ASTON AND COTE
ASTON AND COTE township (2,997 a.) adjoined
the parish boundary on the north and south. (fn. 14)
Parts of its eastern and south-eastern boundaries
were described in 10th- and 11th-century grants
of adjacent estates at Ducklington, Shifford, and
Chimney; its western boundary with Bampton and
Weald, discussed above, was established probably
after the mid 10th century, and followed furlongs
and divisions of common pasture and meadow. (fn. 15)
Abingdon Lane, an ancient route running southeastwards through Yelford and Brighthampton to
the Thames crossing at Newbridge, cut across
the township's northern tip. (fn. 16) A branch leading
southwards towards the Thames crossing at
Shifford ran down the eastern boundary from an
early date: its northern stretch, which branched
eastwards into Shifford and continued to
Brighthampton, was suppressed in 1629 because
of flooding, (fn. 17) and the southern stretch, called
'the way' in a description of Shifford's boundaries in 1005, was abandoned apparently
between 1625 and 1767. (fn. 18) Cote Lane presumably
also originated as a route to the river crossings
at Shifford or Duxford, and in the 18th and 19th
centuries continued through Shifford to Newbridge. (fn. 19) Kingsway Lane north-west of Aston
village, part of the pre-inclosure road from
Ducklington and Claywell to Bampton, may
have been important in the early Middle Ages,
and it has been suggested that its western end
formed part of an inferred minor Roman road
through Bampton from a crossing of the river
Windrush at Gill Mill; an intersecting track
running southwards to Aston village through
Stone Bridge furlong may have been part of a
'way' which ran south or south-westwards across
a stone bridge in the 10th century. (fn. 20)
The Brighthampton road, formerly a bridleway, was confirmed as the principal route
eastwards in the early 17th century, (fn. 21) and by the
late 18th roads or lanes linking Aston with
Bampton, Brighthampton, and Chimney largely
followed their later courses. (fn. 22) The earlier tracks
north of the village were suppressed at inclosure
c. 1853, when a new 30-ft. road from Aston to
Ducklington and Witney was laid out across the
former common and open fields; the Aston
section of Abingdon Lane was confirmed, and
Cote Lane was extended northwards to meet it.
The road towards Chimney was confirmed as a
20-ft. carriageway, with a tow path leading
westwards to Isle of Wight and Tadpole bridges
alongside the newly straightened Great brook. (fn. 23)
An Aston man was transporting wood and fuel
to Oxford by boat in the early 17th century, (fn. 24)
and in 1808 coal for domestic use was transported by river from Cassington wharf. (fn. 25) There
were carriers from Aston and Cote to Oxford
and Witney in the 1840s, when both hamlets
received letters through Bampton. Aston's post
office, by 1841 probably already on its later site
on the south side of the square, became a money
order and telegraph office before 1915, (fn. 26) and
remained open in 1992.
Cropmarks suggesting prehistoric settlement
have been noted south of Aston, east of Cote
Lane, and in the south-east near the Shifford
boundary. (fn. 27) An irregular enclosure on the
Thames floodplain south of Great brook may be
a Neolithic causewayed camp, (fn. 28) and there have
been isolated Neolithic and Bronze-Age finds
north of Aston High Street and near the north
end of Cote Lane. Iron-Age pottery and a
brooch were found south of Cote House. (fn. 29) A
probable settlement site straddling the modern
Brighthampton road east of Cote may have been
reorganized in the Roman period, and it has been
suggested that a large, double-ditched enclosure
on the township's eastern edge south of
Brighthampton road may be a Roman fort,
though it does not lie on any known Roman
roads. (fn. 30) Two coins of Trajan and Hadrian were
discovered in Cote in the 19th century. (fn. 31) South
of Great brook two square enclosures contained
within Bronze-Age ring ditches are probably of
Roman or post-Roman date. (fn. 32)

Figure 7:
Aston and Cote c. 1770
Cropmarks suggesting Anglo-Saxon sunken
huts have been noted on the gravel terraces east
of Cote, near areas of probable earlier settlement. (fn. 33) All lie within the later open fields,
perhaps supporting indications that the medieval fields and township boundaries were
established after the mid 10th century. (fn. 34) Aston
(i.e. Bampton's east tun), on a gravel terrace
south of Kingsway Lane, existed in some form
by 958 when the 'boundary of the people of
Aston' was mentioned, (fn. 35) and in 984 King
Aethelred granted 2 cassati there to his 'minister'
Aelfwine. (fn. 36) Cote, a straggling line of cottages and
farmsteads along Cote Lane, was recorded by
name only from 1203 (fn. 37) but probably existed
much earlier; in the mid 13th century manorial
organization and land tenure there were no
different from elsewhere in the township. (fn. 38)
Neither Aston nor Cote was separately entered
in Domesday Book. In 1279 c. 59 of the tenants
listed probably resided (fn. 39) and at least another 11
seem to have been omitted, (fn. 40) implying over 70
households of which 15 or more were in Cote. (fn. 41)
That some holdings had apparently been recently divided (fn. 42) may indicate rising population,
and Aston and Cote remained by far the most
populous, though not the wealthiest, of Bampton's outlying townships. Over 63 inhabitants
were taxed in 1306, 76 in 1316, and 78 in 1327,
and in 1377 poll tax was paid by 156 inhabitants
over 14, suggesting that 14th-century depopulation had been less marked than in some
Oxfordshire parishes. (fn. 43) As elsewhere in the parish there may have been contraction during the
15th century, (fn. 44) but 113 male inhabitants were
listed in 1642, (fn. 45) implying an adult population of
c. 226; 68 houses were assessed for hearth tax in
1662, possibly an underassessment. (fn. 46) Between a
fifth and a third of the population probably then
lived at Cote, where 75 adults were noted in
1676. (fn. 47) Several holdings had been divided between two or more tenants by c. 1668, and in
1657 a poor Aston man obtained permission to
build a cottage on the waste, though in the late
17th century and early 18th the death rate seems
temporarily to have exceeded the birth rate: (fn. 48)
periods of unusually high mortality were 1693-4,
caused perhaps by an outbreak of 'contagious
disease', (fn. 49) 1700, 1711, and 1728, in which year
there was smallpox in Bampton, (fn. 50) and the 1760s.
