STOKENCHURCH
Stokingchurch (xiv cent.).
Stokenchurch is a large parish on the border of
Oxfordshire of nearly 5,920 acres, including 2,427
of arable, 1,215 of permanent grass and 970 of woods
and plantations. (fn. 1) The slope of the land varies from
418 ft. above the ordnance datum in the east of the
parish between Fillington and Barn Woods to 800 ft.
near the Aston Rowant border on the main road from
High Wycombe to Oxford. The soil generally is
stiff loam or clay, the subsoil chalk. The chief crops
are wheat, oats and barley. Chairmaking for the
London market forms an important industry, and
bricks were formerly made here and still are at
Cadmore End, once part of this parish. The village
is situated in the north of the parish on a lofty spur
of the Chiltern Hills on the main road from London
to Oxford. It has encroached to a large extent on
the common, proof of which exists in the Court Rolls
in Mr. H. Clerke Brown's possession, and also in the
increasing difficulty of lack of roads as approaches to
the houses, with the result that the village green is
constantly being cut up. When the common was inclosed in 1861 under the General Inclosure Acts (fn. 2)
its use was reserved for the annual pleasure and horse
fair on 10 and 11 July, to which great droves of
Welsh ponies and Irish horses were formerly brought,
though the number has dwindled considerably of
late years. The parish is badly off for water and
there is only one well dug by Colonel Fane and
Mr. John Brown about 1870 after a water famine
when beer was cheaper than water. (fn. 3) The church
stands to the north of the village and the vicarage at
a short distance to the south-east. At each end of
the village is a sawmill, and there is a windmill to
the south-west. There are also two schools and a
Congregational and a Methodist chapel. About a
mile to the north-east, standing in large grounds,
is Mallard's Court, the property of the executors
of the late Rev. Henry Tufnell Young and the
residence of Mrs. Flower. Wormsley House, about
2 miles to the south-west, is approached through
beech woods on three sides. It has belonged to the
Scrope and Fane families for more than three centuries,
and is at present occupied by Mr. Frederick William
Fane.

Keynshams Farm, Stokenchurch
There are a number of houses about the village
green and also at Horsley's Green (a hamlet about
1¾ miles south-east of the village and just south of the
London Road). These were
probably built in the 17th
century, but most of them have
been a good deal altered and
restored during later times.
Keynshams Farm, on Cadmore
End Common, in the southeast, dates probably from the
16th century, but has restorations and alterations of the
17th and 19th centuries;
Dell's Farm, south of Horsley's
Green, is a building of about
the same date refronted in the
late 17th century.
The hamlet of Water End
lies over a mile to the southeast of the parish church to
the east of Saunder's Wood.
Further on in the same direction is Beacon's or Bacon's
Bottom with a school and
Methodist chapel. Chequers
Farm and plantation are
situated in the south of the
parish to the south of the
main road from Marlow to
Oxford. For the purposes of local government
Stokenchurch was transferred from Oxfordshire to
Buckinghamshire in 1896. (fn. 4)
The following place-names occur: Pillisdisch (fn. 5)
(xv cent.); Sladys (fn. 6) (xvi cent.); Sowers and Stockfield (fn. 7) (xvii cent.); Pophley's Wood and Farm
(xx cent.).
MANORS
There is no mention of Stokenchurch
in the Survey of 1086, but its later
history points to its inclusion under the
20 hides held by Miles Crispin in Aston Rowant
(Estone) in Oxfordshire. (fn. 8) In the middle 13th
century Aston Rowant Manor was held of the honour
of Wallingford as half a fee, (fn. 9) specified in 1279 as
including the hamlet of Stokenchurch. (fn. 10) It continued
under the honour of Wallingford (fn. 11) and afterwards
under that of Ewelme, (fn. 12) and this overlordship is last
mentioned in 1661. (fn. 13)
Stokenchurch as a member of Aston Rowant Manor
descended successively in the direct line from Haufray
to Alan, (fn. 14) Roald and Alan, (fn. 15)
and was held by the latter in
1279. (fn. 16) By 1300 it had passed
to his son John, (fn. 17) and by
1316 to another son Henry
Fitz Alan. (fn. 18) He was succeeded
in 1318 by his son Roger. (fn. 19)
Later in the century the Fitz
Alan rights had passed to
Richard Champernowne, (fn. 20) and
his grandson Hugh Champernowne, then a minor, (fn. 21) was
apparently the heir of Fitz
Alan mentioned in 1428. (fn. 22)

Champernowne. Gules billety or a saltire vair.
