FINMERE
Finmere lies in the extreme north-east corner of
Oxfordshire which is enclosed between Buckinghamshire and Northamptonshire. The River Ouse, which
separates Oxfordshire from Buckinghamshire, forms
its northern boundary, and the line of the Roman
road from Bicester to Towcester separates it from
Buckinghamshire on the east. (fn. 1) There have been no
recorded changes in its boundaries or its area of
1,570 acres. (fn. 2) Geologically, the parish lies on the
Great Oolite but is nearly all covered by drift
gravel; (fn. 3) the soil is stiff clay, gravel, and stonebrash.
The height above sea-level nowhere exceeds about
400 feet and falls to about 300 at the Ouse. Except
in the south, where there are several plantations,
Finmere, Grassy, Widmore, and Diggings Wood,
the parish is remarkably bare of trees. It is traversed
by the Buckingham-Banbury road, which was made
a turnpike in 1744. The Roman road was then left
as a bridle-way only. (fn. 4) In 1813 the branch turnpike
road from Bicester was formed. (fn. 5) Two lesser roads
connect Finmere and Water Stratford, over the
Buckinghamshire border, crossing the Ouse by
Fulwell Bridge. (fn. 6)
The parish is also crossed by two stretches of railway: one made in 1845–6, and formerly part of the
London and North-Western Railway, and the other
a branch of the Great Central Railway opened in
1899. (fn. 7) The nearest stations are at Buckingham and
Westbury.
The village lies almost on the Buckinghamshire
border, just off the main road from Buckingham and
less than half a mile from the Roman road which
marks the county boundary. Its name Finmere means
'pool frequented by woodpeckers'. (fn. 8) The chief part
of the ancient and modern village lies to the north of
a small brook, which was covered over in 1872. (fn. 9) The
village is unusual in being sited at some distance
from its manor-house, which used to lie in the extreme north-east corner of the parish, on land sloping
down to the Ouse.
Finmere was among the larger villages in the
hundred in the Middle Ages, (fn. 10) and in the 17th
century it was among those of medium size: for the
hearth tax of 1665, besides the manor and the
Rectory, there were nineteen listed houses of which
ten were farm-houses, returning mostly three or two
hearths. (fn. 11) There seems to have been a steady growth
in the size of the village during most of the 18th
century, with a sharp increase in the last quarter. (fn. 12)
Finmere continued to expand until 1851, when the
census recorded 89 houses, but by 1901 had shrunk
to 65 inhabited houses. There has been much rebuilding since the Second World War: by 1951
there were 72 houses. (fn. 13)
The present village straggles up the hill from the
covered brook to the church. (fn. 14) Below the church,
there is also a steep lane which runs down past the
old schoolhouse, (fn. 15) built in 1824, to the drive of the
19th-century Rectory. The Rectory, a private house
by 1955, was built in 1867 (fn. 16) on a new site when the
old one was pulled down. This last house is first
described in detail in 1634, when it was a house of
four bays, thatched and in good repair. Attached to
it was a new barn, thatched and walled, as well as an
old pease barn. (fn. 17) In 1662 a violent storm destroyed
ten bays of building, perhaps part of the farm buildings, of which the rector re-erected five. (fn. 18) In 1665
the house was taxed on six hearths, but three years
later it was partly destroyed by fire. (fn. 19) The terrier of
1685 consequently notes that the rectory consisted
of only three bays with barn and stable of four bays. (fn. 20)
It had been again enlarged by 1738 when there were
six bays and two stables: the terrier of 1805 adds the
information that the house was built of stone and
was thatched. (fn. 21) Its beautiful garden was described
by Lord Selborne. It was laid out or rather improved
by 'Capability' Brown at a time when he was working
on the grounds of Stowe House (Bucks.), perhaps
in the 1740's. (fn. 22) His grouping of trees gave 'the effect
of a long perspective and considerable space . . .
where there was really little'.
At the point where the street to Fulwell, with
a number of cottages and houses on either side,
branches off westwards from the main village street,
a natural centre is formed, and here are the stump
of what is known as the 'cross' tree, and the post
office. In the 1880's there was a small green there
and the stocks stood beneath the elm. (fn. 23) Many of the
old cottages still (1955) have thatched roofs; they
are built, some of red or vitreous brick, timber and
rubble, others of brick and rubble only. A group of
20th-century council houses borders the Tingewick
road to the south.
Two houses on the outskirts of the village are
of special note: (fn. 24) Lepper's House, a stone-built
house, dated 1638 with the initials 'I.Y.'(ates) and
'E.Y.'(ates), was rebuilt or altered in 1879. This date
appears on the east porch with the monogram
'a.t.l.'(epper). When Lepper bought the house it
was one story high and covered with a long thatched
roof: he raised the walls and turned it into a twostory building. Finmere House with its 18th-century
south front of brick dates from about 1600 and is
T-shaped. The date 1739 appears on rain-water
heads with the crest of a gazing stag, the crest of
John Pollard, who bought the house, probably in
1739, from the James family, inheritors of a third of
Finmere manor. (fn. 25)
There are several outlying farm-houses: Widmore
Farm in the south-west of the parish, Warren Farm
to the west of the village, Finmere Grounds to the
north, probably built soon after the inclosure, (fn. 26) and
Bacon's House in the extreme north-east corner.
