NETHER WORTON
Nether Worton, a small parish of 734 a. (297
ha.) until its amalgamation with Over Worton in
1932, (fn. 1) lies 3½ miles (6 km.) west of Deddington
and 9 miles (15 km.) south of Banbury. (fn. 2) In the
Middle Ages it was a chapelry of Great Tew, but
was later considered a separate parish. (fn. 3) It was
sometimes called Little Worton, (fn. 4) presumably
because its population was then smaller than that
of Over Worton, although its area was larger.
The land is mostly Lower Lias clay, but in the
north west, on Iron Down and its outlier Hawk
hill where the ground rises to c. 140 m., there are
patches of Middle Lias clay and marlstone. (fn. 5) On
the north the parish was bounded by the road
from Chipping Norton to Deddington, presumably an ancient route, and on much of the
east by a small brook; the southern boundary
followed the slope on which stands Over Worton
village, and the western boundary partly followed
a stream, but for a short stretch south of Nether
Worton village where it followed the Ledwell
road. The right angle formed by the road at that
point suggests that it was rerouted to follow
inclosure fences, a footpath east of the parish
boundary perhaps marking the line of the earlier
road. (fn. 6) A road from Great Tew, probably finally
abandoned after the inclosure of Sandford parish
in 1768, when it was described as an ancient
bridle path, (fn. 7) entered Nether Worton south of
the right angle. Running north from the village
the road to Barford crosses the stream by a bridge
which was mentioned in 1588 (fn. 8) but rebuilt in
modern times; narrow gated lanes run east from
the village towards Duns Tew and south to Over
Worton.
A large Iron-Age fortification on the eastern
edge of the parish at Ilbury (fn. 9) may have a counterpart at Hawk hill where there are earthworks of
unknown date. The Anglo-Saxon name Worton
(Ortune), a settlement by a bank or slope, may
have been applied first to Over Worton, since
Nether Worton lies on fairly level ground, in a
wide, remote valley beside a small tributary of the
river Cherwell once called Tomwell. (fn. 10) The village
retains the characteristic appearance of a shrunk
settlement, flanked by pastures with deep ridge
and furrow, and comprising only a small church,
three or four cottages, Manor Farm, and, within
a high-walled park, Nether Worton House. (fn. 11) All
the buildings are in local stone. In the mid 17th
century the owners of the two large houses, John
Parsons and William Draper, having acquired
between them all the land in the parish, agreed to
inclose it. (fn. 12) Detached farms were built later in the
north at Blackpits and in the south east at New
House Farm. Apart from a farmhouse on the
west side of the village, perhaps first established
in the 18th century, (fn. 13) and a schoolroom of 1820
abutting the church, the other buildings are farm
cottages of the 17th century and later. In Mill
close, west of the park, there seem to be foundations of buildings which presumably included
the mill. (fn. 14) A suggestion that 'moats' in the
grounds of Nether Worton House and north of
the church may once have defended the village
site (fn. 15) seems unlikely: the southern sections appear
to be fishponds associated with the landscaping
of the grounds of Nether Worton House.
The 27 families in Nether Worton in 1279 (fn. 16)
probably represent a total population larger than
any recorded until the 19th century. The amalgamation of properties in fewer and fewer hands (fn. 17)
from the later Middle Ages was probably attended
by a steady reduction in population. Parish
registers suggest a total population of perhaps
60–70 by the 1560s, and in 1642 the Protestation
oath was sworn by 18 adult males, but the
Drapers and presumably some of their servants
were then absent. (fn. 18) Only the Draper and Parsons
families were assessed for hearth tax in 1662, but
46 adults were recorded in 1676. (fn. 19) The figure of
57 inhabitants given in 1801 included a disproportionate number of males and as many as 7
families engaged in trade, perhaps because building operations for William Wilson had brought in
outside labour. (fn. 20) The population rose to 96 in
1821 and 94 in 1831, falling sharply to 59 in 1841,
and varying thereafter between 69 and 29, the
low figure (in 1891) perhaps explained by the
absence of the principal family and its servants.
The combined population of Over and Nether
Worton was 114 in 1931 and 108 in 1971. (fn. 21) There
were few craftsmen or tradesmen in the village in
the 19th century and no shops; 2 victuallers were
licensed in the mid 18th century but none
thereafter. (fn. 22)
During the Civil War and Interregnum the
small community was deeply divided, for the
two principal inhabitants, John Parsons and
William Draper, though relatives and close
neighbours, found themselves on opposite sides.