No reference occurs to any tenants holding under
the Fitz Alans, and the manor may possibly not have
been subinfeudated before it came to the Champernownes, since one messuage,
I carucate of land and rent
in Stokenchurch were held
of the latter family by
Edmund de Chelrey, who
received a grant of free warren
here in 1366 (fn. 23) and died in
1372. (fn. 24) His son Thomas
succeeded, (fn. 25) but does not
seem to have retained the
holding. It apparently corresponds to the STOKENCHURCH MANOR held by
John son of John Hardwick
at his father's death in 1394. (fn. 26)
The manor appears to have
reverted to the Champernownes as lords of Aston
Rowant, and Sir Philip
Champernowne, great-grandson of Hugh Champernowne, (fn. 27) granted land on
lease in Stokenchurch in
1503 which he was still holding in fee in 1517. (fn. 28) Aston
Rowant Manor was afterwards acquired by Henry Courtenay Earl of Devon,
who became Marquess of Exeter in 1525. (fn. 29) He sold
it in exchange in 1528 to Thomas Unton, (fn. 30) who
also held Exchequers Manor in the parish, and the
settlement between his great-grandsons Edward and
Sir Henry Unton in 1589 (Cadmore End, Fingest)
included both Aston Rowant and Stokenchurch
Manors. Sir Henry Unton, who had assigned Stokenchurch Manor during his life to Sir Henry Poole and
Nicholas Payne, died in 1596, (fn. 31) and in the following
year it was sold to John Rotherham of Great Marlow. (fn. 32) It descended with Cublington (q.v.) to
William Willoughby, who sold Stokenchurch Manor
in 1630 to Henry Lee. (fn. 33) He died seised in 1632
during the minority of his son Henry. (fn. 34) Various people
had interests in this manor in 1642. (fn. 35) It was afterwards acquired by John Clerke, who had married
Rebecca daughter of the elder Henry Lee, (fn. 36) and he
made a settlement of it in 1651. (fn. 37) Stokenchurch
Manor descended in the direct line to his greatgrandson John Clerke, (fn. 38) who by his will, proved in
December 1771, settled the residue of his property
on his widow Ann with remainder to his nephew,
another John Clerke. (fn. 39) He settled Stokenchurch
Manor in 1787 in trust on his wife Damaris for life,
his brother Richard being next in the succession, (fn. 40)
and in 1824 it was vested in trustees by Richard
Clerke's widow Mary and their daughter Mary
Elizabeth. (fn. 41) The latter married Mr. John Brown,
and their grandson Mr. Henry Clerke Brown, J.P.,
of Kingston Blount in Aston Rowant, Oxfordshire, (fn. 42)
is the present owner of this manor.

Dell's Farm, Stokenchurch
Some manorial court rolls for the 16th century exist. (fn. 43)
A second manor, STOKENCHURCH alias MALLETS or MALLARD'S COURT MANOR, originated
in land held under the Fitz Alans in the 13th
century. It evidently derived its later name from
Robert Malet, who in 1279 was holding I virgate of
land in this parish, formerly Robert Brond's, for 21s.
yearly. (fn. 44) In 1295 soon after his death a messuage
and a horse-mill are named in the holding to which
his son Robert succeeded. (fn. 45) He was holding in 1316, (fn. 46)
but there is at present no trace of a later descent of
this land in his family. It
reappears as the manor of
Stokenchurch granted in 1399
by Andrew Norwich, Richard
Moldrich and Godfrey atte
Pirye to Richard II (fn. 47) and immediately transferred by him
to Westminster Abbey. (fn. 48) It
was valued at £3 16s. 8d.