The last was the former manor-house or Court
House, but takes its name from its early 18thcentury owners. In 1887 Blomfield, possibly echoing local tradition, wrote that it had been a house 'of
considerable size and pretensions, with . . . a courtyard . . . fishponds . . . a bowling green, garden, and
pleasure grounds'. (fn. 27)
In the first half of the 19th century the Duke of
Buckingham, lord of the manor, pulled down the
greater part of the old house and reduced it to its
present proportions, a pleasant small farm-house of
stone. At the same time he destroyed the water-mill
on the Ouse and built the existing farm buildings. (fn. 28)
In 1853 Merton College, Oxford, purchased part of
the farm and in 1858 the remainder. (fn. 29) Finmere
Grounds is also an ancient house, probably built
immediately after the inclosure of the common fields
in 1667. It too was bought by Merton College in
1853, whose land in Finmere covers the whole of the
north-eastern part of the parish and extends almost
to the church. (fn. 30)
For a few years in the early 13th century a house
in Finmere was occasionally used by King John. It
was built in 1207 at a recorded cost of less than £50 (fn. 31)
by the king's carpenters. (fn. 32) As the work was supervised by Hugh de Neville, the king's chief forester, (fn. 33)
and the house lay within easy reach of the forests of
Bernwood and Whittlewood, there can be little doubt
that it was constructed as a hunting-lodge. It was
ready by January 1208, when the king ordered wine
to be sent there. (fn. 34) He subsequently stayed in it four
times. (fn. 35) The overlordship of the manor was in the
king's hands at the time, (fn. 36) and the house was built
on land belonging to a hermit, (fn. 37) who had a hermitage
there. As compensation he was assigned a penny
a day for life. (fn. 38) After the king's death, however, he
recovered his property, and in 1218 it was described
as 'the place where the house of King John was
situated'. (fn. 39)
The only other striking event connected with
Finmere occurred in 1645, when a party of eighteen
royalists, stationed here, was surprised by a force of
parliamentarians from the garrison at Newport
Pagnell and driven out. (fn. 40) Parliament troops were
then quartered in the village. The local tradition
that the troopers' horses were stabled in the Rectory
was confirmed in 1867, when a quantity of oat-husks
was found under the flooring. (fn. 41)
In 1840 the church bells were rung for the Dowager
Queen Adelaide as she passed through the village on
her way to Stowe, (fn. 42) and two brothers, Dr. James
and Dr. Charles Clark, resident at Finmere House
at the time, may be mentioned for their services to
the community, particularly for the improvement
of the sanitary conditions. (fn. 43) But several of the rectors
were more outstanding, notably William Cleaver
(1742–1815), successively Bishop of Chester, Bangor,
and St. Asaph, and the saintly rector, W. J. Palmer
(rector 1814–52), (fn. 44) the father of Roundell Palmer,
Lord Selborne, and William Palmer, theologian and
archaeologist. (fn. 45)
The following old customs survived until modern
times: the pancake bell was rung on Shrove Tuesday
at 11.30 a.m. and the curfew bell was rung each
night from 4 October to 5 April. (fn. 46)
Manor.
Before the Conquest and for nearly
twenty years after it the larger of two estates in
FINMERE, assessed at 8 hides, was held by Wulfward the White, a thegn of Queen Edith. By 1086,
however, like part of Wulfward's Buckinghamshire
lands, it had been granted to Geoffrey, Bishop of
Coutances. (fn. 47) On Geoffrey's death in 1093 his lands
passed to his nephew, Robert de Mowbray, Earl of
Northumberland, who forfeited them by his rebellion in 1095. A smaller estate of 2 hides was held
after the Conquest by Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, (fn. 48)
but was later joined to the larger estate, for the
whole of Finmere became part of the honor of
Gloucester, possibly as the result of a grant by
William II to Robert FitzHamon of some of Robert
de Mowbray's lands, (fn. 49) or perhaps by a grant by
Henry I to his illegitimate son Robert of Gloucester.
The overlordship of Finmere followed the descent
of the Earldom of Gloucester, (fn. 50) and after the death
of Gilbert de Clare in 1314 passed to Hugh Audley,
who married Gilbert's sister Margaret. Hugh's only
daughter and heiress Margaret married Ralph, Earl
of Stafford, and after Hugh's death in 1347 the overlordship followed the descent of the Earldom of
Stafford. (fn. 51)
The tenant of both Finmere estates in 1086 was
a certain Robert. (fn. 52) By the mid-12th century Finmere
was held by the De Turri family, who were tenants
of the nearby Buckinghamshire manor of Tingewick, and were closely associated with the Earls of
Gloucester in their lordship of Glamorgan. (fn. 53) Gregory
son of Robert de Turri, who may have held Tingewick as early as 1135, (fn. 54) had lands in Oxfordshire in
1158: about 10 hides, which may well have been
Finmere. (fn. 55) Gregory had been succeeded by his
eldest son William by 1176. (fn. 56) Some time in the reign
of Richard I, William son of Gregory remitted to
Biddlesden Abbey (Bucks.) the rent of £2 which it
owed him for Finmere mill, the abbey undertaking
to pay the £4 a year William owed to a Jewess of
Oxford. Later, William granted lands in the manor
to the abbey in return for the discharge of a debt of
8 marks owed to the Jews. (fn. 57) Gilbert of Finmere,
William's elder son, succeeded his father in about
1205; (fn. 58) he was one of the collectors of the carucage
in Oxfordshire in 1220, (fn. 59) and died soon after 1225, (fn. 60)
leaving three daughters by his wife Emma: Philippa,
wife of William de Bois, Alice, wife of Robert de
Chandos, and Cecily, wife of David de Bovenden. (fn. 61)
The three husbands held Finmere as 1 knight's fee
in 1243, but in 1247 Robert de Chandos's portion
and in 1251 William de Bois's portion were purchased by Laurence de Broke. (fn. 62) The latter received
a grant of free warren in his Finmere demesnes in
1251, (fn. 63) and appears to have acquired the whole
manor by 1255. (fn. 64)
On Laurence de Broke's death in 1274 Finmere
passed to his son Hugh, (fn. 65) who was holding the
manor in 1285. (fn. 66) In 1295, however, the Earl of
