HAMPTON GAY
The 19th-century parish, covering 684 acres, was
bounded on the south by the parish of Hampton
Poyle to which it was united in 1932. (fn. 1) The River
Cherwell bounds it on the west and Bletchingdon
parish on the north and east. The river here meanders
through an alluvial flood-plain that is seldom less
than 200 yards wide and in some parts well over
twice that width. This has prevented the building
of roads direct to the lands on the west bank of the
Cherwell, which today are connected with Hampton
Gay only by a footbridge. The only metalled roads
are that from Hampton Poyle to Bletchingdon, which
crosses the east end of the parish, and its branch,
nearly a mile long, that runs westward to the Manor
Farm and the cottages near the church. From this
nucleus footpaths lead to Shipton-on-Cherwell
church as well as to Bletchingdon village.
In 1709 the inhabitants were indicted for the bad
state of their highway; and in 1758 the rector was
empowered to levy a tax of 3½d. in the £1 on holdings and 3½d. on £20 of personal estates for the
repair of the roads. (fn. 2)
The geology and relief of the parish are simple.
From the flat riverine alluvium the land rises gently
through a narrow band of Cornbrash to a wide, flat
terrace, which is floored by gravels in the west and
elsewhere by Oxford Clay with occasional thin
patches of downwash soils. In the north-east this
undulating plateau slopes up to a higher patch of
gravel. (fn. 3) On the side facing Hampton Gay hamlet
this patch has been deeply cut by a small stream.
Whereas the meadows lie at about 208 feet above
sea-level and the main terrace at 230 to 260 feet, this
higher gravel patch rises to 326 feet. On the hill
slope near Bletchingdon lies Knapp's acre, formerly
an arable strip but now grassland. It was once clearly
marked by two rows of stones, which have since
been mostly replaced by two lines of trees. The acre
therefore remains a remarkable, if not unique,
feature of the Oxfordshire landscape.
The Oxford canal does not enter the parish, but
the level of the canalized stretch of the Cherwell,
which it uses, is controlled by the weirs of Hampton
Gay mill. The London and Western canal or the
Hampton Gay canal, planned in 1792 to connect the
Oxford canal and London, was never cut. (fn. 4)
The hamlet stands on the northern edge of a patch
of gravel and, as A. D. Godley noted, within a large
meander of the Cherwell:
'Cherwell winds with devious coil
Round Hampton Gay and Hampton Poyle.'
The Old English name Hampton means village
or farm, and the distinctive name Gay comes from
the De Gay family, the 12th-century lords of the
manor. (fn. 5)
Hampton once had a larger population than it has
today. In the 17th century there were seven taxable
houses for the hearth tax of 1665 (fn. 6) —the manor-house,
two largish farm-houses or gentlemen's houses for
which twelve hearths were returned, a small farmhouse with three hearths, and three cottages. No estimate of the number of houses survives for the 18th
century as no returns were made to episcopal visitations, but Davis's map of 1797 shows at least ten
houses in the village and two a little way off. It marks
Mill Lane parallel with the northern loop of the
river. (fn. 7) A victualler had been licensed in 1735, but
there is no further record of one. (fn. 8) By 1811 there
were thirteen houses and by 1851 there were seventeen. By 1901 the village had shrunk to six houses. (fn. 9)
In 1955 there were two isolated cottages, another isolated dwelling, Watkin's Farm, which had recently
been converted into a cottage, while the Manor Farm
and a group of five cottages made up the hamlet. (fn. 10)
The farm-house is a substantial building of two
stories with gables, and probably dates from the 17th
century. It is built of coursed rubble and roofed
with Stonesfield slate. The end stacks of the main
block are surmounted by brick shafts. The entrance
to the forecourt is between a pair of ashlar gate-piers
with stone ball finials. The house was enlarged in the
19th century by a two-story wing.
