ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Lew's fields were
mentioned in 1298, when a holding of 2 a. was
unevenly divided among three named furlongs. (fn. 6)
A 90-a. estate in the early 18th century was
unevenly divided among Upper field, Lower
field, Woodlains, and Blackpit piece, (fn. 7) and in the
later 18th century there were seven fields covering the township's southern part, cropped on a
four-course rotation: on the west, Hither west
and Further west fields; in the centre, Stream
(or Streamhead) and Combe Hill (or Wellhead)
fields; and on the east, Gander, Woodlains, and
Roughlains fields, (fn. 8) the last perhaps identical
with the Thorney Leaze and Bullham fields
mentioned in 1789. (fn. 9) The fields were regrouped
before 1809 when the quarters were Further
west and Long Breach fields, Home west and
Whitehill fields, Gravel and Streamhead fields,
and Combe Hill and Woodlains fields, not all of
them adjoining, and Bullham and Ditcham fields
were mentioned also. (fn. 10) Meadows, two of which
were held severally for rent in 1279, (fn. 11) lay chiefly
in the east, and in the 18th century included
Cabbage, Park, and Woodlains meads, and Bull
hook, where Christ Church had 6 a. severally
every 12 years. (fn. 12) By then there were also meadow
closes further west. (fn. 13)
Inhabitants enjoyed extensive common and
furze-cutting rights on Lew heath, some 400-500 a. covering the township's northern part. (fn. 14)
By the 18th century and possibly in 1318, when
Lew Home heath was mentioned, (fn. 15) it was divided
into an inner cow common on the north-west
and an outer sheep common on the north-east,
each estimated at c. 200 a. In 1609 the stint was
12 beasts and 60 sheep per yardland, and in 1746
it was 8 cows on the inner heath and 50 sheep
and 2 cows or 1 horse on the outer; (fn. 16) for part of
the year, in the 16th century apparently between
1 August and 25 March, sheep and cattle
were depastured on both commons indiscriminately, and in 1809 the outer common's
value for cows was said to be greatly lessened
because of their intermixture with sheep. (fn. 17) In
1318 Aymer de Valence, as owner of the waste,
challenged Exeter cathedral's right to commons
in Lew Home heath, then divided into east and
west parts, but later accepted that the cathedral's
demesne carried common rights though its tenants were excluded. Commons in the heath were
let with the cathedral's demesne in 1430, though
the dispute evidently recurred later in the century. (fn. 18) In 1540 Lew's inhabitants impleaded John
More of Lower Haddon for depasturing over
200 sheep on the common, and before 1625 his
successors sold 250 sheep commons there, presumably those owned chiefly by outsiders c.
1798. (fn. 19) Combe Hill near Lew's southern boundary, a 73-a. (later 60-a.) Lammas ground of poor
pasture and furze which in the early 14th century
may have been open-field arable, was partitioned
between the lords of Bampton and Aston in
1678, and in the 18th century claims to common
rights there by Bampton's inhabitants were
overturned. (fn. 20) Park mead and presumably other
meadows were commonable from 1 August in
1767. (fn. 21)
By the 17th or 18th century a band of small
irregular closes, some taken presumably from
the heath and many of them probably medieval
in origin, stretched across the middle of the
township. (fn. 22) A tenant illegally inclosed some
common land c. 1668, and in the 1760s a small
piece of heathland adjoining Pound close, north-west of the hamlet, was inclosed with the lord's
permission. (fn. 23) Quy closes in the south-west,
perhaps arable in 1317 when Quyhay furlong
was mentioned, (fn. 24) were inclosed presumably
before 1420 when the Talbots' demesne
included pasture in 'Overquyhey' and in
'Thorneylese', the latter one of another group
of closes in the south-east. (fn. 25) Medieval assarting is suggested by the furlong names Pease-,
Long-, and Shortbreach, the last two in the
south-east, and perhaps also by the names of
Roughlains and Woodlains fields, which abutted
the heath and included the worst arable land. (fn. 26)
No medieval woodland was recorded, though in
the 18th century there was valuable hedgerow
oak and elm between the closes and open fields:
Christ Church's estate included some 500-600
trees c. 1729, and over 200 oaks, elms, and ashes
in 1833. (fn. 27) Two small coppices existed c. 1812,
but Ditcham wood and a smaller plantation
further west are 19th-century. (fn. 28)
In 1086 much of Lew lay within the royal
manor of Bampton. (fn. 29) Hugh de Bolbec's 1½-hide
estate had one ploughteam worked presumably
by the single bordar recorded, and on Aretius's
7-yardland estate in Lew and in Aston and Cote
3 villani and 2 bordars shared one ploughteam
and, since no servi were mentioned, perhaps
worked a second recorded on the demesne,
which was later in Aston and Cote. Both estates
had risen in value since 1066, Bolbec's from 10s.