Parsons compounded as a royalist, (fn. 23) while Draper
emerged as a prominent local supporter of parliament, serving on sequestration and other commissions, appointed visitor of Oxford University
in 1647, governor of Oxford in 1651, M.P. for the
county in 1653, and high sheriff in 1655 and
1657. (fn. 24) Prolonged wrangling between the inhabitants and Parsons, the lay rector, over provision for the incumbent (fn. 25) was presumably
encouraged by Draper; even so Draper and
Parsons co-operated over the inclosure of Nether
Worton in 1648–9.
Draper's brother-in-law, the author Francis
Osborne, whose Advice to a Son was one of the
popular successes of the period, died at Nether
Worton House in 1659. (fn. 26)
Manors and other estates.
All three
estates recorded in 1086 in the Wortons (fn. 27) may
have lain in Nether Worton. The later descent of
½ hide held by Turstin of the bishop of Coutances
and 2 hides less ½ yardland held by Alwi, a king's
serjeant, shows that they lay in Nether Worton;
both were held before the Conquest by Levet.
The third estate, sometimes ascribed to Over
Worton, (fn. 28) comprised 3 hides and ½ yardland held
of Odo of Bayeux by Adam, son of Hubert de
Rys; Levet is not recorded as Adam's predecessor
but it seems certain that the holdings of Adam
and Alwi once formed a single five-hide estate.
The nature of its division, involving the partition
of a single yardland, makes it unlikely that it lay
in two townships. Moreover the number of
yardlands in the three 13th-century estates in
Nether Worton thought to represent the three
Domesday holdings accords well with the
11th-century hidation, whereas Over Worton
contained far too many yardlands to be accounted
for by Adam's estate. (fn. 29) Adam's two mills have
not been traced in Over Worton, whereas the ½
fee in Nether Worton later held of the Bassets
contained two mills.
Adam's estate probably passed to his brother
Eudes the sewer, escheating to the Crown on his
death in 1120. (fn. 30) In 1242 the ½ fee in NETHER
WORTON was held of Fulk Basset as of Kirt
lington manor; (fn. 31) it may have been connected
with Kirtlington by 1130, when Jordan de Sai,
lord of that manor, granted to the Norman abbey
of Aunay a chapel and demesne tithes possibly in
Nether Worton. (fn. 32) The overlordship of the ½ fee
followed the descent of Kirtlington, being held in
1279 by Ela, countess of Warwick, formerly wife
of Philip Basset, (fn. 33) in 1351 by William de Bohun,
earl of Northampton, (fn. 34) to whom it had been
granted in 1332, and then by his son Humphrey,
earl of Hereford (d. 1373). (fn. 35) It presumably
passed to the Crown with the rest of the Bohun
inheritance. The earliest known demesne tenant
was Henry of Worton, mentioned as a knight of
Oxfordshire from 1207, and holding the manor in
1229. (fn. 36) His son John held it in 1242, but in 1279
and 1285 the tenant was Robert of the Hall, (fn. 37)
already the holder of another Nether Worton
estate devised from Alwi's holding of 1086.
By 1198 that estate was a serjeanty, the service
being defined as bearing a banner before the foot
levies of Wootton hundred or, more vaguely,
before the people going to the coast. Robert son
of Alan was tenant in 1198 and 1236, his son
William in 1238 and 1247. (fn. 38) By 1250, when
Robert son of Alan was recorded as William's
heir, two thirds of the estate had been alienated,
mostly to Robert's brothers. (fn. 39) In keeping with
royal policy towards serjeanties an additional
service of a rent of 13s. 4d. was imposed by the
king to be paid to the sheriff and made due from
the holders of alienated land; Walter, the brother
with the largest share of alienated land, was made
responsible for the payment. The distinction
between the senior line of the family owing the
serjeanty service and a junior line owing rent was
preserved in 1279 when Robert and Nicholas of
the Hall were the tenants, (fn. 40) but it was lost later
and the successors of Robert were held liable for
both service and rent.
By 1279 both the ½ fee and the serjeanty had
been split up among various freeholders, who
shared the burden of scutage and other extrinsic
services but mostly paid only a nominal rent. (fn. 41)
The lordships were smaller and less profitable
than some of the free holdings, and the term
manor was not applied to them before the end of
the Middle Ages; the descent of both may be
traced in the holding of Robert of the Hall.