From the mid 18th century baptisms usually
outnumbered burials, and by 1801 the population was 628 accommodated in 115 houses; in
1841 it was 727, of whom 204 lived at Cote. After
reaching a peak of 908 in 1871 it declined, with
intermissions, to 531 in 1931. By 1951 it had
risen to 678, partly because of boundary
changes, and from the 1960s it rose steadily to
1,221 in 1991. (fn. 51)
Aston's topography may in part have been
conditioned by a rectilinear arrangement of
fields and roads also discernible around Bampton, and possibly of Roman or earlier origin. (fn. 52)
Though High Street runs from east to west
several roads and lanes are aligned north-west to
south-east or north-east to south-west, among
them the road towards Bampton, Cote road, a
small lane branching north-west from the intersection of High Street and Back Lane, and Bull
Street, (fn. 53) so called by 1841 from the public house
near its southern end. (fn. 54) North Street (formerly
Duckend) Farm, north of the gravel terrace, (fn. 55)
originated perhaps as part of a separate 'end',
and is connected with the main village by North
Street and by the sinuous Back Lane, which
together embrace an area of pasture closes.
Aston cross, where High Street, North Street,
and Bull Street converge in an open triangular
space later called the square, was mentioned in
the 16th century as a meeting place of the
Sixteens, elected officers responsible for agricultural regulation. (fn. 56) Only the base seems to have
survived in 1848, (fn. 57) but a cross was marked on
the Ordnance Survey map of 1876 and a new
war memorial cross was erected on the site
shortly after the First World War. (fn. 58)
In the 18th century houses extended along the
full length of High and Bull Streets, and there
were isolated cottages and farmsteads along
North Street and Back Lane. Since a tenement
recorded from the Middle Ages lay at Bull
Street's extreme south-east end, presumably the
lane had been settled from an early date. (fn. 59) The
surname 'at well', recorded in the 13th century
and referring possibly to a medieval holy well
near the township's eastern edge, suggests that
medieval settlement in Cote extended at least as
far as the site of Cote House and possibly to the
Shifford boundary, (fn. 60) though by the 18th century
Cote House marked the southernmost limit of
expansion. (fn. 61) Cottages south of Bull Street and
near North Street Farm, and a farmhouse west
of later Cote Lodge Farm, all on the edge of the
common, were established by the mid 18th
century, (fn. 62) but there were no other outlying
farmsteads before inclosure.
Thatched Cottage on North Street incorporates in its central bay a late 16th- or early
17th-century one-roomed cottage whose walls
may originally have been timber-framed, suggesting that, as in Bampton, timber construction
may have been common in the medieval period.