To the west is the ruin of the manor-house: most
of its outer walls are still standing. This residence
was erected by the Barry family (fn. 11) in the second half
of the 16th century. When Vincent Barry's daughter
married Edward Fenner in 1598 provision was made
for her father to live on at the manor-house. By an
agreement of 1612 Barry was to have board and
lodging for himself and two servants, and stabling
for two geldings. (fn. 12) The house retained its original
Elizabethan plan and features almost unaltered up to
the destruction of its roofs and interior by fire in
1887. It was three-storied and constructed throughout of coursed rubble with freestone dressings.
E-shaped in plan, it has a battlemented central porch
with a doorway with moulded jambs and a fourcentred arch with blank shields in the spandrels. The
south window of the hall has eight lights with stone
mullions and transoms and a moulded course running along the whole facade. (fn. 13) All the other windows
were stone-mullioned and square-headed, with
moulded dripstones. When it was sold to William
Wilson in 1809 it was described as 'a venerable Gothic
mansion, which has been very substantially built of
stone'. Several of the rooms were then said to be in
'an unfinished state' and the whole much neglected.
The amenities included 'a garden, surrounded on
three sides with brick and stone walls, lately built
and planted'. (fn. 14) About 1870, when the first extant
photographs were taken, the interior retained many
handsome chimney-pieces, and several of the rooms
were nearly in their original state with some excellent oak panelling. (fn. 15) The house was subdivided into
two tenements shortly before it was gutted by fire in
April 1887. It was then jointly occupied by a farmer
and Messrs. J. and B. New, paper manufacturers. (fn. 16)
The mansion was never repaired, but the stone
exterior has withstood the weather well, and together with the nearby site of the former paper-mill
it formed in 1955 one of the most picturesque ruins
in Oxfordshire.
The village is memorable for its part in the abortive
agrarian rising of 1596. (fn. 17)
Manor.
In 1086 there were two estates in
HAMPTON GAY, one of 3 hides held by Roger
d'Ivry, and one of 2 hides which ought to have been
royal demesne, but which was held by Rainald,
Roger d'Ivry's tenant of his estate. (fn. 18) Roger's lands
were part of the honor which had been given to him
by Robert (I) d'Oilly, (fn. 19) and which ultimately passed
as the honor of St. Valery to Richard, Earl of Cornwall. (fn. 20) Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, claimed his rights
as overlord in 1292, and the ½ fee became merged
in the Duchy of Cornwall. (fn. 21) The king's estate in
Hampton became part of the honor of Gloucester,
and together with lands at Otley in Oddington
formed ½ knight's fee. (fn. 22) The overlordship of the
estate followed the same descent as that of Finmere. (fn. 23)
By the 13th century the Champernowne family were
mesne lords of the Gloucester fee, (fn. 24) as they were of
the Gloucester fee in Lower Heyford. William de
Champernowne was succeeded by his daughter Joan
by about 1260, and the mesne lordship probably
descended through Joan's son John de Willington
(d. 1339) to her grandson Henry, who was mesne
lord at his death in 1349: (fn. 25) it is not subsequently
mentioned.

HAMPTON GAY MANOR HOUSE
About 1137 Robert de Gay was tenant of both the
Hampton estates, as his predecessor Rainald had
been in 1086. Robert, the founder of the monastery
at Otley, was succeeded in 1138 or very soon afterwards by his son Reginald. (fn. 26) Reginald died between
1173 and 1177 and survived his son Robert, being
succeeded by his grandson Robert, a minor who was
placed with his land in the ward of William le Poure
of Oddington. (fn. 27) Robert's wife Maud le Poure was no
doubt William's daughter. (fn. 28) Between about 1195 and
1205 Oseney Abbey acquired 2 virgates in Hampton
Gay from Robert's nephew, Reginald son of Norman, (fn. 29) and about 1210 Robert himself started a
series of gifts to the abbey, which by 1218 held
nearly all the ½ fee of St. Valery. In 1219 Robert let
his whole demesne in Hampton at farm to Oseney,
and finally, between 1220 and 1222, gave the abbey
the whole manor for a nominal rent. Oseney became
responsible for the forinsec service of the two ½ fees,
and Robert's gift was confirmed by his sons Philip
and Robert, and later by his immediate lords
Richard of Cornwall and William de Champernowne. (fn. 30) In 1292 Edmund of Cornwall released the
abbey from the payment of homage and relief due
to him and his successors, but retained the service
of ½ knight. (fn. 31) William and Joan de Champernowne,
however, acquitted the abbey of half the service of
the ½ fee held of the Earl of Gloucester. (fn. 32)
Within the manor of Hampton, which was held
by Oseney Abbey until the Dissolution, (fn. 33) were two
small estates belonging to the Templars and Godstow Abbey respectively. About 1170 Reginald de
Gay, with the consent of his son Robert, gave a
virgate in Hampton to the Templars of Cowley.