He gave the serjeanty to Walter of Bicester in
1316, and in 1321 it passed to William Page. (fn. 42)
Probably by 1326, and certainly by 1346, Page
had acquired the ½ fee, and in 1351 he settled his
lands on his son Richard. (fn. 43) After the deaths of
Richard in 1375 and his son Richard in 1386 the
estate passed to John Norton of Deddington who
conveyed it in 1387 to John Hilton. (fn. 44) Hilton
settled it in 1409 on his son William and William's
wife Catherine. (fn. 45) In 1435 it passed to their
daughter Isabel, wife of William Birmingham
(d. 1478), and in 1500 her son William Birmingham died holding LITTLE WORTON manor. (fn. 46)
It passed to his second wife Margaret and her son
Henry, though claimed by the heirs of his first
wife, Agnes, who alleged bigamy. (fn. 47) Margaret
married Walter Bulstrode, and when Henry
Birmingham died in 1532, two years before his
mother, a James Bulstrode married his relict,
Goodith. (fn. 48) The Bulstrodes were thus able to
retain Worton, despite continued opposition,
including allegations that Goodith had poisoned
her first husband. (fn. 49) Her son William Birmingham
was dead by 1554, and a final settlement with the
other Birminghams seems to have been made in
1560. (fn. 50) In 1562 Goodith settled the manor on her
son-in-law, Thomas Nash, from whom it passed
by sale to Richard Purefoy in 1576 and Philip
Babington, a junior member of the prominent
recusant family, in 1578. (fn. 51) He sold it in 1590 to
John Penn of Penn (Bucks.); (fn. 52) William Penn
conveyed it in 1636 to Richard Roberts, whose
feoffees sold it in 1641 to William Draper. (fn. 53)
The Drapers came from Kent, William having
married in 1636 Mary Parsons (d. 1639), whose
family held the other chief estate in Nether
Worton. (fn. 54) William died in 1671 and the Kentish
connexion was broken when lands were sold
under the will of his son William (d. 1673); (fn. 55) a
third William (d. 1746) moved to Yorkshire after
marrying Anne, daughter of Ingilby Daniell of
Beswick. (fn. 56) but his eldest son Daniel Draper of
Beverley eventually moved back to Worton, was
buried there in 1757, and in his will ordered the
sale of Beswick and the improvement of the
Worton estate. (fn. 57) The Drapers became sole landowners in Nether Worton by acquiring the
Parsons estate; (fn. 58) Daniel's son William was high
sheriff in 1771, and the family lived at Worton
until the death of William's son Col. William in
1797, when the estate was sold to a wealthy
London silk manufacturer, William Wilson. (fn. 59)
Wilson became sole landowner of both Wortons
but seems to have lived at Nether Worton. A
division of the estate at his death in 1821 gave
Nether Worton to his eldest son Joseph (d. 1855),
who settled it on Joseph Henry Wilson in 1854. (fn. 60)
In the same year the estate was sold, (fn. 61) part to
M. P. W. Boulton of Great Tew, part (Blackpits
farm) to John Painter, and the manor and Manor
farm to Sir John Warren Hayes; he still held it in
1891, though his son John Beauchamp Hayes
(d. 1884) was recorded as lord in the 1870s and
1880s. (fn. 62) The manor passed to John Beauchamp's
daughter Annie Ellen Hayes, (fn. 63) from whom it was
purchased before 1911 by A. C. Thimbleby of
Whitley, in Reading (Berks). Much of the land
was purchased in the 1920s by Sir George
Schuster, who later acquired the manorial rights,
transferring them to his son J. B. Schuster. (fn. 64)
Nether Worton House, built in local stone and
stone slate, incorporates a house of the mid 17th
century or earlier which had a short central range
with crosswings projecting to the north; there is a
datestone of 1653. The house was remodelled in
the 1920s by Sir George Schuster, its lessee from
1918 and owner from 1927; the house was greatly
enlarged by adding a passage and porch across
the front, with balancing wings in traditional
style on the east and west, forming a walled
forecourt on the north side. The grounds include
an embanked stream or ornamental canal,
perhaps of the 18th century.
