KIRTLINGTON
The parish lies on the east bank of the River Cherwell, which divides it from the parish of Tackley. (fn. 1)
The Gallows Brook forms much of its eastern
boundary. The area of the ancient parish (3,582 a.)
has remained unchanged. (fn. 2) The parish is mostly
above the 300-foot contour, but the ground falls
away slightly on the south and east and, much more
markedly, on the west towards the Cherwell. The
soil, primarily Cornbrash, is excellent for pasture
and for barley. (fn. 3) The village, which extends for ¾
mile north and south, is in the southern half of the
parish, with Kirtlington Park adjacent to it on the
east. Timber is fairly plentiful, especially in and
around the park. The hamlet of Northbrook lies
near the river, 1½ miles north-north-west of the village. The Oxford-Banbury railway and the RugbyOxford canal both follow the Chenvell valley. The
railway, opened in 1850, here lies mostly on the
Tackley bank, but enters the parish at two points
owing to bends in the river. (fn. 4) The canal, which in
1787 had just reached Northbrook, is on the Kirtlington bank. (fn. 5)
The Inclosure Award of 1815 names six roads
which shall be maintained as 40-foot public highways; these, with one exception, constitute the roads
of the parish today. (fn. 6) The Somerton road, running
north, follows the line of the pre-Roman Portway.
The Bicester road was the name normally used of
Akeman Street, which runs east from the Somerton
road along the north edge of Kirtlington Park. (fn. 7) The
Middleton road, used as an alternative road to
Bicester, runs to the north of, and roughly parallel
with, Akeman Street; it was built about 1800, and is
locally called New Road. (fn. 8) The Brackley road, now
disused and overgrown, branched north-east from
the Somerton road and ran beside the pre-Saxon
Aves Ditch; reference is made to it in 1396, and it
occurs earlier as Aves Ditch Way. (fn. 9) The Woodstock
road, running south-west to Enslow Bridge, and the
Bletchingdon (or Oxford) road are not apparently
mentioned by name before the 16th century; but the
Bletchingdon road at least, which was the boundary
between the open fields, is much older than this. Of
the existing lanes, Mill Lane is clearly medieval;
Crowcastle Lane, leading from Kirtlington towards
Northbrook, is part of the old Deddington Way (fn. 10)
which passed to the west of Northbrook; and the
seemingly ephemeral cart-tracks which lead from
the village to Vicarage Farm buildings and from
Crowcastle Lane to Briton Field have existed since
about 1200 at least, their medieval names being
Warper's Way and Plumper's Way. (fn. 11) Several roads
or lanes disappeared in the 18th century. Of these
the most frequently mentioned, from the 13th
century, is Northbrook Church Way, an alternative
track to Northbrook east of the Deddington Way. (fn. 12)
In the eastern half of the parish, Weston Way,
Wolwell (or Wooller's) Way, and the old Middleton
Way had all vanished by 1815. (fn. 13) There were certainly two fords over the Cherwell—White Hill ford
at the mill and Catsham ford just west of Northbrook; (fn. 14) tracks from each led up to Tackley. A footbridge was built at Catsham about 1637; the present
narrow stone bridge existed by 1750. (fn. 15)
Until the 15th century there was only one wood of
any note; it lay in the eastern half of the parish and
was called Old Wood. (fn. 16) Herons and probably also
spoonbills (volucres vocati poplers) nested there in
1390, but had ceased to do so by 1416. (fn. 17) In an exceptional year more than £15 worth of timber was sold
from it, (fn. 18) A New Wood, the present Cockshot Copse,
had recently been planted in 1476. (fn. 19) These two
woods are called the Great and Little Woods in some
accounts of 1539, (fn. 20) and the name Great Wood is
normal from this time. In 1591 the manor possessed
two coppices totalling about 100 acres 'wherein are
one thousand timber trees or thereabouts of all
sorts'. (fn. 21) Part of the Great Wood is said to have been
cut down in 1741 to clear the site for Kirtlington
House. (fn. 22) Many new plantations, mostly of a few
acres, were made between 1821 and 1844; in 1908
woods and plantations totalled about 219 acres. (fn. 23)
By the inclosure award Kirtlington lost its
Town Green, which was allotted to Sir Henry
Dashwood. It lay to the north of the present North
Green, and its 10 acres had constituted a piece of
common grazing. (fn. 24) There were originally gates on
all roads and tracks leaving the village; 16th- and
17th-century court rolls mention at least six of
these by name. (fn. 25) Apart from the inclosure of Town
Green, and with the exception of the council houses
built at the south end and on the west side of the
village in 1948 and 1954, the general plan of Kirtlington is much as in the map of 1750. A fair number
of the present houses must have been standing then.