yearly in 1535, when it was
still owned by the abbey. (fn. 49)
After the Dissolution this
manor was first granted by
the Crown in 1542 to Westminster Cathedral, (fn. 50) but afterwards, in 1545, to Walter
Hendle and Sir John Williams, (fn. 51) a reserved rent of
6s. 8d. yearly being granted to the latter in 1546. (fn. 52)
Sir John Williams, afterwards Lord Williams of
Thame, died seised in 1559, (fn. 53) when his daughters
and co-heirs were Isabel wife of Richard Wenman
and Margery wife of Henry Norreys. (fn. 54) Stokenchurch
Manor was included in the estates conveyed by
mutual agreement to the latter in 1561, (fn. 55) and was
settled in 1576 by Henry, then Lord Norreys, (fn. 56) on his
son William on the marriage of the latter with
Elizabeth Morison, daughter of Bridget Countess of
Bedford by a former husband. (fn. 57) It descended in
the barony of Norreys of Rycote, Oxfordshire, to
Elizabeth daughter and heir of Francis Earl of
Berkshire, suo jure Baroness Norreys and wife of
Edward Wray. (fn. 58) He with his wife conveyed it in
1627 to William Kenrick, (fn. 59) who made a settlement
of this manor in 1631 (fn. 60) and was succeeded in 1635
by his son Thomas. (fn. 61) William son of Thomas
Kenrick had succeeded his father before 1665 (fn. 62)
and was created a baronet in
1679. (fn. 63) His son and successor, Sir William Kenrick,
bart, (fn. 64) sold the Stokenchurch
estate in 1691 to John Mason. (fn. 65)
It remained in the Mason
family for over 100 years. A
settlement was made by a later
John Mason in 1743 apparently on his marriage. (fn. 66) The
owners in 1811 were Thomas
and John Mason, (fn. 67) and they
conveyed the manor of Mallard's Court in 1814 to Henry
Mant. (fn. 68) In the later 19th century Mallard's Court
was for many years in the ownership of the Rev. Henry
Tufnell Young, (fn. 69) and is now the property of his
executors. (fn. 70)

Westminister Abbey. Gules St. Peter's keys crossed saltirewise with St. Edward's ring in the chief.

Williams, Lord Williams of Thame. Azure two organ pipes crossed saltirewise between four crosses formy argent.

Norreys of Rycote. Argent quartered with gules fretty or with a fesse azure over all.

Kenrick. Ermine a lion sable.
A third manor called EXCHEQUERS or
CHEQUERS MANOR is traceable through its
name to the half fee in the parishes of Lewknor and
Stokenchurch held by Roger de Scaccario at his death
about 1271 by the serjeanty of being grand usher of
the Exchequer, usher of the Jewry and crier before
the justices in eyre for all pleas. (fn. 71) His son and heir
Lawrence (fn. 72) held 6 virgates of land in Stokenchurch
in 1279 (fn. 73) represented in the unspecified half fee in
Oxfordshire held in mesne of the Earl of Cornwall
to which his son Simon de Scaccario succeeded about
1284. (fn. 74) He died in 1292, when the manor was
divided between his sisters Maud, Lora wife of
William Payforer, and Beatrice wife of John Peverel. (fn. 75)
In 1414 Robert Morley granted three parts of the
Exchequers Manor to Peter Fettiplace and his wife
Juliane, with remainder in default of issue to Robert
and his heirs and final remainder to Peter and his
heirs. (fn. 76) The Exchequers Manor remained in the
Fettiplaces and passed to the Untons through the
marriage of Hugh Unton with Anne (or Sybil) (fn. 77)
daughter and heir of William Fettiplace. (fn. 78) In 1514
their son Thomas afterwards Sir Thomas Unton (fn. 79)
agreed to settle this manor in
jointure on Mary Bourchier
on her marriage with his son
Alexander. (fn. 80) The latter, who
was also knighted, succeeded
his father in 1533, (fn. 81) and was
buried at Faringdon in Berkshire in 1547. (fn. 82) His son and
heir Sir Edward Unton (fn. 83)
made a settlement of this
manor in 1579 on his marriage
with Katherine Hastings, (fn. 84)
and it descended with Cadmore End in Fingest (q.v.)
in the Unton, Tipping and Wroughton families. (fn. 85) In
1860 Philip Wroughton sold the property to Thomas
Taylor of Aston Rowant House, whose interest passed
to Mr. Henry Clerke Brown, J.P., the present owner. (fn. 86)

Fettiplace. Gules two cheverons argent.