Reginald's grandson confirmed the gift about
1190, (fn. 34) and the Templars held the estate (fn. 35) until
1311, when it passed to the Hospitallers. In 1512
it was held under the Hospital by John Kempster
and was worth 13s. 4d. a year. (fn. 36) Godstow received
½ hide in Hampton Gay, part of the St. Valery fee,
from Robert de Gay about 1218. (fn. 37) A Bletchingdon
under-tenant of the manor gave the abbey a few
acres in about 1220 and 1250; and another Bletchingdon man added some adjoining land about 1250. (fn. 38)
Godstow held this property until the Dissolution,
when it seems to have been included in their
Bletchingdon estate. (fn. 39)
In 1542, after the suppression of Oseney, Hampton
Gay manor and the Hospitallers' lands there were
sold by the Crown to Leonard Chamberlayne of
Shirburn. (fn. 40) In 1544 Leonard Chamberlayne sold
Hampton Gay manor to John Barry of Eynsham for
£1,100. (fn. 41) Barry died in 1546 and left Hampton to his
son Lawrence, (fn. 42) who was succeeded in 1577 by his
son Vincent. (fn. 43) In 1598, on the marriage of his daughter
and heiress Katherine to Edward Fenner, Vincent
Barry conveyed the manor to Edward Fenner's
father Edward and to Henry Collier, to his own use for
his life, and then to his son and his daughter-in-law
Katherine and their heirs. (fn. 44) In 1613, however, he
surrendered the manor to Katherine and Edward in
return for annuities, totalling £63 6s. 8d., for himself and his wife Anne, and for their maintenance in
the manor-house for life. (fn. 45) Vincent died in 1615, (fn. 46)
Edward in 1625, and Katherine in 1663. (fn. 47) In 1657
Katherine had settled the reversion of Hampton
Gay at her death on her cousin Vincent Barry of
Thame. (fn. 48) Vincent died in 1666, and the manor
descended to his son Vincent (d. 1680) and his
grandson Vincent. The estate was mortgaged in
1671; and in 1682 the last Vincent Barry first
mortgaged it again for £4,500 to Robert Jennings of
Abingdon and then sold it outright to Sir Richard
Wenman of Caswell for £6,400. (fn. 49) Sir Richard, who
succeeded to the viscountcy of Wenman of Tuam in
1686, died in 1690, (fn. 50) and in 1691 his widow Katherine
sold the manor to William Hindes of Priors Marston
(Warws.). (fn. 51)
By his will William Hindes (d. 1706) left Hampton
Gay to trustees, with the provision that if it were not
sold to pay his debts it should pass to his son
Thomas when he married or came of age. (fn. 52) Thomas
received the manor from the trustees in 1715, (fn. 53) but
died in 1718, leaving it to his elder son John, although his widow Elizabeth continued to hold a
part of the estate as her jointure. (fn. 54) John died childless in 1743 and was succeeded by his brother the
Revd. Thomas Hindes, who in 1761 settled the
manor jointly on himself and his intended wife
Susannah Ryves, daughter of Edward Ryves of
Woodstock. (fn. 55) Thomas died in 1768 and his widow
in 1798, when the manor passed to Ann Hindes,
only child of Richard Hindes (d. 1776), a cousin of
the Revd. Thomas Hindes. (fn. 56) Ann married first
Henry Hill (d. 1803) and then Henry Huguenin.
The Huguenins won a long Chancery case against
the Revd. Thomas Bazeley, a kinsman of the Revd.