The ½ hide held in 1086 by Turstin and valued
at 10s. followed the descent of other estates held
of Geoffrey, bishop of Coutances, becoming part
of the honor of Gloucester; in 1279 it comprised 2
yardlands in Nether Worton attached to Burford
manor, held by Richard Parsons (Persona) in
socage for 10s. rent to the honor. (fn. 65) The Domesday
value was evidently the rent. A John Parsons had
witnessed a Nether Worton charter before 1250,
and members of the family were recorded in the
parish until c. 1360, the estate being held in 1314
by Richard and in 1351 by John Parsons. (fn. 66) A
William Parsons who took the oath to observe the
peace in 1434 was probably of Nether Worton, (fn. 67)
but the family may have moved to Warwickshire,
where many Parsonses were recorded at that
time, and where the family certainly held estates
later. (fn. 68) By the 16th century there were representatives in Nether Worton again. The connexion with Burford was recorded as late as 1552
when a Parsons held of that manor for 11s. rent. (fn. 69)
Richard Parsons (d. 1545) and his son Richard
(d. 1571) probably held little more than the
original estate and an additional 1½ yardland, (fn. 70)
but a third Richard before his death in 1626
acquired all the land in Nether Worton except for
the manorial estate. He left 10½ yardlands to his
eldest son Robert and 7¼ to his son Richard. (fn. 71) On
his death in 1636 Robert's heir was Mary, who
married William Draper; (fn. 72) thereafter that part of
the estate descended with the manor. The junior
branch of the Parsons family continued to
flourish: Richard died in 1634, his son Richard in
1646, which left a second son John, who later
compounded as a royalist. (fn. 73) His son William
succeeded in 1682 and died in 1715 without male
heir. (fn. 74) From 1682 the estate was burdened with
annuities, and in 1723 it passed to Mary Wilson,
daughter of one of the trustees, who sold it
in 1728 to William Bumpstead. (fn. 75) In 1733
Bumpstead and Mary his wife conveyed the
estate to John Campbell, duke of Argyll, in whose
family it remained in 1760. (fn. 76) By 1786, and probably by 1783, it had passed to William Draper. (fn. 77)
Manor Farm, the house associated with the
Parsons estate, incorporates on the south a small,
probably 17th-century, house of 3-roomed plan;
there was a datestone of 1645. Additions, including a staircase, were made on the north side later
in the 17th century. In the 19th century a north
service wing was added, and it may have been
then that the roof was entirely reconstructed.
Twentieth-century alterations included a further
addition on the north and a south porch, and the
removal of several internal walls.
A freehold of 6½ yardlands, held in 1279 by
Osbert Giffard, knight, seems to have been
acquired by an earlier Osbert Giffard from
Henry of Worton in 1229, later becoming the
subject of a dispute involving John of Worton
and Gilbert Basset, the overlord, apparently over
wardship. (fn. 78) The Giffard holding seems to have
been dispersed in the later Middle Ages. Another
large freehold was built up by the descendants of
William of Bray who held 2 yardlands in 1279. (fn. 79)
By 1307 Richard of Bray had acquired another
2½ yardlands; his son John died in 1349 holding
5 yardlands, and his grandson Richard of Bray
(d. 1368) increased the estate to 6½ yardlands. (fn. 80)
John of Bray (d. 1451) left as heir a daughter
Gillian, wife of John Hatclyffe, (fn. 81) and in 1533
Thomas Hatclyffe sold lands formerly of William
Hatclyffe to Thomas Hall of Grove Ash and later
South Newington. (fn. 82) In 1555 Hall's widow Joan
and her husband Henry Higford were in possession, and by 1568 it had passed to Margaret
Greswold, Thomas Hall's daughter. Her son
Henry gave it up to his elder brother Thomas in
1586, who sold it in 1594 as 'Hall's farm' to Ralph
Sheldon of Steeple Barton, who sold it in 1596 to
Richard Parsons. (fn. 83)
Between 1240 and 1244 William of Milcombe
gave a rent charge of 5s. from a yardland in
Nether Worton to St. John's hospital, Oxford. In
1299 Robert of the Hall, lord of Nether Worton,
after a dispute with the hospital placed liability
for the charge on the tenant of the yardland.
From the 16th century the Parsons family was
paying the 5s. (fn. 84)
Economic History.