No reference has been found to the Exchequers
estate as a manor after 1763, (fn. 87) but the name survives
in the Chequers farm and plantation.
WORMSLEY
WORMSLEY (Woodmundeslee, xiii cent.) in
Stokenchurch was held in the middle of the 13th
century directly of the honour of Wallingford by the
service of a quarter fee worth 40s. (fn. 88) and the payment
of one clove gillyflower yearly to the lord of Aston
[Rowant]. (fn. 89) Philip de Wormsley enfeoffed John son
of Adam de Lewknor, who was holding in 1279. (fn. 90)
The later descent is not known till a conveyance by
William Waller in 1574 to Adrian Scrope is found. (fn. 91)
His grandson (fn. 92) Col. Adrian Scrope was executed as a
regicide in 1660, (fn. 93) but in the following year Wormsley
Manor, which had consequently become forfeited to
the Crown, was granted to his son Thomas. (fn. 94) John,
Judge Scrope, succeeded his father Thomas (fn. 95) and
made a settlement of this manor in 1714. (fn. 96) By the
marriage of his sister and co-heir Anne with Henry
Fane, grandson of Francis first Earl of Westmorland, the Wormsley estate passed to their third son
Henry Fane, (fn. 97) who died in 1777. (fn. 98) It has since
remained in his descendants in the direct line, (fn. 99) and
is at present owned by Mr. John Henry Scrope Fane.

Scrope. Azure a bend or.

Fane. Azure three gauntlets or.
In the middle of the 16th century WATER END
or WATERS MANOR was in the possession of Bartholomew Tipping. (fn. 100) It was afterwards acquired by
the Belsons, one of the Roman Catholic families of
Oxfordshire, (fn. 101) and conveyed in 1585 by Augustine
Belson and his son Robert to John Bowyer, (fn. 102) who
transferred his rights in the manor in 1590 to Robert
Bowyer. (fn. 103) In 1616 Augustine Belson, Robert's son, (fn. 104)
died seised of seven messuages and other property in
Stokenchurch, (fn. 105) probably the whole or part of this
estate. His son Augustine was then a minor. (fn. 106) The
later descent is not known.
Wallingford Priory owned land in Stokenchurch (fn. 107)
called in the 14th century STOKENCHURCH
MANOR. (fn. 108) It corresponds to the rectory of Stokenchurch, including a tenement called Prior's Grove, which
before the Dissolution had been granted by the priory
in fee farm for sixty-seven years to Robert Pigott, John
Young and William Thornhill. (fn. 109) The reversion was
granted to Cardinal Wolsey for his college at Oxford
in 1528, but was resumed by the Crown in 1530. (fn. 110)
Sir William Spencer died seised of the rectory in 1609,
leaving instructions in his will for its sale. (fn. 111) This estate
was afterwards split up among various owners. (fn. 112)
In 1279 a hide of land in Stokenchurch was held
in mesne by Reynold Beauchamp with Geoffrey de
Pockele as sub-tenant. (fn. 113) It was chargeable with suit
of court at Wallingford and 4d. yearly to the lord of
Aston Rowant. (fn. 114) No later trace of it has been found.
CHURCH
The church of ST. PETER AND
ST. PAUL consists of a chancel 28 ft.
by 15 ft., nave 64 ft. by 20 ft., north
transept 20 ft. by 15 ft., north aisle 34 ft. by 11 ft.,
south porch and a western bell-turret. These dimensions are all internal.
The nave, which dates from the latter half of the
12th century, was probably lengthened in the 15th
century, and the contemporary chancel appears to
have been rebuilt during the first half of the 14th
century, when the north transept was first erected.
In the 16th century the south porch was added and
the north transept rebuilt. The fabric was thoroughly
restored in 1847, and the north aisle was built in
1893. The materials are flint rubble with limestone
dressings, much of the walling being coated with roughcast. The north transept roof is tiled and the roofs
of the chancel and nave are covered with lead.