Gloucester's tenant was said to be 'the heir of
Robert of Finmere', presumably the Osbert of Finmere who was named as tenant in 1314. (fn. 67) Robert
and Osbert were in fact probably sub-tenants, and
Robert may be identical with Robert Peronele who
had held ½ hide under Hugh de Broke in 1279
and who was perhaps a son of Pernel of Finmere, (fn. 68)
who had been granted 2 virgates by Gilbert of Finmere in 1222. (fn. 69) Hugh de Broke, who was dead by
1300, (fn. 70) was succeeded at Finmere by his son
Laurence, but the latter, as he afterwards asserted,
was unlawfully dispossessed by Walter de Langton,
Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield. (fn. 71) The bishop was
in possession in 1300, (fn. 72) but in 1301 he alienated the
manor to Sir William Tuchet. (fn. 73) In 1312 Tuchet
granted Finmere to Bartholomew Badlesmere; it
was regranted to him with the provision that it
should revert to Badlesmere if Tuchet died without
issue. (fn. 74) Both Tuchet and Badlesmere took part in
Thomas of Lancaster's rebellion and were hanged
in 1322 after the battle of Boroughbridge. (fn. 75) Finmere
was claimed by Laurence de Broke soon afterwards, (fn. 76)
but the manor probably remained in the king's hands
until 1333. William Tuchet had died childless and
under the settlement of 1312 the manor was claimed
for Giles, son and heir of Bartholomew Badlesmere. (fn. 77)
Giles received his father's lands in 1333 and at his
death in 1338 held two-thirds of Finmere. (fn. 78) A compromise had evidently been reached with the De
Brokes, for Laurence's widow Ellen held the remaining third of the manor until her death in about 1341. (fn. 79)
Giles's widow Elizabeth was given his part of Finmere in dower, (fn. 80) and she and her successive husbands, Hugh Despenser (d. 1349) and Guy de
Brian, held it until her death in 1359. (fn. 81) By a partition made in 1341 the reversion of Finmere had
been allotted to Giles Badlesmere's third sister and
coheiress Elizabeth, (fn. 82) who had married firstly
Edmund Mortimer (d. 1332), by whom she had a
son Roger, Earl of March, and secondly William de
Bohun, Earl of Northampton. In 1346 Elizabeth and
William held the third of the manor which had been
Ellen de Broke's dower: (fn. 83) this part William retained
after his wife's death in 1356 until his own death in
1360. (fn. 84) Roger Mortimer inherited two-thirds of the
manor on the death of Giles Badlesmere's widow in
1359, but also died in 1360, (fn. 85) a few months before
William de Bohun. Roger's heir Edmund was a
minor, and in 1361 his wardship and the custody of
the manor of Finmere were granted by Edward III
to his daughter Isabel. (fn. 86)
Edmund was granted his father's lands in 1373
and Finmere then followed the descent of the Earldom of March until the death of Edmund, the 5th
earl, in 1425. (fn. 87) Edmund's nephew and heir Richard,
Duke of York, son of Richard, Earl of Cambridge,
and Anne Mortimer, was a minor and in 1428 Finmere was in the custody of Sir Richard Neville. (fn. 88)
Richard, Duke of York, was attainted in 1459 and
killed at Wakefield in 1460, but shortly after his
attainder Henry VI granted Finmere with other
lands to his duchess, Cecily, for her support. (fn. 89) After
his accession as King Edward IV in 1461 Richard's
son confirmed the grant to his mother, and it was
again confirmed by Richard III in 1484. (fn. 90) After
Cecily's death in 1495 Finmere reverted to the
Crown.
Henry VIII granted Finmere to four of his queens,
to Katherine of Aragon in 1509, to Jane Seymour in
1536, to Anne of Cleves in 1540, and to Katherine
Howard in 1541. (fn. 91) In 1546 the manor was granted
to Leonard Chamberlayne of Shirburn and John
Blundell, mercer, of London. (fn. 92) Blundell acquired
the whole manor in 1547 and died in possession in
1559. (fn. 93) Finmere was then divided between his three
daughters, Elizabeth, wife of Edmund Hogan; Mary,
who married firstly Gerard Croker and secondly
Richard Lee; and Theodora, who married firstly
John Denton and secondly Justinian Champneys. (fn. 94)
In 1602 Theodora's son Richard Champneys sold
his third part of the manor to John Temple of Stowe
(Bucks.). (fn. 95) Mary's son John Lee conveyed his third
part to John Croker and others, who sold it in 1614
to John Temple's son, Sir Thomas Temple, Bt.
Two-thirds of the manor thereafter followed the
same descent as Stowe, (fn. 96) and the Temples held the
manorial rights. (fn. 97) In the late 16th century this
included the privilege of proving in the court baron
the wills of people who died within the manor. (fn. 98)
The remaining third of Finmere remained with the
descendants of Elizabeth and Edmund Hogan for
four generations. Her granddaughter Elizabeth
Hogan married Sergeant Thomas Waller, who was
in possession in 1667. (fn. 99) Their daughter Dorothy
married John James, a barrister and a member of an
Essex family. The Jameses were buried in Finmere
church, as was their son Hogan James, who died
without children in 1725. He bequeathed his share
of the manor to his aunt Frances James, who on her
death in 1739 left it to Nathaniel Bacon, a kinsman
by marriage, who had inherited another part.
Nathaniel died in 1746 and his brother Edward sold
his share to Richard, Earl Temple, soon afterwards. (fn. 100)
Earl Temple's descendant Richard Grenville, 2nd
Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, sold the manor
in 1848, when the chief purchasers were Merton
College, John Warner, and John Painter, and
manorial rights lapsed. (fn. 101)
Economic and Social History.
Domeday Book records that on the Bishop of Bayeux's
small estate there was land for 2 ploughs, but that
the tenant's men had only one at work. On the larger
estate of the Bishop of Coutances (fn. 102) there was land for
9 ploughs, although only 8 (2 being on the demesne)
were employed. No labourers are recorded for the
small estate, but as both estates were held by a certain Robert it is likely that the 4 demesne serfs, 10
villeins (villani), and 5 bordars recorded for the large
estate covered the total labour supply. The value of
the small estate had sunk to 40s., half of its preConquest value; while the other remained stationary
at £8. A hundred acres of pasture are mentioned, also
woodland a furlong square and a mill rendering 14s.