The most striking in appearance is Manor House
Farm, which until recently carried a stone dated
1563. Foxtown End Farm is partly a 17th-century
house, and Portway House, though much altered,
has an inscription 'T.W.: A.W. 1684'.
Kirtlington House itself stands in the park, about
half a mile from the village. It was built by Sir James
Dashwood, who personally kept 'A general account
of money expended on my new house, and the outworks about it, begun 12th September: 1741. (fn. 26) The
first stone was laid on 22 April 1742 and the house
occupied on 30 August 1746. The work was not then
finished, but of the £32,388 8s. spent by 1759 the
great bulk (c. £26,000) had been spent by the end of
1747, and much of the later expense was on the
gardens and grounds. The architect was John
Sanderson, who received £65; plans were also submitted by James Gibbs, architect of the Radcliffe
Camera, at a fee of £30, and comparison of the two
sets of plans suggests that Sanderson may have
borrowed certain features from Gibbs. The builder
was William Smith of Warwick. The house contains
a room famous for its frescoed ceiling of monkeys
engaged in field sports; the painter, M. Clermont,
was paid £52 10s. The grounds were laid out by
'Capability' Brown, who between 1755 and 1762
received £1,574 2s. for the work. Northbrook manorhouse, thought to have been built between 1579 and
1641, (fn. 27) was demolished after Kirtlington House was
built. A brick dovecote and clock-tower, some of the
walled gardens, and some outbuildings survive, and
there are medieval fishponds in the grounds.
The names of three 17th-century inns are known.
The 'Dolphin' is mentioned in 1644; (fn. 28) the 'George'
and the 'Red Lion' both occur in deeds of c. 1675–
1700. (fn. 29) The 'Dashwood Arms' was occupying its
present site in 1815. (fn. 30) A 'Six Bells', which no longer
exists, also occurs in 1815 and again in 1884, (fn. 31) when
it had moved to a different site.
Domesday Book mentions two mills in Kirtlington. (fn. 32) Most, but not all, later references are to a
single mill. There is evidence that in the 13th
century there were two mills, close together but on
opposite sides of the river. (fn. 33) In 1204 the mill was
damaged. (fn. 34) The early 13th-century evidence of
ownership is ample but confusing; (fn. 35) prersumably
various parties had different rights in the mill, or
mills, simultaneously. Certainly 'the mill at Kirtlington' was sold by Ingerram de Kirtlington to John
Fitzhugh, and by Fitzhugh's son-in-law, Adam
Fitzhervey, to Gilbert Basset, who gave two mills
to Bicester Priory c. 1240. In 1535 the priory leased
the mill to John Andrewes of Kirtlington. (fn. 36) In 1568
two water-mills, with other lands formerly belonging to the priory, were bought by Anthony and John
Arden from Nicholas Backhouse and Anna his wife;
and this estate, including the mills, was sold to
Humfrey Hide and William Keate in 1639. (fn. 37) There
appears to be no later reference to two mills. By 1692
the mill had acquired its modern name of Flight's
Mill; (fn. 38) in 1815 it was owned by William Enser. (fn. 39)
There was also a horse-mill in the village at one
time. (fn. 40)
The village, sited on a plateau of Oxford Clay
capped by gravel, was settled in Saxon times: its
name means the 'tun of Cyrtla's people', and a
Saxon burial has been discovered there. (fn. 41) In medieval times the manor-house, it may be conjectured,
stood near the centre of the village, where there is a
triangular moat. (fn. 42)
The lords occasionally resided at the manor-house.