Abundant ridge and
furrow, especially in the south of the parish,
indicates the probable location of the medieval
arable. (fn. 85) There were 24 yardlands in 1279 and
25¾, including the rectorial glebe, in the 17th
century. (fn. 86) Each yardland seems to have contained
between 20 and 25 field acres, judging from
medieval instances of 2¼ yardlands made up of
44 a. of arable and 1¼ a. of meadow, and 1½
yardland comprising 36 a. of arable and 2 a. of
meadow. (fn. 87) The well watered land provided
plentiful meadow, and in 1086 c. 70 a. were
recorded; (fn. 88) Inmede, presumably a demesne
meadow, was mentioned in 1241, (fn. 89) and in a
dispute over grazing rights in 1317 a group of
freeholders, headed by Richard Parsons, proved
against Richard of Bray that Furrowmede should
be common after the hay harvest. (fn. 90)
The marked reduction of population between
1279 and the 17th century, and a statement in
1650 that John Parsons's land had long been
under grass, (fn. 91) suggest that well before the inclosure of the parish in the mid 17th century
there had been a move towards pasture farming,
to which the predominantly clay soil was best
suited. In March 1634 Richard Parsons still
possessed 3 ploughs but had only 15 ridges of
winter corn, while in June 1636 Robert Parsons
owned 277 sheep and 180 lambs, though his
growing corn was worth £100. (fn. 92) The estimated
annual income of the Penn estate in the 1630s was
£146, of which as much as £80 came from 'hay
in the field'. (fn. 93)
In 1279 (fn. 94) there was a landholding population
of 25, excluding the 2 manorial lords, compared
with only 16 in 1086. (fn. 95) The demesne land of the
two manors, which in 1086 had been worked by
3 of the 8 recorded ploughs, had been reduced
to only 3 yardlands out of the 24; the close
correspondence between the hidation of 1086
and the yardlands of 1279 suggests that there had
been little extension of the cultivated area, and
the additional holding had been created largely
from the demesne. On the serjeanty estate (7½
yardlands) the process of fragmentation, far
advanced by 1250, (fn. 96) had continued; Robert and
Nicholas of the Hall held 2 yardlands each and
the rest was in the hands of 4 free tenants, who
were not enfranchised villeins but mostly
members of the lord's family. On the ½ fee (14½
yardlands) Robert of the Hall held only 1 yardland in demesne while another was held of him by
a villein; all the rest was held by free tenants. The
large freehold of Osbert Giffard had once comprised 2 yardlands of demesne and 4½ held by
villeins, but the demesne was divided among
unfree rent-paying tenants and the villeins paid
10s. a yardland for all services; the change had
probably been effected before 1247, when the
estate was rented at 44s. 4d., (fn. 97) almost exactly the
same as in 1279. In the whole township 15 of
the 25 landholders were freemen, and all labour
services had been commuted. Only 4 men had
cottage holdings of 2 a. or less, one being tenant
of one of the mills; there were 2 holdings of 7 a.,
another of ⅓ yardland, but the rest were ½
yardland or more.
Ownership was gradually concentrated in
fewer hands. By 1351 Robert of the Hall's estate
had been enlarged by two ½ yardlands, (fn. 98) bringing
it to the 5 yardlands which seem to have been
leased as a whole by 1533 (fn. 99) and were said in 1590
to be commonly occupied with the manor. (fn. 100) A
holding called Rimell's farm and ½ yardland
called Darrett's were added in the late 16th
century, bringing the total manorial holding to
8 yardlands. (fn. 101) By 1368 the Bray family had built
up a freehold estate of 6½ yardlands, which by the
16th century formed a single farm called Hall's, (fn. 102)
worked by substantial tenants: one of them,
Robert Paine (d. 1593), also held property in
Duns Tew and paid three times as much as any
other villager to the subsidy of 1581. (fn. 103) There was
still a handful of small husbandmen, such as
Richard Tims, with personalty worth only £56 at
his death in 1583, (fn. 104) or Richard Norton (d. 1597)
whose bequests of 40s. each to three daughters
contrasted sharply with Payne's bequests to three
daughters of £133 each. (fn. 105) By 1634 the houses and
lands of Tims and Norton had been acquired by
Richard Parsons, who kept his peas in Norton's
barn. (fn. 106) The Deanes, a yeoman family mentioned
frequently in Worton in the 16th century, finding
the freehold 1½ yardland of which they were
lessees being purchased by Richard Parsons,
tried in vain to buy it from him, but in 1615
Richard Deane was evicted and his house and
hovel became another of Parsons's storage
places. (fn. 107) The process whereby the junior branch
of the Parsons family brought together into
a larger agricultural unit the remaining small
holdings of which they already held the freehold
was only half completed in 1634, but by 1650
John Parsons seems to have occupied all his
land. (fn. 108) The owner of the rest of the township,
William Draper, was probably exploiting his
land directly, since in 1662 the only houses
assessed for hearth tax were those of Draper and
Parsons, (fn. 109) suggesting that there were no other
resident farmers. The shrinkage of the class of
small farmers at Nether Worton is reflected in the
number of their wills proved in local ecclesiastical courts: in the period 1542–99 there were 24,
but in the 17th century only 10, of which four
were of members of the two gentry families. (fn. 110)
The whole township was inclosed by agreement between William Draper and John Parsons
probably in the winter of 1648–9. (fn. 111) Later evidence
suggests that Parsons took the land north and east
of the village, perhaps the whole area between the
brook and the Chipping Norton road. Soon
afterwards Parsons ploughed up much of his
land, but it was avowedly an attempt to make
short-term profit from the current high grain
prices, (fn. 112) and there was probably an early return
to pasture: 18th-century conveyances describe
the Parsons estate as mainly pasture, and in 1733
William Draper stipulated that the greater part
of his land should remain under grass. (fn. 113) In 1797
the whole township appears to have been pasture except for a few fields in the north east
between Manor Farm and Ilbury, and in the
mid 19th century there were only c. 90 a. of
arable. (fn. 114)
In 1692 the Draper estate was divided among
10 lessees, of whom four were gentlemen; one
holding accounted for about a third of the total
rental of £420, and although three houses were
let the landholders seem to have lived outside the
township. The piecemeal tenure may reflect the
recent abandonment of direct cultivation by
William Draper on his removal to Yorkshire. By
1700 there were four tenants with land rated at
£80 or more, but although the small men holding
a single field steadily disappeared the emergence
of fixed farms was slow: from 1720 there were
usually only half a dozen tenants, but the field
tended to be reshuffled when leases were renewed.