The only evidence for economic conditions in the
early 13th century comes from a charter of about
1200, which indicates that the canons of St. Augustine's, Bristol, were keeping sheep on their land in
Finmere. (fn. 103)
By the end of the 13th century there had been
tenurial changes and a considerable growth in population. In 1279 there were 4 free tenants and 29 villein
virgaters. The free tenants held 8½ virgates between
them and owed scutage and rent, with the exception
of one who held his 4 virgates by military service as
1/10 knight's fee. The villeins each paid 4s. and owed
works, paid tallage, and were fined if their sons left
the manor. Their names suggest a population of
comparatively recent growth, many families having
come from neighbouring villages such as Hethe,
Fringford, Fritwell, and Willaston and being still
called after them. An unusual number of them are
named after parts of the village: 'ate Tunesende',
'ate Welle', 'ate Broke', and 'ate Church'. (fn. 104)
Two 14th-century extents, of 1338 and 1359,
cover two-thirds of Finmere manor, the part held
in turn by Giles Badlesmere and his widow Elizabeth. (fn. 105) Their demesne contained some 200 acres of
arable, valued at 4d. an acre in 1338 and 2d. an acre
in 1359, 5¼ acres of meadow at 2s. an acre, and
4 acres of pasture at 6d. an acre. A park of 80 acres,
partly wooded, was worth £1 a year, but the rabbit
warren was worth only 2s. as pasture because it had
been destroyed before Giles's death. The number of
customary tenants in 1338 is not explicitly stated,
but there were certainly 9 cottars and possibly 16
villeins. The villeins owed each year 48 ploughing
works valued at 1½d. each, 16 harrowing works at
1d., 48 weeding works at ½d., 16 lifting and carrying
works at 1d., 16 mowing works at 2d., 306 autumn
works at 2d., 16 works collecting stubble at ½d., and
16 works carrying wood at 1d. each. The cottars
owed 30 weeding works at ½d., 81 autumn reaping
works at 1½d. and 9 works collecting stubble at ½d.
each. No indication is given of how many of these
works were exacted, if any. Besides these labour
services the customaries owed £1 6s. 8d. 'Martinmesgeld', 12s. 11¼d. in loaves and poultry at Christmas, and 9d. Peter's pence on 1 August. The total
annual value of the estate was £16 16s. 5d. By 1359
this had fallen to £13 11s. 2d. The mill and dovecote
brought in 10s. and 2s. 6d. instead of 13s. 4d. and
4s. 5¾d.; the demesne arable, although increased to
234 acres, was valued at 39s. instead of 44s. 8d. for
two-thirds of the arable in 1338. But the most striking difference appears in the receipts from rents and
customary works. Rents were worth £6 18s. 8d.
compared with £5 18s. 2d. in 1338 and works
£1 16s. compared with £5 15s. 3¾d. In 1359 the
customaries were holding 18 virgates, a little less
than two-thirds of the recorded 29 virgates of 1279;
no vacant holdings are noted in the extent, but the
decline in the value of the customary payments indicates that Finmere had suffered from the effects of
plague, though not so catastrophically as elsewhere.
The only evidence for the medieval field system
comes from the extent of 1338. As two-thirds of the
lord's arable was then sown it seems that there were
three fields. (fn. 106)
Fourteenth-century tax lists show that Finmere
was one of the fairly prosperous communities in the
hundred. (fn. 107) The names of 21 persons appear on the
subsidy roll for 1523, but the smallness of the total
contribution (fn. 108) in comparison with other villages and
with previous payments in the 14th century suggests that there had been a considerable decline in
prosperity and population since the first half of the
14th century. Part of this may have been due to the
Black Death. (fn. 109)
The division of the manor into five separate estates
in 1574 meant that in the post-Reformation period
the village continued to suffer from absentee landowners. In the second half of the 17th century, however, the manor-house was let to three families in
succession, the Keats, the Gardiners, and the
Payntons, who may have supplied in some measure
the place of the owners. (fn. 110) In the latter half of the
18th century the Pollards of Finmere House were
the only family of any standing; (fn. 111) their name occurs
in the land-tax assessments until 1807, when the
Halls supersede them as the leading family. (fn. 112)
The Paxtons, whose name appears in the registers
from 1561 onwards, were the chief yeoman family.
John, who died in 1615, had a substantial holding
which his son William inherited. (fn. 113) The family was
prominent throughout the 17th century, (fn. 114) and the
rector described Peter Paxton at his death in 1677 as
'the head of the people of our place'. (fn. 115) As late as
1808 a Paxton was serving as a churchwarden and
the name occurs on the land-tax list for 1832. (fn. 116)
The small extent of the parish and the comparatively small number of freeholders encouraged
early inclosure. It was effected in the 1660's by
agreement between the principal owners and occupiers on the grounds of the inconvenience of the
existing 'intermediary' which produced 'involuntary
trespass'. A survey was made in 1661, and in 1663
the rector, Richard Horn, noted in the register that
the field had been inclosed and allotments awarded,
Sir Richard Temple and Thomas Waller receiving
lands worth £220 and £112 a year respectively. (fn. 117)
The rector was accused by Temple and Waller of
having made difficulties, and of refusing to comply
with the surveyors' award, and a collusive suit
followed in Chancery so as to get the agreement
formally ratified. In 1667 an inclosure agreement
was finally drawn up and ratified in Chancery in
1668. (fn. 118) Of about 1,300 acres inclosed Temple received 556 acres and Waller 414 acres, the former's
arable being in 10 inclosures of an average size of
35 acres, and the latter's in 16 inclosures of about
23 acres average size. (fn. 119) Between them they received
19 acres of meadow, at least 17 acres of closes including the mill and its close, and 99 acres of woodland—
Finmere Park. Temple received the whole of Finmere Warren, 125 acres. The largest of the resident
holders was Peter Paxton with 117 acres, and there
were smaller awards to six others including the
rector and the trustees of the poor's land. (fn. 120) All proprietors were allowed to kill rabbits on their own
land, and the fern on the Warren was to be divided
proportionally between them, being allotted by
1 September and carried away by 18 October each
year. The fern was not to be destroyed save by
ploughing.