Philip Basset witnessed an undated charter of one of
his free tenants at Kirtlington, (fn. 43) and another, dated
December 1299, was witnessed at Kirtlington by
Hugh le Despenser. (fn. 44) In 1390, although the demesne
was then leased out, £9 12s. 2d. was spent on building work at the manor-house, the majority of it 'in
quadam capella annexa camere domini de novo construenda'. (fn. 45) In 1422 the house was certainly in good
condition. (fn. 46) Later it was allowed to fall into complete
decay. In 1471, for example, the hall was roofless, (fn. 47)
and a lease of 1517 refers to 'the syght of the mansion
of the same manor, with a barne or shepe house now
thereon standing'. (fn. 48) During the baronial wars of
Henry III's reign a number of houses in Kirtlington
were burnt, no doubt because of the prominence in
the struggle of the lord of the manor, Philip Basset. (fn. 49)
The unpopularity of a later lord, Hugh Despenser the
elder, led to another attack on Kirtlington. (fn. 50) Royalist
troops appear to have been quartered in the village
in the Civil War—one soldier was shot in the
'Dolphin' in 1644. (fn. 51) In 1646 Sir John Lenthall, who
farmed the rectory, reported that he had received no
money from it for five years and that 'the destruction
of the houses are such that £200 will hardly repair
them', (fn. 52) and St. John's College remitted him 3½ years'
rent. Between April 1649 and September 1650
parliamentary soldiers were billeted in the Rectory
on eighteen occasions at a total cost of £32 2s., and
there were other heavy charges upon it. (fn. 53) In 1651 it
was ordered that the fee-farm of the manor should
be paid to Captain Abraham Davis. (fn. 54) In 1754
Kirtlington Park was the scene of some of the preliminaries to the notorious county election in which
Sir James Dashwood was a candidate. (fn. 55)
The history of the Dashwoods belongs to the
county, but they naturally exercised a permeating
influence, of which many visible evidences remain,
on the life of the parish. All, with the apparent
exception of the 3rd baronet, who became heavily
encumbered with debt, (fn. 56) were active and conscientious landlords. Early in the 16th century three
knightly families owned land in the parish, those of
Hampden, Dormer, and Bray. (fn. 57) Of the yeoman
families whose names predominate in the manorial
and parish records, the most prominent is that of
Hall, which first occurs in 1494 (fn. 58) and disappears late
in the 19th century. Over 80 Halls were born in
Kirtlington, and nearly 50 died, in the period 1590–
1700. (fn. 59) One of the two Kirtlington-born mayors of
Oxford was Anthony Hall, vintner (mayor 1673), the
other being A. J. George (mayor 1924). (fn. 60) Two more
obscure individuals may be mentioned: Nicholas
Jurdan of Kirtlington, a hermit (oc. 1341), (fn. 61) and
Ann Thomas, who died in 1748 aged 101. (fn. 62)
Manors.