One landholder usually held the manor house
and another a homestead known as Palmer's, but
some of the land was worked from outside the
parish; when a Steeple Aston man took four fields
in 1723 it was agreed that a barn should be built in
them for his use. (fn. 115) When Daniel Draper began to
take a closer interest in the estate after 1746 he
was soon at law with one of the larger tenants,
John Davis, who seems to have used his position
as unofficial agent at Nether Worton to defraud
Draper of large sums. (fn. 116) By 1786, when William
Draper was sole landowner in the parish, there
were only 5 tenants and from 1788 only 4, (fn. 117) their
holdings probably corresponding to the 4 farms
of the 19th century.
The farms were Mansion House (c. 164 a.),
sometimes let with Nether Worton House but
worked from a separate homestead west of the
crossroads (now Boultons), Manor farm (c. 190
a.), New House (c. 186 a.), and Worton Grounds,
later called Blackpits (c. 172 a.). (fn. 118) The homestead
of Mansion House farm and the buildings at New
House were marked on a map of 1767, but
Worton Grounds seems to have been an early
19th-century development. (fn. 119) The Owen family,
prominent among the farmers from the later 18th
century, held the lease of both Mansion House
and Manor farms in 1854, the latter until the
early 20th century. (fn. 120) The few cottages in the
township (8 in 1854) were almost all occupied by
agricultural labourers or servants; some of the
farmers presumably employed labourers from
outside the parish. (fn. 121) The farms remained predominantly pastoral; in 1914 the Wortons had a
higher recorded density of cattle (33 per 100 a.
of cultivated land) than any other Oxfordshire
parish, and all but a tenth of the land was under
grass. (fn. 122) After the Second World War the chief
landowner, J. B. Schuster, converted much of the
estate to arable, removing many of the 17thcentury field boundaries. By 1980 only two fifths
of the land was pasture, used for dairy farming
and horse breeding. (fn. 123)
In 1279 there were two mills in Nether Worton,
probably those recorded on Adam's estate in
1086. (fn. 124) A mill house, mentioned in 1634 and
between 1692 and 1720, (fn. 125) seems to have been
abandoned by the mid 19th century; its site was
presumably in a field west of the village called
Mill Close.
Local Government.
In 1279 Robert of
the Hall had a court at Nether Worton for which
he had to demand his liberty twice a year at the
hundred court, the bailiff of the hundred visiting
Nether Worton once a year to hold view of
frankpledge. A remnant of the annual view
continued into the 20th century. (fn. 126)
In 1854 Nether Worton had no church wardens,
but in the 17th century it had the usual two. (fn. 127) A
constable and two overseers of the poor were
appointed annually. Pauperism was rarely a
problem in such a small community, and most of
the overseers' payments were to the sick and
aged. (fn. 128) In the 1740s their total expenditure,
including the constable's bill, seems to have been
only c. £12; (fn. 129) Daniel Draper, though nonresident, arranged for the provision of light
employment for a few men and women who
might otherwise have become a charge upon the
parish. (fn. 130) In 1776 £13 was spent on the poor and
in 1803 £62, when 4 adults were on regular out
relief. (fn. 131) By 1813 that number had risen to 8, and
the cost of poor relief per head of population had
risen from c. £1 to £1 13s.; the cost fell to 14s. a
head in 1821, but rose sharply in the late 1820s,
bringing the cost to £1 7s. in 1831. (fn. 132) In 1834
Nether Worton was included in Woodstock poor
law union, being transferred in 1932 from Woodstock to Chipping Norton rural district, and in
1974 became part of West Oxfordshire district. (fn. 133)
Church.