The chancel is lighted from the east by a
modern three-light window with some original 14th
century inner jamb stones, from the south by two
14th-century windows, each of two lights with tracery
under a pointed head, and from the north by one
window similar to the last and one of the 15th
century of two trefoiled lights under a square head.
Between the two south windows, the eastern of which
appears to have been raised in the 15th century,
when the inner sill was carried down to form a sedile,
is a 14th-century doorway with a modern head.
In the north wall is a 14th-century locker, which
was probably used as an Easter sepulchre in the 15th
century, when it was given its present trefoiled ogee
head, and in the south wall is a 14th-century piscina
with a sexfoil bowl and a cinquefoiled head, above
which is a crocketed and traceried gablet flanked by
pinnacles supported on head corbels. East of this is
a small square recess, and on the north wall is a carved
bracket, probably of the 14th century. The pointed
chancel arch, dating from the late 12th century, is of
two orders, the inner plain and the outer cheveron
moulded; one order of the responds is enriched on
the side towards the nave by keeled edge rolls with
foliated capitals and moulded bases. On the north
side of the chancel arch there is a hagioscope.
The nave is comparatively narrow for its length,
and is lighted on the south by four windows.
The easternmost window is similar to that at the
south-east of the chancel; the next, about thirty years
later in date, is of two trefoiled lights with a quatrefoil under a pointed head; the third is a 15th-century
window of two cinquefoiled lights with head tracery,
and the westernmost a 13th-century lancet, probably
reset. The south doorway, which dates from the late
12th century, has a moulded two-centred arch with
dog-tooth enrichment; the semicircular inner order
is modern and the jambs have been considerably
restored. The north wall is occupied by an arcade
of four bays, the three western of which are modern;
the east bay, opening into the transept and dating
from the 14th century, is of two chamfered orders,
the inner one of which was supported on both
sides by head corbels, but the west corbel has been
removed to the west respond of the arcade. In
the west wall is a 15th-century doorway with a
two-centred head and a three-light traceried window
of the same period, above which is a reset roundheaded window, now blocked, which probably dates
from the late 12th century. At the east of the
transept arch is the upper doorway to a rood-loft.
The north transept is lighted on the north by a late
16th-century window of three lights under a fourcentred head and on the east by a window of two
lights under a square head, probably dating from the
same period, while over the north window is a
reset trefoiled light of the 15th century. In the
east wall is a 14th-century piscina with a cinquefoiled
head, a sexfoil bowl and a shelf at the back, and at the
west is a modern arch opening into the aisle. Reset
in the north wall of the aisle are two 15th-century
windows, each of two cinquefoiled lights under a
square head, and in the west wall is a reset 14thcentury window of two trefoiled lights with tracery
under a pointed head which has been restored. The
south porch retains its original four-centred entrance
arch, but the jambs are modern, and in each of the
east and west walls is a square-headed light, mostly
of modern stonework.
The nave roof dates from the late 15th century;
its trusses have tie-beams with curved braces, and they
are supported on stone corbels carved generally with
angels holding shields or with heads, but those at the
west, which are later insertions, are plain. The
transept has a 16th-century roof with a central
moulded tie-beam, over which is a foliated board,
which may be a re-used barge-board.
The font has an octagonal limestone bowl with
a moulded lower edge, a bell-shaped stem and a
moulded base; it is apparently of early 13th-century
date and was originally circular, but was recut to its
present shape in the 15th or 16th century. The
cover is probably of 17th-century date and has a
central vertical handle. In the north-west window
of the chancel and the west window of the nave are
some fragments of old painted glass. On the inner
sill of the south-east window of the nave are fragments
of two 13th-century shafts, one of which has a foliated
capital and the other a moulded capital, with remains
of colour decoration of a later date on the back.