Kirtlington was a royal manor in the time
of Edward the Confessor, (fn. 63) and was presumably
already a hundredal manor in the 10th century. It is
first mentioned in 945, when a payment was made
there to the king, (fn. 64) and in 977 Edward the Martyr
held a witenagemot there at which Archbishop
Dunstan was present. (fn. 65) 'CHERIELINTONE'
appears in Domesday Book as an important royal
manor yielding £52 yearly, and having the soke of
2½ hundreds, which are identifiable in the later
hundred of Ploughley. (fn. 66) Early in Henry II's reign,
however, the manor was held by Richard de Humez, (fn. 67)
Constable of Normandy; and as it does not appear
in the pipe rolls under terre date it must have
already been alienated under Henry I. Richard
de Humez's wife, Agnes, was a daughter of Jordan
de Say and Lucy de Aulnay, by whom Kirtlington
church was given to Aulnay Abbey. (fn. 68) It seems likely,
therefore, that the manor had been held by Jordan
de Say, a conjecture supported by an entry in the
1130 pipe roll. (fn. 69) Richard's son, William de Humez,
was holding the manor when it escheated as terra
Normannorum in 1203. (fn. 70) By an unusual arrangement
its administration was apparently placed in the
hands of the reeve and four men of the village; (fn. 71) but
this cannot have been for long as in 1204 it was
handed over from the custody of Geoffrey le Sauvage
to the royal minister, John Fitzhugh, who was to
account for it at the Exchequer. (fn. 72) Fitzhugh was still
in possession in November 1215, when he was
ordered to hand over part of the fee to Ralph de
Montibus; (fn. 73) but he deserted the king in 1216 and
was deprived of the remainder of the fee in favour
of John's mercenary captain William de Bréauté. (fn. 74)
William held the manor until the siege of Bedford.
On 11 March 1224 Thomas Basset, of Headington,
was given seisin of it during pleasure; on 30 April it
was restored to de Bréauté, only to be handed back to
Basset three weeks later. (fn. 75) In 1227 it was formally
granted by charter to Thomas Basset and his heirs. (fn. 76)
In 1230 the manor passed, on Thomas's death, to his
brother Gilbert Basset, of Wycombe. (fn. 77) In 1233,
when Gilbert's fiefs were confiscated in consequence
of his part in the rebellion of that year, Kirtlington
manor was given to Henry de Trubleville during
pleasure; (fn. 78) but it was shortly restored to Gilbert,
who obtained a charter in 1235. (fn. 79)
William de Humez had held his Oxfordshire lands
by service of ½ knight; (fn. 80) possibly this included other
lands beside Kirtlington. In the 13th century
Kirtlington's assessment was for ¼ knight's fee; (fn. 81)
with Nether Orton and Bignell it made up a single
fee. (fn. 82)
Gilbert Basset was followed successively by his
brothers, Fulk, Bishop of London 1244–59, and
Philip, justiciar 1261–3. In 1255 Fulk Basset was
authorized to tallage his tenants on the manor if it
was indeed ancient demesne. (fn. 83) He also had view of
frankpledge. (fn. 84) On Philip's death in 1271 the manor
remained as dower in the hands of his wife, Ela,
dowager Countess of Warwick, (fn. 85) who in 1279 was
enjoying among other rights the liberty of return of
royal writs. (fn. 86)
Philip Basset's heiress, Alina, widow of Hugh
Despenser who was killed at Evesham, and by her
second marriage wife of Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, was outlived by her mother. Kirtlington therefore passed in 1297 to Alina's son Hugh Despenser,
later Earl of Winchester. (fn. 87) It was pillaged, with
many other Despenser manors, when in the king's
hand during Despenser's exile (1321–2). (fn. 88) On its
forfeiture in 1326 it was granted (2 March 1327) with
a group of Despenser's Oxfordshire manors (fn. 89) and
much other property to Edward III's uncle, Thomas
of Brotherton, as part of the provision intended for
him by Edward I. (fn. 90) In 1332 it was among the
manors which, with Thomas' acquiescence, the
king granted to his kinsman, William de Bohun,
later Earl of Northampton. (fn. 91) In 1360 it passed to his