The Temples acquired the Waller estate of 1667
in the 18th century, (fn. 121) and in 1786 the Marquess of
Buckingham's estate was by far the largest in Finmere, and was assessed for land tax at £66 compared with the £20 and £16 paid by the two next
largest of a total of seven estates. There were then
11 occupiers. There had been little change by 1832,
when there were 8 estates and 14 occupiers, 7 of
them tenants of the Duke of Buckingham. (fn. 122)
The Vestry Books (1815–33) give much information about conditions after the Napoleonic War. (fn. 123)
In 1818, 2s. a week was enough to keep a girl of under
ten years. In 1817 labourers were to get 17s. a week
in haytime; in 1826 this was reduced to 8s. a week,
although the Duke of Buckingham paid his men 9s.,
in his view the minimum subsistence wage. The
lowness of wages in general is evident from the fact
that in 1821 23 persons were forced to apply for
relief because of the rise in the price of bread. The
vestry's chief business was to cope with the severe
unemployment in the parish, and the methods
adopted show the advantage to the village of having
a good landlord and a conscientious rector. The
Duke of Buckingham, as 'open hearted' as he was
wealthy, and the Revd. William Palmer were most
active.
Details of the 'roundsmen system'—an effort to
give work to the many able-bodied men living on
parish relief—are first recorded in 1818, when there
were 24 such men. The men and boys were divided
into four groups according to their age and were
allocated to employers in proportion to the value of
their land. The overseers gave applicants for relief
work, either on the highways or in the Duke of
Buckingham's woods. The number of unemployed
increased rapidly: in 1820 there were 33 men on the
rounds and 55 in 1822. By 1826 nearly the whole
village was living on relief; out of 90 able-bodied
men with families only 19 were in regular employment—of these 5 were in trade and 7 in service, and
women and girls were obliged to do lace-making.
The average expenditure on the poor in the 1820's
was £473. In September 1826 the vestry submitted
to the Duke of Buckingham a number of resolutions
dealing with the problem. In spite of great overcrowding the vestry, for fear of encouraging increases
in the population, refused to recommend the building of new cottages. It recommended, however,
letting land to the poor. The plan of letting small
allotments of land to agricultural labourers for spade
husbandry was, therefore, tried here at a comparatively early date. From 1826 to 1833 the Duke of
Buckingham rented Poor's Plot from the churchwardens and let it to the poor at cheap rates with the
aim of eradicating pauperism. Then in 1834 he subdivided a farm into allotments, but this scheme was
not very successful, as the allotments were too large
for spade husbandry and too small to be successful
as smallholdings. Meanwhile the rector, William
Palmer, had drawn up a new code of rules for the
management of Poor's Plot. His scheme was still
working in 1887. (fn. 124)
Another remedy recommended in 1826 was to
use money from the rates to apprentice children,
£15 to be spent in the first year, £75 and £90 in the
two following years. Ten children were apprenticed
between 1826 and 1831 to men outside the parish,
but in 1832 an attempt to apprentice nine boys,
mainly to Northampton cordwainers, failed as the
parents were unwilling to part with their children.
Only three were sent. The vestry also agreed in 1826
that no new-comer should be given legal settlement
in the village; that no relief should be paid to persons living outside the parish; that a premium of £2
should be paid to any man finding work outside the
parish, and that the overseers should not give relief
to anyone who refused work.
A proposal made in 1829 to adopt the workhouse
system was abandoned on account of the too great
expense of building a workhouse. In 1831 money
from the rates was paid to help families to emigrate.
The first family to go was that of Paxton, one of the
leading farmers, and in 1832 four more families left
for New York. In 1832 there were still 54 ablebodied men out of work as well as 43 boys under 21,
and 12 older men. The vestry, therefore, agreed that
farmers should employ two labourers for every 100
acres owned, and that the parish should employ one
man to every mile of road, two men on the turnpike,
and two older men to keep the village streets and
paths tidy.
Other questions dealt with by the vestry included
the administration of the parish's charities and applications for special help. These seem to have been
treated sympathetically: for instance, in 1823 £2 15s.
was spent on sending a man to London to have his
eyes cured. The overseers paid a surgeon to look
after the village poor and also sent a subscription to
the Oxford infirmary.
The vestry normally consisted of 2 to 8 members;
an attendance of 33 in 1830 was quite exceptional.
The rector or his curate was always present. In 1815
and 1832 a professional valuer was employed to survey the parish for the poor rate. In 1828 a salary of
£15 was offered to the overseer. (fn. 125) The rector's work
was outstanding. Palmer owned at least eighteen
cottages himself, which he let at uneconomic rents
but at the same time enforced strict rules of conduct
on the tenants. He also looked after the health of the
villagers and saw to it that they had sufficient heating
and food. He organized a coal society and sold faggots
at cost price. There were free dinners on rent day
for the parents and children; there was a school-tea
on 1 May and a school-dinner at Christmas. Soupdinners were also provided twice a week for six weeks
in the year. There was a Finmere Provident Clothing
Club and the schoolchildren's clothing was provided.
The hair of boys and girls alike was cut short once
every six weeks. Lace-making was discouraged and
finally forbidden because of its ill effects on health. (fn. 126)
Milling was for long the chief village trade. A mill
is mentioned in Domesday Book and in the 14th
century, and one was working in the 17th century
when the inclosure agreement contained provisions
safeguarding its flow of water in summer. (fn. 127) There
may have been a blacksmith in the 13th century:
a Robert filius Fabri is mentioned in 1279. (fn. 128) In the
mid-19th century there were two in the village, when
other tradesmen included seven butchers, carpenters, and shoemakers, a cattledealer, a cooper,
a brickmaker employing three labourers, and an
innkeeper-brewer. (fn. 129) In 1826 98 women and 48 girls
above the age of ten had been engaged in lacemaking, which was carried on in almost every cottage. It was still being carried on in 1851 by eighteen
women. (fn. 130) Clay was dug and bricks were made in
Finmere in the 19th and early 20th centuries; (fn. 131) two
coal merchants' businesses were established after the
coming of the Great Central Railway. (fn. 132) There were
seven farmers in the parish in 1853 (fn. 133) and in 1920,
when five of them held farms of over 150 acres. (fn. 134)
There seems to have been a steady growth in
population from the late 17th to the first half of the
19th century. The Compton Census of 1676 recorded
81 adults, while the rector returned 34 houses in
1738, about 40 with 219 inhabitants in 1768, and 46
families in 1778. (fn. 135) In 1801 there were 308 inhabitants and this increased to a peak figure of 399 in
1851. During the second half of the century as the
consequence of the agricultural depression there
was a steady decline, and by 1901 the population
was 226. In 1951 it had risen to 265 and was beginning to increase fairly rapidly. (fn. 136)
Church.