Thomas Hindes, who had got possession of the
deeds relating to Hampton Gay. (fn. 57) The estate had
become heavily mortgaged, however, and in 1809
it was sold by the Huguenins' creditors to William
Wilson for £16,500. (fn. 58) William Wilson died in 1821
and was succeeded by his son the Revd. William
Wilson the elder, (fn. 59) who in 1848 surrendered his
interest in Hampton Gay to his son, the Revd.
William Wilson the younger. (fn. 60) In 1849 the latter
sold the manor to Charles Venables, the sitting
tenant, for £12,850. (fn. 61) In 1862 Venables sold it to
Wadham College for £17,500. (fn. 62) The college rounded
off the estate by purchasing a small piece of meadow
land from Tyrrell Knapp of Hampton Poyle in
1867, (fn. 63) some 8 acres from the Duke of Marlborough
in 1868, (fn. 64) and about 11 acres from Arthur Annesley,
Viscount Valentia, in 1902. (fn. 65) In 1928 Col. S. L.
Barry of Long Crendon manor (Bucks.) bought the
estate from Wadham College for £6,500, thus reacquiring it for the family which had held it from
1544 to 1682. (fn. 66) On Col. Barry's death in 1943 the
estate passed to his daughter Jeanne Irene, wife of
the Hon. James Angus McDonnell. (fn. 67)
Lesser Estate.
The manorial estate covers
228 acres: the remainder of the parish, 447 acres, was
part of the land purchased by John Barry in 1544
and shortly before 1637 passed to Christopher, a
younger brother of Vincent Barry (d. 1666). (fn. 68) By
1700 this estate was being administered by John and
Sutton Coghill of Bletchingdon, and in that year it
was bought by William, Lord Digby, who in 1719
sold it to Christopher Tilson, a clerk of the Treasury (d. 1742). (fn. 69) It remained in the Tilson family
until 1795, when John Henry Tilson sold it to
Arthur Annesley. It has since followed the descent
of Bletchingdon manor. (fn. 70)
Economic History.
The Domesday survey
gives details for 3 of the 5 hides of Hampton, the
D'Ivry estate. (fn. 71) Here there was land for 3 ploughs,
and there were 3 ploughs at work, all on the demesne.
The meadowland was 3 by 1½ furlongs in extent, and
the estate, on which a single villein (villanus) lived,
had increased in value from £2 10s. to £3 since the
Conquest. In the late 12th century husbandry was
organized on a two-field system, (fn. 72) although the
fields are not named. The virgates of arable—of
which there were about 30 (fn. 73) —each consisted of 24
or 25 field acres and were divided more or less
equally between the two fields. (fn. 74) The selion or ridge
was commonly reckoned as a ½ acre. (fn. 75) To each
virgate of arable pertained 2 acres of meadow, and
in one instance the acre of meadow is known to have
been 4 perches in breadth. (fn. 76) 'Brodemede' at least
was a lot-meadow in the late 13th century. (fn. 77) Much
of the demesne arable lay in compact blocks in about
1185, when it included at least 7 complete furlongs. (fn. 78)
By 1219 the demesne arable was unequally divided,
74 acres in one field and 18 in the other, (fn. 79) but this
may be accounted for by the alienation of much of
the demesne by the De Gay family by this date.