The cottage, which included attics and a gable
chimney stack, had been rewalled in stone by
the time a two-storeyed addition was made on
the south perhaps in the 18th century. Most
surviving buildings are of limestone rubble with
stone-slated roofs, though thatch may formerly
have been common, (fn. 63) and some houses in the
later 19th century, among them Newhouse
Farm, were built of local Aston brick. (fn. 64) Several
17th- or early 18th-century farmhouses survive
in both hamlets, among them Cote Farmhouse
and Cote Cottage and, in Aston, North Street
Farm, Westerleigh, West End Cottage, the Elms
(facing Aston square), and cottages on Back
Lane; West End Farm, on a site near the southern end of Back Lane occupied probably from
the Middle Ages, incorporates a late 16th- or
early 17th-century house of one storey with
attics and a cross passage, whose southern end
was truncated when two west-facing houses were
built onto a side lane before 1773. (fn. 65) The most
notable building in Aston, besides the church,
is Aston House at the south end of North Street,
erected for the Baptist minister on the site of an
earlier cottage c. 1744. (fn. 66) The symmetrical main
block incorporates a 5-bayed front of two storeys
and attics, faced with red brick and with ashlar
dressings and a segmental pediment over the
central doorway; the interior retains some original panelling and other fittings. A service wing
at the rear was extended in the 19th century. On
Cote Lane Milton Lodge was rebuilt c. 1720
probably by members of the prosperous Williams family (fn. 67) and has a symmetrical 5-bayed
entrance front with a shell hood; fittings include
panelled dados and an original staircase with
turned balusters. (fn. 68) Cote House and the 18th-
century Baptist chapel at the northern end of
Cote Lane are described below. (fn. 69) In 1848 Aston
was judged 'humble and primeval-looking' and
its architecture mediocre, (fn. 70) though inclosure,
delayed until c. 1853, was said in 1856 to be
improving its appearance, with new houses being built and others altered. (fn. 71) Newhouse and
Cote Lodge Farms, the latter on the newly
established road leading north from Cote hamlet, were built before 1876, and labourers'
cottages on Cote road during the same period, (fn. 72)
though in 1890 the vicar commented on the poor
condition of the township's cottages. (fn. 73) Also rebuilt in the 19th century were the post office and
nearby Red Lion public house on Aston square,
and farmsteads on Back Lane, North Street, and
in Cote. New institutional buildings in Aston
included the church (1838) and adjacent
National school (1856) on Cote road, the laterdemolished vicarage house (c. 1858) south of
High Street, and the Baptist chapel and British
school (1845) on North Street. Westfield House,
on Aston's western edge, was built as a private
school c. 1913, and a Baptist Hall was built on
Cote road in 1929 and was replaced in 1980 by
a larger Fellowship Centre. (fn. 74)
New drains were being laid in 1856, which it
was hoped would transform the 'damp and dirty
street towards Cote' into a 'clean and healthy
locality'. (fn. 75) Contaminated wells in Cote may have
caused a diphtheria epidemic in 1893, (fn. 76) but despite the establishment c. 1907 of the Bampton,
Aston and District Gas and Water Co. the water
supply was chiefly from wells until the Second
World War, (fn. 77) and in 1938 the parish council
voted against being supplied with water and
electricity by the Rural District Council. (fn. 78) Electricity was introduced before 1949, (fn. 79) gas before
1939, (fn. 80) and mains drainage c. 1967. (fn. 81)
There was little expansion of either hamlet
until the 1960s, when large numbers of houses
were built along Cote road, off Bull Street, and,
following the demolition of the vicarage house,
south of High Street. In 1965 a total of 57 new
houses was expected within two years, (fn. 82) and
limited expansion continued in the 1970s and
1980s. Old people's accommodation was built
north of the Baptist Hall on Cote road in 1975, (fn. 83)
and a new village hall, replacing an ex-army hut
acquired originally by the British Legion, c.
1985. (fn. 84) In Cote there was some infilling from the
1960s, but most of the eastern side of Cote Lane
remained unbuilt in 1995.
A disorderly alehouse in Aston was suppressed
at the inhabitants' request in 1700. (fn. 85) In the mid
18th century there were 3 or 4 licensed alehouses, among them the Red Lion, probably
then, as later, on the south side of Aston square,
and the Ball or Bull, not necessarily the later Bull
on Bull Street. (fn. 86) From 1784 until the early 19th
century the Red Lion only was recorded in
Aston, and the Star, opened c. 1802 at the
junction of High Street and Ham Lane, closed
c. 1860 after the vicar acquired the site. (fn. 87) The
later Bull existed by 1841, was rebuilt in 1865
probably by James Gibbons of Eynsham Brewery, (fn. 88) and closed c. 1992; the Red Lion remained
open in 1995. In Cote the unidentified Black
Horse was licensed from 1779 to 1801, (fn. 89) and a
beerhouse recorded from 1869 closed after
1939. (fn. 90)
An Aston coal club established in 1859 was
funded by subscription and from the township's
share of the Bampton charities, and in the 1870s
had over 100 members. (fn. 91) A Bampton-Aston
blanket club established in 1850 continued in
1872, and was probably also financed wholly or
partly from charitable income. (fn. 92) A library and
reading room opened in 1860 (fn. 93) was not mentioned later. A cricket club existed by 1869, (fn. 94)
and in the 1870s and the early 20th century a
3-day annual fete in Aston included a pleasure
fair in the square. (fn. 95)
Holywell field, on the south-eastern edge of
the township, was so called by 1432. The 13th-
century surname 'at well', and a 15th-century
reference to open-field land lying 'towards the
holy well' (versus le holywelle), (fn. 96) suggest that the
spring from which it was named continued as a
religious site throughout the later Middle Ages.
If, like Bampton's Lady well, it was associated
with the Virgin, (fn. 97) it may have lain near the later
Mary headland on the Aston-Shifford boundary,
close to the intersection of 'the way' mentioned
in 1005 and of the modern Cote-Shifford road; (fn. 98)
alternatively it may have been further north near
Cote House, where Lady close (so called from
the 17th century) was taken possibly from
Holywell field c. 1662. (fn. 99) No later references have
been found, and the well's site had been lost
perhaps by the 17th century.
In the 16th century inhabitants laying out a
meadow in Aston were entitled to bread and a
gallon of ale from those with rights there, and
complex meadow customs persisted until inclosure. (fn. 1)