son, Humphrey, then a minor, (fn. 92) on whose early
death in 1373 the vast Bohun inheritance was
divided between his daughters, Eleanor and Mary,
subsequently married to Thomas of Woodstock and
Henry of Bolingbroke respectively. In 1374 Kirtlington was among the lands committed in wardship to
Eleanor's future husband; (fn. 93) later it was assigned
definitely to her moiety of the inheritance. (fn. 94) On her
death in 1399, her daughter and heiress, Anne,
Countess of Stafford, succeeded to her estates; (fn. 95) but
in the repartition of the Bohun lands which took
place in 1421 on the death of Humphrey de Bohun's
long-lived widow, (fn. 96) Kirtlington was included in the
share transferred to the king, and thus became a
manor of the Duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 97)
With many other manors, Kirtlington was assigned in dower to three successive queens of
England: to Katharine, the queen-mother, in 1422; (fn. 98)
to Margaret of Anjou in 1444; (fn. 99) and to Elizabeth
Woodville in 1467–8. (fn. 100) Its stewardship was an office
of profit, which was for some time held by William
de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk. (fn. 101) A clerk, Richard Martyn,
was granted custody of the manor for life in 1481; (fn. 102)
Sir Edward Wydville was assigned a pension on it
six months later. (fn. 103) In the 16th century the manor was
normally farmed out. Thomas Lovett was farming it
in 1517, (fn. 104) as was John Wellesborne between 1526 and
1537. (fn. 105) It was retained by the Crown 1543–55, (fn. 106) but
from 1556 to 1622 it was in the hands of an Oxfordshire family, a branch of the Ardens of Cottisford. (fn. 107)
In addition to farming Kirtlington manor, the
Ardens were much the largest landowners in the
parish. They owed their position to Anthony Arden
(d. 1573), who had held some freehold land in
Kirtlington since 1538; (fn. 108) later he married, as her
second husband, the granddaughter and heiress of
the woolman John Cockes, who had held 11¾ yardlands freehold in the manor. (fn. 109) In 1556 Anthony
Arden bought from John Dormer of Steeple Aston
another sizeable freehold, (fn. 110) and finally (1568)
Anthony and John Arden acquired the 'manor' of
Kirtlington and Tackley, which had belonged to
Bicester Priory. (fn. 111) Anthony was followed by his sons
John (d. 1605) and Henry (d. 1622). (fn. 112) The association of the Ardens with Kirtlington was probably
more direct than that of any family which had previously held the manor. Henry Arden left no male
heir, and was followed as farmer for two years by
Hugh Keate. (fn. 113)
In 1604, however, the Crown had sold Kirtlington, with other manors, to Peter Vanlore, merchant,
and William Blake, both of London. (fn. 114) It was to be
held, in free socage, as of the manor of Enfield
(Mdx.) at an annual rent of £43 6s. 8d., and the
existing farmer's lease, of 41 years from 1584, was
explicitly protected. (fn. 115) In 1610 Vanlore and Blake
resold Kirtlington for £3,000 to Sir Thomas Chamberlayne, chief justice of Chester, who held his first
court as lord of the manor in 1625, (fn. 116) in which year
he died. His son Thomas bought Northbrook in
1641, (fn. 117) a step which in effect united the two manors.
In 1682 Penelope, daughter of Sir Thomas Chamberlayne, Bt. (grandson of the chief justice), was
married to Robert Dashwood. Sir Thomas himself
died in 1682. By the marriage settlement all the
Chamberlayne estates in Kirtlington passed to Robert
Dashwood, (fn. 118) on whom a baronetcy was conferred in
1684. (fn. 119) The Dashwoods held Northbrook and Kirtlington until 1909. (fn. 120) Although they were great landowners elsewhere in Oxfordshire, their main residence in the county was at first at Northbrook House
and later at Kirtlington Park. (fn. 121) In 1909, the estate
was bought by the Earl of Leven and Melville. (fn. 122) His
successor sold it in 1920 to J. White Esq., who never
resided in the parish. In 1921 it was bought by H. M.
Budgett Esq.