The earliest evidence of a church at
Nether Worton is 12th-century work in the
building. A chapel and demesne tithes in Tew,
granted by Jordan de Sai to the Norman abbey of
Aunay in 1130, (fn. 134) may have been in Nether
Worton, which remained a chapelry of Great
Tew in the 16th century. In 1530 Nether
Worton's inhabitants objected to paying for the
tolling of the great bell at Tew for their funerals,
but they continued to have burial there throughout the century. (fn. 135) In 1576 Worton was described
wrongly as a chapelry of Broughton, (fn. 136) perhaps
because the link with Great Tew was becoming
weak, and the separation of Worton's tithes and
advowson from those of Tew in 1604 speeded
progress towards autonomy. The reconsecration
of the church in 1630 may have marked a change
in status, and from 1632 Nether Worton was used
regularly as a burial place. (fn. 137) In 1745 the curate
was adamant that Nether Worton formed a
distinct parish. (fn. 138) In 1928 the benefice was united
with that of Over Worton. (fn. 139)
The rectory of Great Tew, presumably including Worton, was acquired and appropriated by
Godstow abbey in 1309. (fn. 140) It is not known how
Nether Worton was served in the Middle Ages,
but in 1526 there was a priest and apparently an
endowed living, valued at £5 6s. 8d. and not set as
a charge against either Godstow abbey or the
vicar of Tew. (fn. 141) After the Dissolution the Crown
granted the tithes and advowson of Worton to
William Rainsford in 1541, together with Great
Tew rectory. (fn. 142) In 1604 Edward Rainsford sold the
chapel and tithes to Richard Parsons; (fn. 143) they were
settled on the junior line of the family and were
thus held in 1745 by Jane Campbell, duchess of
Argyll, passing later to William Draper, and
successive lords of the manor. (fn. 144)
There was a priest's house and a yardland of
glebe, leased in 1551 with the rectory by William
Rainsford to James Bulstrode; in 1567 they were
seized by the Crown as concealed lands and were
not finally recovered by Humphrey Rainsford
until c. 1574, (fn. 145) after which they went with the
tithes to Richard Parsons. (fn. 146) Uncertainty over the
endowments and status of the living continued as
the impropriators treated it much as a private
chapel, appointing curates with a minimum of
formality. (fn. 147) The villagers c. 1650 referred to the
living as a vicarage, but all incumbents from the
16th century onwards were curates. (fn. 148) The last
known resident curate, William Draper, by will
dated 1558 left half his lambs to his successor, (fn. 149)
implying perhaps that he had tithe of lambs; later
curates, usually provided from among the neighbouring clergy, had no endowment as of right,
although the Parsons family seems to have paid a
small stipend in the early 17th century. (fn. 150)
The sequestration of John Parsons's estate
during the Civil War encouraged the villagers to
seek improvement of the living: after a resolution
of the Committee of Plundered Ministers to raise
a minister's stipend of £50 had come to nothing,
Parsons's fine was reduced on condition that he
provided £20 to the living, but the inhabitants
also pressed in 1648 for the return of the glebe
house and yardland. (fn. 151) In 1666 Parsons was again
charged, apparently without effect, with unjustly
detaining the property. (fn. 152) By then he was paying
£10 a year to the church, having at one time paid
£12, but he denied having any obligation to pay
anything. (fn. 153) In 1686 his son William refused all
payment, arousing much indignation for his
'unchristianlike neglect' in allowing the chapel to
be void. Opposition was led by William Gannock,
guardian of the young William Draper, owner of
the other large estate in the parish, and it was
probably Gannock's threat to withhold tithes
rather than the 'modest advice' of the bishop that
persuaded Parsons to accept his obligation and
leave in his will of 1715 a charge on his estate of
£10 for church purposes. (fn. 154)
The meagreness of the provision was justified
partly by the low income from the tithes, probably
close to the £20 a year declared by John Parsons
in 1650. (fn. 155) Once the parish had become two large
estates the tithes seem to have been commuted
for an agreed sum which reflected the relative
bargaining power of the Drapers and the impropriator: in 1656 John Parsons was leasing the
tithes to William Draper for only £10 a year,
whereas later the duke of Argyll as tithe-owner
received £40. (fn. 156) The insecure income of the living
was improved by augmentations from Queen
Anne's Bounty in 1745, 1769, and 1791, with
which land was purchased in Barford and South
Newington. (fn. 157) The living was valued at over £37
in 1808, rising to £50 after further augmentations
in 1810 and 1827, but was still no higher in the
1890s. (fn. 158)
The tendency for the cure to be served by the
vicar of Great Tew, as in the 1640s, (fn. 159) changed
after the Restoration to a close relationship with
Over Worton. All the 18th-century curates were
rectors of Over Worton, and although the two
livings were held separately at times in the 19th
century they remained together from 1864. (fn. 160) The
parishioners of the two Wortons were treated as a
single congregation, and services were held on
Sunday morning at one church and in the afternoon at the other. (fn. 161) Church life from the 18th
century is described under Over Worton.