The first evidence for the existence of a
church at Finmere dates from the late 12th century.
The advowson was granted before 1189 by William,
son of Gregory, to the abbey of Augustinian canons
at Bristol. (fn. 137) The abbey's plan to transfer the church
in 1200 to the Hospital of St. John and St. James at
Brackley (Northants) never materialized, (fn. 138) and it
held Finmere until its dissolution in 1539. (fn. 139) In 1546
the king sold it with the manor to John Blundell.
After Blundell's death in 1559 there was a long
period of confusion about the advowson. His heirs
failed to present, for in 1560 the Archbishop of
Canterbury presented after a vacancy of several
months, (fn. 140) and in 1576 there was again a presentation
through lapse, this time by the queen. (fn. 141) The next
year the three owners of the three thirds of the manor
presented, as they did again in 1592, when Robert
Higgins became rector. (fn. 142) On his death the situation
was more complicated: by this time two-thirds of
the manor belonged to Sir Thomas Temple, and the
other third to the two Hogan coheiresses, who were
wards of the king. In 1632 the king presented Lewis
Wemys, (fn. 143) but a few months later, after a case before
the royal court, the right to present was recovered
by Thomas Fowkes of Buckingham, (fn. 144) who seems to
have been acting for Sir Thomas Temple, for
Richard Horn, who then became rector, called
Temple his patron, (fn. 145) and Sir Thomas held twothirds of the advowson at his death. (fn. 146)
The advowson, like the manor, continued to be
divided into a third and two-thirds, but the owners
do not seem to have presented in turn, and there
were several sales of presentations. In 1678 Pope
Danvers and Ambrose Holbech were patrons, after
having bought the right from both Sir Richard
Temple and the Wallers, who owned the other third
of the manor. (fn. 147) William Chaplin, who in 1704 presented his son, probably acquired his right in the
same way. (fn. 148) Richard Temple, Viscount Cobham,
presented in 1726, and Francis Edwards of Tingewick (Bucks.) in 1734. (fn. 149) From 1771 until 1848 the
Earls Temple and the Marquess of Buckingham were
patrons. (fn. 150) The advowson was then bought by John
Walker, who in 1853 presented his son. In about
1865 it was sold to W. Ashwell, who presented his
son in 1866. (fn. 151) In 1931 the livings of Finmere and
Mixbury were united, (fn. 152) and the Misses Ashwell
now (1955) present for two turns and the Bishop of
Oxford for one.
In 1254 the rectory was valued at £5 6s. 8d (fn. 153) and
in 1291 at £8. (fn. 154) By 1535 its value had only risen to
£8 9s. 4d., (fn. 155) but in the second half of the 16th
century it rose sharply, for in 1595 the rector was
leasing most of the tithes for £34, (fn. 156) while perhaps
farming the glebe himself. In 1667 the tithes were
commuted at the inclosure for a rent charge of £80. (fn. 157)
When prices rose in the 18th century this fixed sum
was very disadvantageous to the rector. In 1808 the
value of the living was only £126, (fn. 158) but as the result
of a new valuation of the tithes in 1814, (fn. 159) the value
of the rectory was nearly trebled. (fn. 160) In 1842, after a
third valuation, the rent charge was fixed at £457, (fn. 161)
and this with the glebe made the living worth about
£500.
A terrier of 1601 shows that the glebe then consisted of 80 separate pieces of arable land in the open
fields, three plots of meadow, and common for 8
beasts, 5 horses, and 60 sheep; (fn. 162) a terrier of 1634
lists an even larger number of strips; (fn. 163) but by the
inclosure award of 1667 (fn. 164) all were exchanged for a
compact area of 45 acres adjoining the rectory and
'distinctly mounded'. (fn. 165) In 1760 the rector, Thomas
Long, gave the church half a yardland in Tingewick
(Bucks.), thus increasing the size of the glebe to the
56 acres mentioned in 1808. (fn. 166) There was no glebe
in 1955. (fn. 167)
There is a detailed 17th-century record of the
tithe payments. (fn. 168) It was the custom to give a
shoulder when a lamb was killed, the tenth penny
if it was sold, and a halfpenny when it was weaned.
At Easter the rector received a penny offering, and
a penny from every garden; tithe eggs on Good
Friday; tithe wool at shearing time; cream at a
christening, and a mortuary at a death. His small
tithes included the tithe of hemp, pigs, bees, rabbits,
fruit, tithe milk, and tithe lambs. Some parts of
Finmere Field were free of hay tithes and it was
thought that the parson had been allotted in lieu of
these lands by the riverside called Tythe Meadow
and Parsons Holmes (2 a.).