Domesday Book (fn. 123) does not differentiate between
Northbrook Gaytorum (the present NORTHBROOK) and Northbrook iuxta Somerton, once in
the parish of Somerton. (fn. 124) It records 3 small fees in
Northbrook; the largest of these, 2 hides held by
Rainald of Robert de Stafford, is identifiable with
Northbrook Gaytorum, since in 1193 Hilda de Gay
held in Northbrook de feodo Roberti de Stafford. (fn. 125) In
1242 Northbrook Gaytorum was held in chief by the
Abbot of Westminster as ¼ knight's fee, and in 1255
it constituted a part of the abbot's liberty of Islip,
the abbot having acquired his right since 1216. (fn. 126)
The heirs of Philip Basset held as sub-tenants of the
abbot in 1279. (fn. 127) From the 12th century to the 16th,
however, the ultimate tenants were the Gays,
originally a branch of the family that held Hampton
Gay. (fn. 128) The Northbrook tithing attended the two
'great courts' at Islip manor each year, and paid 3s.
cert-money at least until the early 16th century. (fn. 129)
After the Reformation 'the lordship and manor' of
Northbrook was among the endowments of Westminster Abbey as refounded successively by Mary
and Elizabeth. (fn. 130) Northbrook is mentioned as part
of Islip manor in a lease of 1687, but by this date
the connexion with Westminster Abbey and Islip can
have been no more than a meaningless survival. (fn. 131)
In. practice the connexion with Kirtlington must
always have been much closer, Northbrook having
no separate field system. Suit was owed at Kirtlington and Adam de Gay witnessed many charters in
the manorial court in the 13th century. (fn. 132) In 1422 the
lord of Northbrook, as a tenant-at-will, owed 9s. 5d.
in commuted labour services to the lord of Kirtlington, (fn. 133) while the customary tenants of Northbrook
vill owed a further 4s. (fn. 134) In about 1540 the Kirtlington homage presented that John de Gay had held
Northbrook of the king as of his manor of Kirtlington, owing an annual rent of 13s. 5d. (fn. 135) Between
about 1570 and 1641 the manor changed hands many
times. William Arscote of Holdsworthy (Devon)
acquired it from the Gays after litigation arising out
of non-fulfilment of a marriage agreement between
the families. (fn. 136) By a marriage settlement on Arscote's
daughter (1578) it passed to John Fox, yeoman, of
Kirtlington. (fn. 137) By a further marriage settlement
(1609) it was to pass to William Holleyman of Long
Handborough; but in 1619 it was sold to John
Hollins, presumably acting for John Hawley, D.C.L.
of Oxford University, to whom the property was
transferred almost immediately. Thomas Chamberlayne bought it from Edmund Hawley in 1641.
The KIRTLINGTON manor (fn. 138) of Bicester Priory
was given in free alms to the priory by Gilbert Basset
shortly before his death in 1241. (fn. 139) This estate, whose
annual value was assessed at £5 3s. 3d. In 1291, (fn. 140)
had been bought by Gilbert Basset from Baldwin de
Montibus in 1239 for 100 marks. (fn. 141) It had originally
been part of the main manor, having been granted
by William de Humez to Baldwin's father, Ralph.
Presumably it escheated with the De Humez fee in
1203, for in 1215 it was 'restored' to Ralph to be
held by him in chief of the Crown. In 1222, on the
death of his brother Herbert to whom he had subinfeudated it in 1217, Ralph did homage for it as for
1/7 knight's fee. Shortly afterwards, however, it was
in the hands of the king's uncle, William, Earl of
Salisbury, on whose death it was committed to
Thomas Basset during pleasure. It was again restored to Ralph de Montibus in 1227, and passed to
his son Baldwin in 1234. The estate was held by
Bicester Priory until the Dissolution. In 1535 the
priory's lands in Kirtlington and Tackley were under
one bailiff, (fn. 142) and were later sometimes called a single
manor. (fn. 143) They were acquired by the Ardens in
1568 (fn. 144) and thereafter followed the descent of the
main manor.