The church of ST. JAMES (fn. 162) is a small
building comprising nave, short chancel, narrow
north and south aisles, and a south-west tower of
which the lower stage forms an entrance porch;
the west door opens into an attached schoolroom. (fn. 163) The bases of the south arcade piers show
that the 12th-century church comprised at least a
nave and aisle of three bays, presumably with a
chancel. The south doorway, though probably
not in situ, was built in the 13th century, but the
apparently 13th-century blind arches on the east
walls of the aisles may be later, decorative work.
In the early 14th century the nave arcades and
chancel arch were rebuilt, and square-headed
windows inserted in the aisles. In 1630, at the
expense of Robert Parsons, a small tower was
built into the west bay of the south aisle, (fn. 164) the
13th-century south doorway forming its entrance.
At an unknown date before the late 18th century
the medieval chancel was demolished and rebuilt
as a shallow recess, only 5ft. deep, with a re-used
14th-century east window. (fn. 165) In 1883 it was said
that there was 'not a fitting in the church worthy
of the House of God', and a restoration was
carried out, which included further reconstruction of the east window, (fn. 166) the renewal of the altar
rails and pulpit, the creation of a railed choir in
the body of the nave, and the reflooring of the
church. (fn. 167)
The monuments include 17th-century floor
slabs, mostly illegible, to members of the Parsons
and Draper families and to Francis Osborne
(d. 1659), (fn. 168) an elaborate mural tablet to William
Wilson (d. 1821) by Henry Westmacott of
London, and memorials to Joseph Wilson (d.
1855), his family, and members of the Schuster
family. On the north wall is a large mural
monochrome by Grace Wilson, based on a painting by Raphael of Christ bearing the Cross. The
font is modern, but the earlier, 18th-century,
font, with a small fluted bowl and baluster stem,
survives in the north-west corner of the church.
There are two bells, the older dated 1601. (fn. 169) The
plate includes a chalice of c. 1680. (fn. 170) The 18thcentury clock is said to have been originally in
Heythrop House. (fn. 171)
Nonconformity.
The brief connexion of
the Babington family with Nether Worton had
its effect in encouraging Catholic recusancy,
and 2 of that family and 5 other parishioners,
perhaps household servants, were owing fines
in 1593. (fn. 172) The Babingtons' successors in the
manor, the Penns, seem to have been Catholics,
and Griffin Penn was fined in 1612. (fn. 173) A single
Catholic was reported at Nether Worton in
1738. (fn. 174) There were 5 Protestant dissenters in
1676 but none in 1682. (fn. 175) A Quaker family was
recorded in 1768, and c. 4 nonconformists in
1854 attended meeting houses in neighbouring
parishes. (fn. 176)
Education.
There was no school until the
Wilson family came to the parish in the late 18th
century. (fn. 177) A private school mentioned in 1802
was probably the later Sunday school. (fn. 178) In 1808 a
day school was started in Nether Worton for the
children of both Wortons; the National plan was
adopted in 1814 and all the children of school age
were taught there largely at William Wilson's
expense. (fn. 179) The school house at the west end of
the church was apparently built before 1809. (fn. 180) In
1818 there were 32 pupils (fn. 181) and in 1834 there
were 15 boys and 20 girls on weekdays, a few
more on Sundays; pupils attended between the
ages of 5 and 10, and the incumbent taught older
children on two evenings a week. A free village
library was available to parishioners. (fn. 182) Evening
classes had ceased by 1854 when the school,
supported by the Revd. J. Wilson, had 25 pupils;
the mistress received 5s. a week and a free
cottage. (fn. 183) Numbers remained small, (fn. 184) reaching a
maximum of only 27 in 1891, although for a time
there were two mistresses. In 1891 a single
certificated teacher taught infants and juniors
under one roof, financed by church collections
and parents' contributions, graded according to
family size. (fn. 185) A government grant was first
received in 1893. (fn. 186) By 1920 only 10 children from
the two Wortons attended, and the school was
closed in 1937. In 1979 junior children travelled
to Steeple Aston and seniors to Bloxham. (fn. 187)
Charities for the poor.
None known.