The living changed hands very frequently in the
Middle Ages: there were 24 pre-Reformation incumbents of whom only four are known to have died
in office. (fn. 169) The first known rector, Roger de Cherlecote (oc. 1200), was a graduate with a son. (fn. 170) In about
his time Finmere also had a hermit, a monk called
William, who had been granted the hermitage by
King Richard. (fn. 171) In 1213 the king ordered that he
should have 1d. a day for life in exchange for land
on which the royal hunting-lodge had been built. (fn. 172)
In the next year it was proposed to give the hermitage, if William had died, to Roger, a former Prior
of Wallingford Priory. (fn. 173) In 1216 another monk called
William was installed at the hermitage, now called
the chapel of Finmere, on condition that he provided with necessaries the hermit (William or Roger
presumably) who was already there but by now
decrepit with age. (fn. 174) In 1218 the king gave instructions to pay 1d. a day to William 'our chaplain of
Finmere' for serving the chapel, (fn. 175) and in 1228
William was enjoined to return to his monastery,
the Benedictine priory of Bradwell (Bucks.). The
king's forester was to take the chapel into the
king's hands and see that services were continued
there. (fn. 176)
A rare piece of evidence about an early 13thcentury parson, probably John de Langton (1299–
1306), occurs in a letter from Bishop Langton to the
Abbot and Convent of Bristol, saying that his clerk
wanted to resign Finmere because of its poverty and
asking that they would present someone chosen by
himself. Langton's successor was Richard de Abingdon, a former Fellow of Merton, and another
graduate, Geoffrey Damport, was instituted in the
early 15th century. (fn. 177)
In the post-Reformation period Finmere was
fortunate in being spared the evil of absenteeism:
during three centuries, out of twenty incumbents
fourteen resided from their institutions to their
deaths. (fn. 178)
One of the most notable rectors in the 17th
century was Richard Horn (or Horne) of Hart Hall,
Oxford (1632–77). It was his practice to record in
Latin in the registers the chief contemporary events
both national and local. (fn. 179) Typical of his irregular
entries are the opening of the Civil War (1642); the
intrusion of a Presbyterian, Richard Warr, into his
office (1647); and the deaths of Oliver Cromwell
(1658), Thomas Appletree, Horneromastix, the
magistrate resident at Deddington, who had taken
an active part in the rector's ejection (1666), and
Henrietta, Duchess of Orleans (1670). The comments are often trenchant. Horn continued to reside
at Finmere during the Commonwealth and regained
his rectory after the Restoration. (fn. 180)
Thomas Long (1734–71), 'a man of the most
exemplary piety and charity', (fn. 181) is the most interesting of the 18th-century rectors and a marked contrast to the better known and less desirable type of
18th-century parish priest. The memorial to his
sister Mary Turner and her husband in Finmere
church shows that he was a man of good family, one
'of the Longs of Wiltshire'. Like Richard Horn,
Long believed in keeping records, and instituted the
Rector's Book for notes on matters of local importance: his first entry is a useful abstract of the
deed of inclosure. It is characteristic of him that his
answers to the episcopal visitation questionnaires,
unlike those of many of his colleagues, are extremely
full and careful. He resided constantly at his parsonage, held two services every Sunday, celebrated
Holy Communion five times a year, and duly
observed festival days, as also Lent and 'the passion
week'. (fn. 182) Long's special concern seems to have been
for the children of Finmere. He kept a school, (fn. 183) and
excelled as a catechizer. In 1759 he claimed that he
catechized every Sunday and every other day of the
week except in the harvest season, and he gave details
of his system. (fn. 184) In his latter years, owing to illness,
he was obliged to have a curate and substituted for
his own catechitical method Crossman's Introduction
to the Christian Religion. In 1762 he printed The
Holy Scripture the best Teacher of Good Manners and
Civility, his last lecture on the catechism, which he
presented to the youth of Finmere and their elders
as a permanent memorial of his teaching. (fn. 185) Happily,
his work at Finmere was followed up by that of the
younger William Cleaver, rector from 1783 to 1787
and afterwards a bishop. (fn. 186) Among other things,
Cleaver instituted eight celebrations of Holy Communion, introduced musical instruments into the
church services, and patronized a resident schoolmaster. (fn. 187) Finally, mention must be made of William
Joscelyne Palmer, of whose devoted cure (1814–52)
Dean J. W. Burgon wrote a vivid sketch. (fn. 188)
The church of ST. MICHAEL, which has been
much restored, comprises a nave and chancel,
separated by a chancel arch, a western tower, south
porch, and north aisle. The north wall of the chancel,
the battlemented tower of three stages and most of
the windows are the only survivals of the 14thcentury church. By the mid-17th century the fabric
was in a precarious condition, for an entry of 1651
in the registers records that the walls 'were propt
with timber'. In 1664 the churchwardens reported
that their church was 'in decay and ready to fall',
and that the two lords of the manor had covenanted
with the parishioners to rebuild it. (fn. 189) In 1668 the
churchwardens stated that they 'had been at extraordinary charges (wth ye whole towne) about repairing their church which is now done'. (fn. 190) A stone with
the date 1666 and the name of a mason (?) formerly
in the south porch may commemorate this work. (fn. 191)
In 1695 further work was carried out, according to
Blomfield, and was commemorated by an inscription with the date 1695 and the names of the two
churchwardens. (fn. 192) Blomfield states that at this time
the roof of the chancel was covered with a low plaster
ceiling, which concealed the upper part of the east
window, and the walls were covered with plain
painted woodwork. (fn. 193) But this may have been done
in the 1760's when a considerable amount of work
was in progress, for the rector refers to a period
'when no Duty could be done by reason of being
embarrassed by much scaffolding employed in repairing and ornamenting my church and chancel'. (fn. 194)
It was probably at this time that the western gallery
was built. Some years earlier the north door of the
nave had been blocked up. (fn. 195)
Repairs to the fabric were executed in 1833 and
1840, those in the latter year costing £70. (fn. 196) But the
great restoration of the 19th century was begun in
1856; the south and east walls of the chancel were
then rebuilt, a new south-west window inserted (fn. 197)
and the east window restored. The plaster ceiling
was removed. In 1858, following the plans of G. E.
Street, the south wall of the nave and the chancel
arch were rebuilt, a new nave roof was erected, a
north aisle was built, and the western gallery was
removed; new seating was also provided. (fn. 198) A vestry
was added in 1868 and the south porch rebuilt in
1876. (fn. 199)
The plain circular font may date from the 12th
century. (fn. 200) The clock, placed in the tower in 1697,
was altered and re-erected in 1859. (fn. 201) A new mahogany
communion table was put in in 1755. (fn. 202) The organ,
pulpit, reredos, and tower screen are late-19thcentury work. (fn. 203) The statue of St. Michael in the
gable of the south porch was placed there in 1894.
There is a series of 18th- and 19th-century mural
tablets and gravestones commemorating members of
the manorial families. (fn. 204) They include Mrs. Frances
James (d. 1739), Nathaniel Bacon (d. 1746), Francis
Turner (d. 1752) and his wife Mary, who have a
cartouche with coat of arms, and William Long (d.