On the north jamb of the chancel arch is a mutilated
brass figure in plate and mail armour with a French
inscription to Roberd Morle, who died in 1410, and
on the south jamb is a figure and inscription of similar
character to Robert Morle, who died in 1415. In
the chancel are two rectangular brass plates with arms,
figures and inscription, commemorating Bartholomew
Tipping of Chequers, who died in 1632, and two
similar plates, one with her figure, to commemorate his
wife Martha, who died in the same year. On the
north side of the chancel is a mediaeval coffin lid, on
which was an incised cross, but the stem only can now
be seen, and on the north wall is a monument with
arms to Bartholomew Tipping, who founded the free
school in the parish and died in 1680. On the
chancel floor is a slab to the same person, one to
Elizabeth Whistler, his sister, 1693–4, and two other
slabs probably of the same period.
There are three bells, of which the first, dated
1640, and the third, 1618, are both by Henry
Knight.
The communion plate includes a cup and cover
paten of 1574 and a paten of 1684.
The registers date from 1707.
ADVOWSON
Stokenchurch was a chapelry of
Aston Rowant with a chapel and
cemetery of its own in the early
13th century. (fn. 115) The advowson descended with that
of Aston Rowant, and before 1220 belonged to
Wallingford Priory, to which foundation the mother
church had already been appropriated. (fn. 116) It remained
with the priory, (fn. 117) which was dissolved in 1524, (fn. 118) and
was included in the Crown grant of the priory
estates to Cardinal Wolsey in 1528 (fn. 119) for his college
at Oxford. (fn. 120) Further grants of the advowson of
Stokenchurch chapel were made in 1531 (fn. 121) and
1532 (fn. 122) to St. Albans Abbey, but since the Dissolution it has been vested in the Crown. (fn. 123) The
chapelry of Stokenchurch was severed from Aston
Rowant in 1844 and made a perpetual curacy. (fn. 124) It
is now a vicarage in the gift of the Lord Chancellor. (fn. 125)
CHARITIES
The following eleemosynary
charities are regulated by a scheme
of the Charity Commissioners of
20 September 1904, under the title of the united
charities, namely, the charity of Francis Deane,
founded by will, 1674, being an annuity of 30s.
issuing out of Cooper's Court Farm in this parish;
Thomas Mason, by will 1711, consisting of an annuity
of £3 1s. issuing out of Mallard's Court estate, for
providing coats for six poor men and six twopenny
loaves of bread; — Newell, gift about 1719,
originally the interest of £100 for bread, in respect of
which the yearly sum of £4 is now paid by the owner
of Pophley's Farm; — Burrows, by will, referred
to in the Parliamentary returns of 1786, being an
annuity of 14s. issuing out of two cottages in this
parish; James Hitchcock, who died in 1817, by his
will gave £3 yearly for bread, which is received out
of a house and premises in this parish; Sarah
Holmes, by will 1829, trust fund, £29 11s. 9d. consols, producing 14s. 8d. yearly for poor widows. The
annuity of £3 1s. in respect of Mason's charity is
duly applied for the benefit of six poor men, and
the other annuities, amounting together to £9 4s.,
are applied in the distribution of bread, the income
of Sarah Holmes's charity being divided among eight
or nine poor widows.
The sum of stock belonging to Sarah Holmes's
charity is held by the official trustees, who also hold
a sum of £100 consols under the title of 'Jodrell's
charity,' derived under the will of Sir Richard
Paul Jodrell, bart., proved at London, 7 March 1861,
the annual dividends of which, amounting to £2 10s.,
are applicable in the distribution of clothing and
blankets amongst necessitous inhabitants most regular
in attendance at church, who have maintained the
largest families with the least parochial relief.
Tipping's Educational Foundation.
In 1675
Bartholomew Tipping by deed charged certain lands
in Shabbington, Bucks., with a yearly rent-charge of
£41 0s. 6d. to be disposed of for the schooling and
clothing of twelve poor children, for apprenticing two
of them, and for other purposes specified in the said
deed, including 13s. 4d. to the curate for preaching
a sermon on St. Bartholomew's Day. A sum of
£275 consols, representing accumulations of income,
was in 1858 transferred to the official trustees, of
which £26 13s. 4d. consols was in 1904 set aside as
'Tipping's charity for curate.' The income of
the foundation is applied for educational purposes in
the parish.