The pastures of 'Hulliwaldene' and 'Colowelle' and
the meadow of 'Depeham' were among demesne
lands granted to Oseney Abbey about 1218, (fn. 80) and
the abbey finally acquired the remaining demesne
meadows, the isle of Petham, 'Hulmede', and the
meadow 'at the head of the croft', by Robert de Gay's
gift of the whole manor. (fn. 81) The manor-house had
gardens and a dovecote by 1219, (fn. 82) and about the
same time Oseney acquired the water-mill, to which
pertained 2 acres of arable, two hams in the Cherwell, and the fishery of the whole river from Shipton
weir to 'the meeting of three waters' below the mill,
and of half the river from Thrupp mill to 'Goldebroc'. (fn. 83)
By 1279 Oseney Abbey held almost the whole
manor in demesne. (fn. 84) The Abbess of Godstow held a
½ hide granted by Robert de Gay about 1220, (fn. 85) and
the Templars of Cowley held a virgate given to
them by Reginald de Gay about 1170, (fn. 86) but besides
these there were only six free tenants with about
4 virgates in all. (fn. 87) The commonest rent was 6s. a year
for a virgate. Two villeins with ½-virgates worked
at the lord's will, owed tallage and were bound to
pay fines if their sons left the manor. (fn. 88) Oseney Abbey
was keeping sheep on the manor in the 1220's when
by a reciprocal agreement with the lord of Hampton
Poyle it secured pasture for a flock of 200 in the
fields and meadows of the adjacent manor after the
corn and hay harvests. A gap near Hampton Poyle
church gave access to Hampton Poyle North Field
when it lay fallow. (fn. 89) The crops grown, wheat, barley,
rye, and beans, had given their names by the late
12th century to 'Whethulle', 'Berefurlong', 'Ruifurlong', and 'Beanlonde'. (fn. 90) Oats and peas were
being grown in 1280 and malt was evidently being
produced from the barley. At this time a canon of
Oseney was resident at Hampton Gay as bailiff of
the abbey's land there and in adjoining parishes. At
Michaelmas 1280 his return of stock included 314
sheep in the whole bailiwick, 69 cattle, and 71 pigs. (fn. 91)
In the early 14th century Hampton Gay was one
of the smallest communities in Ploughley hundred. (fn. 92)
There were only nine taxpayers in 1306, including
Oseney Abbey, whose assessment was more than
half the total, and only twelve in 1316 and 1327. (fn. 93)
By 1344 Hampton had been combined with Bletchingdon for purposes of taxation, and in 1428 it was
exempted from taxation because there were fewer
than ten resident householders. (fn. 94) In 1509–10
Oseney received from its estate a revenue of £13 16s.,
but reserved to itself pasture for 240 sheep. (fn. 95) The
manor was leased for 40 years in 1518 and in 1535 it
brought in a farm of £11 and £6 2s. from the rents
of customary tenants. (fn. 96) Some arable land had by
this time gone back to waste: in 1512 in the former
Templars' (now the Hospitallers') virgate there
were 6 acres uncultivated and covered with furze. (fn. 97)
In 1524 there were seven contributors to the lay
subsidy, (fn. 98) and inclosure, with some consequent
depopulation, (fn. 99) may have already begun. The acquisition of the manor in 1544 by John Barry, who
had made his money from wool, (fn. 100) may have accelerated the work, which was evidently carried on
by his successors Lawrence and Vincent Barry.
Inclosure was probably facilitated by the natural
division of the parish into two, part lying within
the meander of the Cherwell, which could easily be
inclosed by a ring fence, and part without. Christopher Barry's will (1670) suggests that inclosure had
been long accomplished. It states that a parcel of
land and pasture called the Great Leas had formerly
been 'one inclosure', but is now divided into several
inclosures. (fn. 101)
Late Elizabethan inclosure of lands in Hampton
Gay and the neighbourhood involved most of the
male inhabitants of the village in an agrarian revolt
in 1596. (fn. 102) The originator and driving force of the
plot was Bartholomew Steere of Hampton Poyle,
but Richard Bradshaw of Hampton Gay spread the
discontent as he travelled on his rounds as a miller's
man. The conspirators first met at John Steere's
house at Hampton Poyle and eventually involved
people as far afield as Rycote and Witney. They
aimed at destroying inclosures and the inclosers and
incidentally at helping the poor, who had suffered
from them. They planned to meet on Enslow Hill in
Bletchingdon and, if necessary, to go towards
London where the apprentices might help them.
Among the chief proposed victims was Vincent
Barry, who was to be murdered as well as his
daughter. Many of the would-be rioters worked for
Barry.
The plot proved abortive. Only 'some ten persons
with pikes and swords' assembled on Enslow Hill.
But official action was taken against the rioters, as
a Hampton Gay carpenter, Roger Symonds, (fn. 103) warned
Vincent Barry of the plot, (fn. 104) and Lord Norreys was
notified. When asking the government for instructions, he asked that some 'order should be taken
about inclosures … that the poor may be able to
live'. (fn. 105) Five Hampton Gay men were among those
arrested and sent to London; one was sentenced to
be hanged and quartered as a ringleader. (fn. 106) The revolt
undoubtedly affected parliamentary opinion, and
helped to secure the re-enactment of the Tillage
Acts in 1597, which included the order that lands in
Oxfordshire converted to pasture since the accession
of Elizabeth should be restored to tillage.