1780) and family. A number of rectors have inscriptions: William Chaplin (d. 1726), William Cleaver
(d. 1783), W. L. Bennett (d. 1790), and Robert Holt
(d. 1802). There are 20th-century memorials to
Capt. C. Symes-Thompson (killed 1914) and to
H. E. Symes-Thompson (d. 1952), father of R. E.
Symes-Thompson (killed 1941). (fn. 205)
At the Reformation the church had the minimum
of plate. (fn. 206) In 1955 the plate included a silver chalice,
inscribed 'Finmere, Oxfordshire' (1699), and a paten
(1840) given by the Right Hon. Thomas Grenville. (fn. 207)
Besides this chalice the church had a pewter flagon
in the 18th century, and in 1758 a flagon and paten
of French plate were given. Other possessions of the
church recorded at that time were a carpet, and table
and pulpit cloths, dated 1699, and a damask napkin,
dated 1737. In 1757 these were replaced by a further
gift of furnishings costing over £13, and made of
'very fine purple cloth, and ornamented with yellow
silk fringe', the gift of John Pollard. (fn. 208) The old parish
chest was destroyed about this time. (fn. 209)
As at the Reformation, there was a ring of three
bells in 1955. The inscribed tenor is a fine example
of a 15th-century bell; the treble, which is also
inscribed, is 16th century, and the second was recast
in 1754. (fn. 210)
The registers date from 1662, with four pages of
entries from an earlier book, which began in 1560. (fn. 211)
The churchwardens' book from which Blomfield
quotes has been lost.
Nonconformity.
William Keat (d. 1667) and
his family are the only Roman Catholics known to
have lived in the parish. (fn. 212)
The diocesan returns of the 18th century record
the absence of Protestant dissent, but an Anabaptist
was excommunicated in 1685, (fn. 213) and in 1738 there
was a family of poor Quakers. (fn. 214) In the 1830's two
houses were licensed for worship, (fn. 215) and in 1854
there were about seven dissenters in the parish. (fn. 216)
By 1866 dissent had disappeared. (fn. 217)
Schools.
There was a schoolmaster living in
Finmere in 1784, but there is no record of his school.
There was a Sunday school by 1806, (fn. 218) and in 1808
the parish clerk was teaching 24 children reading and
the catechism, in a house provided rent free by the
Marquess of Buckingham. (fn. 219) This school had 25
pupils—the rector paying for 8—in 1815, (fn. 220) and 30
in 1819. (fn. 221)
In 1824 a National school was built by the Duke
of Buckingham on a piece of waste ground. The
rector and churchwardens accepted responsibility
for its upkeep. A cottage near by was rented from
the duke for the schoolmistress, and was bought
in 1848. (fn. 222) There were 42 pupils in 1833, (fn. 223) and 60 in
1854, when it was reported that evening classes to
teach boys writing held in the spring had been unsuccessful: Sunday evening classes for girls were
being tried with better results. (fn. 224) Attendance figures
were 43 in 1889, 40 in 1906, (fn. 225) and in 1937 there were
20 pupils. In 1926 pupils over 11 years old had been
transferred to Fringford school; in 1948 Finmere
school was closed, the infants being transferred to
Mixbury and the juniors to Fringford. (fn. 226)
Charities.
By his will dated 1666 William Keat (fn. 227)
left a rent-charge of 45s. a year on about 10 acres of
land in Breach Furlong, of which 25s. was to be distributed annually to five poor people of Finmere.
This charity has been regularly distributed (fn. 228) and
five people received 'Keat's Crowns' at Christmas
1954.
At the inclosure of 1667 12 acres of furze, set
aside at some earlier date for the use of the poor,
were assigned to trustees. The plot was producing
a yearly rent of £3 in 1786, and of £7 2s. 6d. in 1823,
when the income was used to enable poor families to
buy 1 cwt. of coal a week at a reduced price from
Christmas to Easter. (fn. 229) From 1827 to 1834 the Duke
of Buckingham rented the Poor's Plot and sub-let it
as allotments at 3s. the chain. The duke's allotment
scheme broke down, but was successfully revived by
the rector, who paid the rent—£16 in the mid-19th
century—into the village coal club funds. (fn. 230) In 1954
the rent was £10 12s., and after the payment of expenses the balance was paid to the coal and clothing
clubs.
The Revd. Richard Ells, by his will dated 1701,
left Rickyard Close (1 a.) in trust, the rents (fn. 231) to be
used for apprenticing one poor boy or girl of Finmere whenever a sufficient sum had accumulated.
From 1715 onwards the close was leased to the rector
for £2 10s. a year and became part of the rectory
garden. (fn. 232) In 1867 it was purchased from the Charity
Commissioners and was added to the glebe. The
proceeds were invested in stock, (fn. 233) which in 1954
produced an annual income of £3 5s. 4d. The charity
is still applied when needed for putting out apprentices. William Baker of Rousham, by a codicil to his
will dated 1770, left £100 in trust for the payment
of an annuity, and after the death of the annuitant
for such poor people of Finmere as were not receiving alms. Baker's executors transferred £100 in
stock to the rector and churchwardens in 1782. It
proved impracticable to limit the distribution of the
charity as intended by the founder, and by 1824 the
income was being used in the same way as the rents
from the Poor's Plot. (fn. 234) The annual income was
£3 9s. 6d. in 1954. Stephen Painter bequeathed £100
to the Sunday schools of the parish in 1834. (fn. 235) In
1954 an income of £2 13s. 4d. was paid into the
Sunday school funds.
Roundell Palmer, Lord Selborne, by deed dated
1872 gave the interest on stock then amounting to
£1 17s. 6d. a year to the parochial clothing club, or
to be divided among five old men. (fn. 236) In 1954 the
stock produced £1 11s. 4d. which was paid to the
clothing club.
Corbett Charles Barrett by his will proved in
1928 left three cottages in Finmere to be converted
into almshouses, and £500 in stock the income of
which was to be spent on the cottages. The latter
proved unfit for the founder's purpose, and were
reclaimed by his executors after an order made in
1929 had transferred the stock to the Official
Trustees. The annual income of £20 has since been
distributed in quarterly payments to three poor
people towards their rent. (fn. 237)