN comprises a
chancel, aisled and clerestoried nave, west tower,
and south porch. The narrow north aisle of three
bays was added to the nave in the late 12th or
early 13th century. Extensive alterations and
additions were made in the mid 13th century
when the chancel (demolished in the 19th
century) and the south aisle were added; the work
may perhaps account for the dedication of the
church recorded in 1273. (fn. 219) The surviving chancel
arch is particularly striking, being built of
alternating light and dark stones. The south aisle
was widened in the early 14th century when the
vaulted south porch of two storeys was added,
and later in that century new windows were
inserted in the east walls of the chancel and the
tower was built. In the 15th century the clerestory
was added and the west tower remodelled.
The tower, porch, and chancel were all presented as out of repair at various times in the later
18th century and the early 19th, and the chancel
was repaired by E. Marshall Hacker and S. F.
Cox in 1827. (fn. 220) In 1844 and 1845 the church was
thoroughly repaired and the interior rearranged. (fn. 221)
Further repairs were carried out in 1853, and in
1856 the chancel was rebuilt by G. E. Street at
the expense of Edwin Guest; the 14th-century
east window was preserved and inserted in the
new building. (fn. 222) The windows in the north aisle
seem to have been replaced at the same time. (fn. 223)
The 12th-century font with zigzag carving has
been roughly shaped to fit a later octagonal base.
The 15th-century rood screen survived until
the reordering of the interior in 1844, and
fragments remained in 1910. (fn. 224) What appears to
have been the rood beam was in use in 1979 to
support the arms of Elizabeth I on the west wall
of the chancel above the arch. Fragments of
medieval glass are preserved in the windows of
the south aisle, and glass by John Piper was
inserted in the east window of the north aisle in
1973 as part of the septcentenary celebrations of
the church. (fn. 225)
There are a number of wall plaques, the
earliest and one of the most elaborate that to
Thomas Giles (d. 1637). On the nave walls are
five hatchments: Henry Scott, earl of Deloraine
(d. 1730), and his wife Anne (d. 1720), James
Sayer (d. 1776), and two members of the Taylor
family. In the churchyard is the humpbacked
tomb of the earl and countess of Deloraine.
The plate includes a silver chalice given in
1691, and a paten of about the same date. (fn. 226) There
are six bells the earliest of 1629 and 1630. (fn. 227)
Nonconformity.
A few papists or dissenters were occasonally reported in the later
17th century and the 18th, (fn. 228) but only the Quakers,
who were closely connected with the Quaker
community in South Newington, survived long.
There was at least one Quaker in the parish in
1663, but no more were reported until 1768. (fn. 229)
Between 1784 and 1825 six Quakers from
Ledwell were buried at South Newington, five of
them members of the Jeffcoat family who moved
to Ledwell from South Newington c. 1782. (fn. 230)
Four adult members of the family were baptized
in 1797. (fn. 231) Joseph Harris, a member of another
South Newington Quaker family, farmed at
Grove Ash from 1791 to 1801 or later. (fn. 232)
Many Sandford people were said to attend
conventicles in neighbouring parishes in 1817,
and in 1823 the absentees were identified as
Methodists. (fn. 233) A Ranters or Primitive Methodist
meeting was occasionally held at a house in
Sandford c. 1850, (fn. 234) and in 1854 a chapel was built
at Ledwell; it closed c. 1955. (fn. 235)
Education.
In the later 18th century there
was usually a small school for c. 8 poor children. (fn. 236)
It was supported by a charity, presumably that of
Henry Meads and Anne Roberts mentioned
below. In 1808 there were two schools, attended
by c. 20 boys and c. 10 girls. (fn. 237) By 1815 the
numbers had risen to c. 40 boys and c. 20 girls,
and there was also a Sunday school for 12 girls,
established by Mrs. R. Kynaston of Sandford
Park, (fn. 238) but in 1818 only 10 boys and 5 girls were
at school. (fn. 239) A day school started in 1820 contained
4 boys and 17 girls in 1833, and a further 38
infants, 26 boys, and 34 girls were taught in two
infant and two day schools largely supported by
Mrs. Perrot of Sandford Park. (fn. 240) The infant
school collapsed that year on Mrs. Perrot's
departure, and numbers in the day schools fell
sharply. In 1834 the only infant school was one in
Ledwell for 10 children. (fn. 241)
In 1843 a school for 83 children was built on
glebeland north of Sandford village, largely at the
expense of E. Marshall, Mrs. Marshall Hacker,
and S. F. Cox. A separate room for infants was
added c. 1865. The school was supported by
subscriptions and children's pence; it received a
government grant from 1867. (fn. 242) In 1858 there
were 59 children on the roll but average attendance was only 47; there was also an evening
school during the winter. (fn. 243) In 1868 a quarter of
the children under 10 were habitually absent, and
16 boys under 13 were agricultural labourers. (fn. 244)
Average attendance increased from 50 in 1871 to
65 in 1890, but thereafter declined with the
decreasing population of the parish. (fn. 245)
There was one certificated teacher in the
school in 1858. (fn. 246) In the 1870s the mistress was
assisted only by E. Marshall's and the vicar's
daughters, who were quite unqualified, and in
1879 the government inspector insisted on the
appointment of an assistant teacher. Standards
improved in the 1880s, but in the 1890s the
school buildings were inadequate, and there was
again no qualified assistant. In 1898 the managers
were severely rebuked for trying to divert a grant
for an assistant teacher to the provision of a
water-supply. (fn. 247)
In 1930 the school was reorganized as a junior
school, older children going to Steeple Aston.
Attendance fell from 28 in 1930 to 17 in 1939, and
the school was closed in 1947, the children being
transferred to Middle Barton school. In 1979
juniors attended Middle Barton county primary
school, seniors Chipping Norton comprehensive. (fn. 248)
Henry Meads (d. 1755) and Anne Roberts (d.
1767) apparently gave money or land for the
schooling of eight poor children. (fn. 249) By 1768 the
charity comprised c. 6½ a. in Barford St. Michael,
the profits of which rose from £3 3s. a year before
inclosure in 1808 to £6 6s. a year in 1811. The
number of children benefiting rose to 10 in 1802
and to 15 in 1833. (fn. 250) After 1842 the money was
used to support children at the parish school.
Since the school's closure it has been applied to
more general educational purposes, notably the
church hall and the Sunday school. (fn. 251)
Charities for the poor.
Thomas Giles,
by will dated 1637, left £100 to the poor. (fn. 252) Most
of the money was lost in the later 17th century
and the early 18th, and in 1756 the remaining £20
was invested in land in Westcott Barton. In the
19th century it was used, with the profits of
the poor's allotment made under the inclosure
award of 1768, to buy coal at Christmas. (fn. 253) It
was still so used in 1972, but a Scheme of 1970
authorized relief in cash or kind, in general or
particular. (fn. 254)
John Lock (d. 1711) gave £40 for an annual
dole of food. The charity was lost c. 1780. (fn. 255)
Henry Meads (d. 1755) and Anne Roberts
(d. 1767) provided for an annual dole of bread, as
well as for the education of poor children. The
dole was still distributed in 1812, but had been
lost by 1852. (fn. 256)