The population and pattern of land-holding
altered little between 1560 and 1665. There were still
the main estate, held by the Barry family, and five
leasehold tenements. Edward Belson, taxed on five
hearths for the tax of 1665, (fn. 107) had a leasehold of
Kempster's house and three closes of meadow adjoining for which he paid 5s. yearly, having paid
£160 for the original copyhold in 1633. John
Dennet, carpenter, taxed on one hearth, held for
99 years at 5s. annual rent and an initial payment of
£30 a dwelling, a plot of ground, and a pasture
called Gouldhill containing 11 acres. He had to pay
£5 yearly for every acre of pasture converted into
tillage but was not to plough Gouldhill for six years
from his new lease (1654). He also had to pay 10s.
for every apple or pear tree lopped or felled. Robert
Springall, taxed on one hearth, had a tenement in
reversion; Anne Gilkes, discharged from payment
on one hearth on account of poverty, had a cottage
and small plot at a rent of 5s. a year. William Tomson, taxed on three hearths, may have held the tenement formerly in the possession of one Paul
Triplett. (fn. 108)
The parish was mainly under pasture and large
tracts were often leased to outside graziers, such as
Oxford butchers. (fn. 109) Sainfoin, mentioned in 1691, (fn. 110)
was introduced early, as at Bletchingdon: its cultivation emphasizes the stock-fattening aspect of farming at this date. Yet the predominance of this
pastoral economy was greatly altered in 1681 when
the grist mill was leased by Vincent Barry to John
Allen of Hampton, paper-maker, at a rent of £9 a
year. The lessors were to pay £10 for rebuilding or
supply rough timber of elm or ash to that value, if
the dwelling-house should be burnt down. The mill
was to be used only for paper-making. (fn. 111) So began
an industry which flourished until the early 19th
century and continued until 1887, although its
condition was now less prosperous partly on account
of the uncertain state of the paper trade and partly
because of disastrous fires at the paper-mill. In
1863–73 the mill was reconstructed and James Lee,
iron-founder of Oxford and Millbank Iron Works,
erected a gas-works and a steam-engine and other
machinery, but the new works were destroyed by
fire in 1875. In 1876 the main building was reroofed
by St. Vincent's Corrugated Iron Works of Bristol,
the sheets coming by canal and costing all told £610.
By July 1880 the machinery was in good order and
a considerable amount of paper had been made. The
fittings included an iron water-wheel, 2 iron pitwheels, 4 iron rag-washing and heating engines, a
60-inch paper-making machine, a 30 h.p. Cornish
steam-boiler, a new 8 h.p. high-pressure steamengine, and various other machinery 'capable of
making about one ton of paper per day'. (fn. 112) Yet within a few years the tenant had gone bankrupt and the
same fate overtook subsequent tenants. In April
1887 the stock in trade was sold under a distress for
rent. It consisted of about 15 tons of rags, waste
paper, &c., 8 tons of white and brown mineral alum,
resin, face-blue, oil, a quantity of paper bags, colouring, string, &c. (fn. 113) Today only the site and a few portions of the walls and the water-falls remain.
Hampton Gay was little more than a hamlet in
the late 17th century, when the Compton Census
(1676) recorded 28 adults. There appears to have
been an increase in population during the late 18th
century, for by 1811 there were 17 families crowded
into 13 houses. The peak was reached in 1821, with
86 inhabitants, and numbers had declined to 67 by
1861. After the destruction of the manor-house in
1887 the population fell to 30. The decline continued
during the 20th century until in 1955 there were
only 14 parishioners, probably the lowest total since
Anglo-Saxon times. (fn. 114)
The agricultural economy has changed almost as
much in the 19th and 20th centuries as the number
of farm-workers. On the manor estate of 210 acres
in 1809, the arable occupied 70 acres; in 1848 about
55 acres; in 1862 about 30; in 1928 there was no
arable; (fn. 115) in 1955 over 100 acres were ploughed by
tractor. (fn. 116) The non-manorial part of the parish also
has a high proportion of arable land, and, as has
been usual since 1630, part is farmed from Hampton
Poyle and rather more from Bletchingdon. The
manorial holding still differs in economy from the
non-manorial estates. Its grassland is used mainly for
fattening, especially of bullocks, while the pastures
of the remainder of the parish are devoted almost
entirely to dairy cattle.