to 20s., and Aretius's from 20s. to 35s. (fn. 30) By
1279 (fn. 31) there were 17 villeins holding of the
former royal manor, 4 with yardlands (each
reckoned at c. 16 a. presumably excluding
meadow), 10 with half yardlands, one with ¼
yardland, and 2 sharing a presumably recentlydivided yardland. Rents and services varied, but
were broadly similar to those in Bampton and
Weald on the same manor. No other villeins
were mentioned in 1279, but one was recorded
on a freehold yardland of the Belet family in
1227, and two on Robert of Yelford's estate in
1328. (fn. 32) Fifteen free tenants in 1279 occupied
holdings ranging from a house and half yardland
shared between three sisters to 4 yardlands;
some owed tallage, suit of court, or hidage and
scutage, and Osney abbey's free tenant of 2
yardlands discharged the abbot's obligations at
the hundred court, for which he seems to have
received a 4s. rent-allowance. (fn. 33) There was much
subletting, one freeholder holding land under 8
owners and himself leasing a small parcel to
another inhabitant. (fn. 34)
Early 14th-century subsidies suggest that Lew
was one of Bampton's more prosperous hamlets,
assessed wealth rising from c. £84 in 1306 to
over £135 in 1327, and the number of taxpayers
from 27 to 38. Roughly half were assessed on
between 16s. and 50s.-worth of goods, and none
on less than 11s. 8d. The highest contributors in
1316 were assessed on over £9 and £12 respectively, and those in 1327 on £10 and £19;
presumably they were freeholders, though
assessed wealth of villein families varied greatly,
and some who had held in villeinage in 1279 and
1294 were among the highest taxpayers. (fn. 35)
The township's losses in 14th-century
plagues (fn. 36) were perhaps exacerbated by the 15thcentury depopulation evident elsewhere in the
parish. (fn. 37) Reduced population led to amalgamation
of holdings, and by 1609 the Bampton Earls land
was held as 5 farms of between 1 and 3 yardlands. (fn. 38) Several moderately prosperous yeoman
families were recorded throughout the 16th and
17th centuries, among them the Startups or
Bartletts, the Shaws, Moulders, and Wises, and
later the Jeeveses and Collingwoods, though the
Saunders family, which paid large amounts in
16th-century subsidies, was not mentioned
later. (fn. 39) William Wise (d. 1687) left goods worth
over £200, including a study of books. (fn. 40) Some
leading farmers were freeholders, though several
held of Bampton Earls manor, and a farmer who
in 1686 left goods worth over £137 was tenant
under at least 4 landowners. (fn. 41) Over half the
contributors to the 1662 hearth tax paid on 2 or
3 hearths or more, (fn. 42) and some taxed on fewer
may have been cottagers: 3 cottagers were recorded in 1609, and their numbers may have
increased during the 17th and 18th centuries as
population rose. (fn. 43)
Farms on Bampton Earls manor remained
copyhold in 1609, and at least one in 1789 was
let for lives at the old quitrent, though it was
then sublet presumably at rack rent. (fn. 44) There
were c. 7 large leasehold farms in 1789, 4 on
Bampton Earls manor, another held under 3
non-resident freeholders, and the Oxford university and Wenman estates, both over 100 a.,
and most large farmers occupied additional small
parcels under other owners. (fn. 45) The sole large
owner-occupier, Jonathan Arnatt of Lew House,
before 1785 added University farm to his extensive freehold and leasehold estate, and by the
later 18th century held c. 35 per cent of taxable
land in the township. (fn. 46) Few holdings included
more than 20 a. of open-field arable, but many
farms were held with significant acreages of
inclosed meadow and pasture: Oxford university's estate in 1767 included 83 a. of inclosures
compared with in a. in the open fields, though
such a preponderance was unusual. (fn. 47) Four people
paying less than 10s. land tax in 1785 were
apparently cottagers. (fn. 48)
Agriculture was mixed from the Middle Ages,
with perhaps a slight bias towards pastoral farming. A villein yardlander in 1227 held 20 sheep
of his lady for 10s. a year paid instead of aid, (fn. 49)
and in 1534 the jitney wool merchant and
stapler Richard Wenman left sheep and cattle in
Lew and at Weald. (fn. 50) Several 17th-century
testators left flocks of up to 100, and some
others left smaller flocks; (fn. 51) on Oxford university's
estate in the 1790s Berkshire breeds predominated, larger types being thought impractical. (fn. 52)
Cattle, pigs, and poultry were also mentioned
frequently, and bees occasionally. (fn. 53) In 1789
Lew's extensive commons were favourably contrasted with the poor-quality arable, though the
value of the commons was lessened by a tendency
to sheep rot, and the stiff clay was said to
produce excellent wheat and beans and reasonable oats and barley. The usual course was then
(1) wheat, (2) beans, (3) oats and barley, and (4)
fallow, though in the 1790s Jonathan Arnatt
achieved good results on some of the poorest
land by sowing clover after beans, allowing cattle
and sheep to feed on it during the fallow year.
The land was nevertheless deemed unsuitable
for turnips without cheap lime, whose use was
recommended both to improve lighter land and
to allow more sheep to be raised. (fn. 54) Some poorer
inhabitants in the later 18th century supplemented their income by poaching in nearby
woodland. (fn. 55)
Inclosure, advocated in the later 18th century,
was not achieved until 1812-21 under the Act
for Bampton and Weald. (fn. 56) John Coventry and
the earl of Shrewsbury, joint lords of Bampton
Earls, respectively received c. 345 a. and 73 a. in
the township; Jonathan Arnatt the younger
received 207 a. for his freehold, Sophia Wykeham
81½ a. for her leasehold under Christ Church
and 74½ a. for her freehold, Oxford university
200 a., and George Richards, a vicar of Bampton,
180 a. for later Morgan's farm, held in his own
right. (fn. 57) Most farms continued to be run from
existing homesteads. By 1861 there were 5
farms, all but one of 200 a. or more, and one,
probably the former Arnatt estate, of 400 a.; in all
they employed c. 68 men, women, and children,
and 65 labourers, one living in a shed, were
recorded, along with 3 carters, 2 shepherds, and
2 cattle dealers. (fn. 58)
The benefits of inclosure were not immediate.
In 1816 it was doubted whether the tenant of
Christ Church's farm could continue without
rent abatement, and in 1824 a sale catalogue
acknowledged that the farm had not improved,
claiming nonetheless that it would quickly repay
investment, notably for drainage, and suggesting
that if converted to grass it would make an
excellent dairy farm. Though the farm remained
mixed, by 1833 it was 'well managed' despite the
cold wet soil. (fn. 59) Before 1824 much of the former
heath was converted to arable and so remained,
though in 1826 a proprietor complained that it
had not yet been brought into proper cultivation, (fn. 60) and on individual farms the proportion of
arable often remained slightly lower than in
Bampton and Weald. On Christ Church's farm
in 1824 and on Manor (later Lower) farm in 1864
it was under 40 per cent, though Morgan's farm
was 74 per cent arable in 1879 and good corngrowing land was reported. (fn. 61)
Drainage remained poor. In 1863 heavy clay
soil on Manor (Lower) farm made the arable
'uncertain' and expensive to cultivate and the
grassland 'poor', though some arable on Christ
Church's farm was drained at the tenant's expense before 1861, and before 1870 the Talbots'
farm was partially drained by the Lands
Improvement Co. (fn. 62) Presumably such problems
exacerbated the effects of agricultural depression
in the 1870s: the longstanding tenant of Lower
and Manor farms was bankrupted in 1878, and
of 5 chief farmers in 1861 only one remained in
1881. (fn. 63) In 1872 labourers demanding increased
wages were reportedly evicted by a Lew
farmer. (fn. 64)
The bias towards pastoral farming continued
to 1914, when 73 per cent of the township was
under permanent pasture. Sheep were still kept,
though in smaller numbers than in 1909, perhaps reflecting a shift towards dairy farming.
Wheat remained the chief crop, followed by
barley (20 per cent), oats (11 per cent), and a few
swedes and mangolds. (fn. 65) Four chief farms remained in 1939, of which Church, University,
and Manor farms were over 150 a. In 1959
University farm (216 a.) was a well-managed
mixed and dairy farm with a good herd of
Ayrshire cattle, though drainage on some land
was still thought inadequate. (fn. 66)
Rural trades in Lew were recorded infrequently. John the cooper, perhaps formerly of
Marsh Haddon, was mentioned in 1327, and the
surname Iremonger or le Ferur in the late 13th
and early 14th century, when it was evidently
hereditary. (fn. 67) Weavers, masons, and a tailor with
land in Curbridge were recorded in the 17th
century, (fn. 68) and a cordwainer and a carpenter in
the 18th. (fn. 69) A 'coal pit' mentioned in 1607 was
probably the site of charcoal burning rather than
of mineral extraction, and lay perhaps in the
township's southern part near later Coalpit
Farm, built after inclosure and so named by
1851. (fn. 70) A maltster was recorded in 1723, and the
Chequers public house had a malthouse and
bakehouse in 1768 and a smithy in 1800. (fn. 71) Only
three families had non-agricultural occupations
in 1811, and four in 1831; (fn. 72) non-agricultural
inhabitants in 1861 were a grocer and postmaster, a toll-collector, and a retired wine-merchant
living at Manor Farm (then called Lew House). (fn. 73)
University Farm opened as a guesthouse c. 1959,
and in 1992 was an hotel and restaurant; the post
office, still the only shop in 1939, had closed by
1989. (fn. 74)
Windmill headland, on high ground near the
township's southern boundary, was recorded in
1746, (fn. 75) but no mills are known.