Church.
The earliest evidence that has been
found about a church at Hampton Gay is a grant of
tithes in 1074 (see below). In the late 12th century
the advowson belonged to the lord of the manor, for
by a charter dated before 1173 Reginald de Gay
presented his clerk Gilbert to the church with a ½
hide of land, free of all service except the royal
service. (fn. 117) Soon after, he granted the church to
Oseney Abbey, and in the 1180's Robert de Gay
made a similar grant with the provision that the
abbey should not take possession until after Gilbert's
death. (fn. 118) Gilbert must have died in about 1190,
when Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln, allowed the canons
to appropriate the church, and Urban III allowed
them to serve it with three or four canons. One
was to be responsible for cure of souls and to be
presented to the bishop. (fn. 119) The absence of institutions in the Lincoln registers shows that this last
provision was not complied with. It is in any case
unlikely that Oseney served the church with its own
canons, (fn. 120) but as the church was valued at only £2 in
1254 and 1291, it may not have been rich enough to
support a resident priest. (fn. 121)
Its 16th-century value is not known, since in
1535 the rectory was being farmed with the manor.
The church was then served by a chaplain who
received only £2 a year from Oseney. (fn. 122) An episcopal
visitation found the chancel and nave dilapidated,
the chancel windows broken, and no distributions
being made to the poor—a reference perhaps to the
10s. which Oseney was supposed to distribute for
the soul of its founder Robert d'Oilly. (fn. 123)
In the 11th century Robert d'Oilly granted twothirds of his demesne tithes in Hampton to the
church of St. George in Oxford castle. (fn. 124) When St.
George's and its possessions became part of Oseney
in 1149, (fn. 125) the abbey tried to collect these tithes in
spite of the opposition of Hampton's rector, Gilbert.
Oseney won its case, and in a general synod at
Oxford, probably that of about 1166, (fn. 126) Reginald de
Gay confirmed the abbey's claims. (fn. 127) When Oseney
appropriated the church, obtaining all the tithes in
the parish, this portion came to an end.
St. Frideswide's also had some rights in the church,
its claim to 16d. and 2 chaldrons (coddos) of grain
a year being confirmed by the Pope in 1158. (fn. 128) In a
property settlement of 1388 between Oseney and St.
Frideswide's this income was awarded to Oseney. (fn. 129)
After Oseney's dissolution in 1539, the rectory
estate continued as an indistinguishable part of the
manor, and Hampton Gay was considered as an
extra-parochial free chapel, exempt from the bishop's
jurisdiction. (fn. 130) As the church then had no endowment,
the lords of the manor, 'out of their generosity',
paid a minister. (fn. 131) A rector of Shipton-on-Cherwell
is known to have served it in the 16th century, (fn. 132)
and occasionally it was served from Blenheim or
Charlbury. Early in the 18th century a curate from
Kidlington was receiving £10. (fn. 133)
The living was again endowed in 1768, when the
Revd. Thomas Hindes, who rebuilt the church, left
£700 to buy government securities to provide £20
annually for a minister. He was to be nominated by
the owner of the manor, with preference for a Fellow
of the Queen's College, Oxford. The bequest was to
be void if the bishop insisted on licensing the
minister, or if he or any ecclesiastical court meddled
with him, or if any attempt were made to make
Hampton into a parish or to help it with Queen
Anne's Bounty. (fn. 134)
During the 19th century there was much uncertainty about the ecclesiastical status of Hampton.
The patronage of the church remained with the lord
of the manor, but from 1809 the bishop began to
license the curates in spite of the provisions of
Thomas Hindes's will, and in the 1830's acquired
the right to subject the parish to his visitations. (fn. 135)
By then it had been decided that although Thomas
Hindes's bequest was valid, the provisions attached
to it were not, and during the 1850's Hampton was
treated as an ordinary parish. (fn. 136) It was transferred
from Bicester deanery by 1854 to the new deanery
of Islip. (fn. 137)
After Wadham College bought the manor in
1862, it provided a minister, usually the Rector of
Shipton-on-Cherwell; paid him partly from Hindes's
bequest; and refused to nominate him to the bishop. (fn. 138)
During this period the church was sometimes considered a donative, sometimes a chapelry attached
to the manor-house. (fn. 139) It was finally decided in the
1920's that Hampton was an ancient ecclesiastical
parish and not extra-parochial, and that the church
was not a donative but a perpetual curacy in the gift
of the lord of the manor. (fn. 140) Its endowment remained
£20 a year, and it was served by the Rector of
Shipton-on-Cherwell in 1955.
The church of ST. GILES, built in 1767–72,
comprises a nave, south porch, and western tower.
Of the medieval building nothing remains except
the cross on the eastern gable and the reused battlements of the tower. During the 19th-century restoration, remains were found inside the walls of a 13thcentury stiff-leaf capital and fragments of windows,
which were probably parts of the original church. (fn. 141)
It is recorded that it was in need of repair in the
early 16th century, and that it was in 'tolerable
repair' in 1717, while the next year Thomas Hindes
(d. 1718) left £50 to repair and beautify it. (fn. 142)
The Revd. Thomas Hindes (d. 1768) provided
money to rebuild the church, and it was opened for
services in 1772. (fn. 143) The original foundations were
used but the fabric of the medieval church was ruthlessly destroyed. The new Georgian building was
considered by 19th-century admirers of gothic
architecture 'a very bad specimen of the meetinghouse style'. (fn. 144)
In 1859 the curate F.C. Hingeston had the church
restored according to his own plans, at a cost of
£154. (fn. 145) He replaced the four round-headed Georgian
windows and south doorway with new ones in the
Early English style, built a south porch, notched
the surround of the external doorway to the tower
in the Norman style, and replaced the old high
seats. (fn. 146)
The most noticeable Georgian features left are
the gallery at the west end, the coved and panelled
plaster ceiling, and the stone ball finial and weather
vane surmounting the pyramidal roof of the tower.
There was another restoration in 1929. (fn. 147)
There is an elaborate alabaster monument with
kneeling effigies to Vincent Barry (d. 1615) and his
wife Anne Denton, with a later inscription at the
bottom to their daughter, Lady Katherine Fenner
(d. 1663). (fn. 148) It bears the arms of Barry, Brome,
Baldington, and Rous, and two crests, one being
that of Brome of Holton, Anne Barry's grandfather.
There are several memorials to the Hindes family:
to William Hindes (d. 1706), lord of Hampton Gay,
to Thomas Hindes (d. 1718) and his eldest son John
Hindes (d. 1754), and to the Revd. Thomas Hindes
(d. 1768). Other inscriptions are to Elizabeth Lydall
(d. 1662), Vincent Oakley (d. 1723), Sarah Venables
(d. 1858) and her two daughters, Sir Francis
Barry, Bt. (d. 1907), and his son Col. Stanley Barry
(d. 1943).
The font, which originally belonged to the church
of Shipton-on-Cherwell, is modern. (fn. 149) The church is
lit by candle light.
In 1552 the church owned, among other things,
chalice and two brass candlesticks. (fn. 150) In 1955 the a
plate included a small silver chalice of 1768. (fn. 151) The
church possesses a barrel organ made in the 1830's
and restored in 1929: it has three barrels, each
containing ten tunes, and a mahogany case designed
in the Gothic style. As in the 16th century, there were
in 1955 two bells: the treble, of mid-13th-century
date and shrill in tone, is one of the oldest bells in the
country; the tenor is of 1782. (fn. 152)
The registers date from 1621 for baptisms and
burials, and from 1657 for marriages.
Nonconformity.
None known.
Schools.
None known.
Charities.
None known.