The KIRTLINGTON manor (fn. 145) of the Abbot of
Aulnay must have been larger than the 1279 survey
implies. In 1341–2 his lands, apart from the glebe,
comprised 3 carucates. (fn. 146) The Aulnay deeds show
many instances of gifts of a few acres, or often a
single acre, in free alms to the abbey by individual
local freeholders. One deed mentions a tenant bringing an action for land in the abbot's court of Kirtlington per breve regis, and another, dated 1270,
suggests that the abbot enjoyed view of frankpledge. (fn. 147)
Lesser Estates.
Apart from the Northbrook
holdings and a hide held by Osmund the priest,
Domesday Book records two subsidiary fees, one of
2 hides held by Herbert of Robert d'Oilly, the other
of 1 hide held by Robert d'Oilly of William FitzOsborn; (fn. 148) but one of the hides held by Herbert has
been identified with Grove in Holton. (fn. 149) Under
Henry III the tenure-in-chief of the two small
D'Oilly fees in Kirtlington passed, with that of
other D'Oilly lands, to the De Plescy family, which
still held it in 1364. (fn. 150) In 1279 each of these fees
was of 1 carucate and was assessed for scutage as
¼ knight's fee. (fn. 151) The families in possession, the
De Codefords and the De Doningtons, are both
prominent in local charters from before 1250. (fn. 152) The
De Codeford carucate went with lands in Ducklington and Little Barford to make up 2 knight's fees
held of the chief lords by the De Dives. (fn. 153) That of the
De Doningtons was held by them of a mediate lord,
Henry de la Grave. (fn. 154) The later history of these
holdings is not known, although the carucate held by
John de Croxford in 1350 is certainly one of them. (fn. 155)
Several lay tenants in the parish had their own
courts in the 13th century. (fn. 156) In the 15th century one
lesser holding was styled a 'manor', and in 1461 Sir
Edmund Hampden was temporarily deprived, on
attainder, of the 'manor of Bowelles in Kyrtlyngton',
worth 60s. at that time. (fn. 157) This small fee was probably
one of those held of Kirtlington manor, since in the
16th century the Hampdens owed suit there until
1554. (fn. 158)
Economic and Social History.
In the
Middle Ages the agriculture of the whole parish was
organized on a two-field economy. The fields were
called the East and West Fields, or often, in early
deeds, campus versus boscum and campus versus aquam:
they were separated by the Somerton and Bletchingdon roads. (fn. 159) The meadow land was concentrated along
Gallows Brook, on the eastern edge of the parish, and
beside the Cherwell, where lay Whitmersham, Pinsey,
Briton, and Northam meadows. Almost all the waste
and common land lay in the northern part of the
parish, either behind Northbrook and in the 'Breach
Furze', east of the Somerton road, or in Roumer
Leys and Grove Leys, which together covered most
of the area between Akeman Street and the Middleton parish boundary. (fn. 160) In 1750 the common land
amounted to 720 acres; (fn. 161) in the 16th century its
extent must have been considerably greater. The
court roll of October 1596, for example, records a
decision to convert to tillage 1 furlong and one other
parcel of land, both adjacent to Middleton Field. In
1591 a jury assessed the area in the manor 'besides
wastes' as 1,086 acres, less than one-third of the area
of the parish; (fn. 162) but this surprisingly low figure
does not include Northbrook manor and other
freeholds.
Although nearly all the early evidence indicates
a completely regular two-field system, one or two
deeds suggest that the two fields may not have comprised the whole of the arable; (fn. 163) and some kind of a
'hitch' evidently existed as early as 1263. (fn. 164) A 'hitchefylde', contrasted with the 'cornefylde', occurs in
1586; (fn. 165) but it is only from 1619 that the 'pease
hitch' suddenly becomes a regular feature, alternating between the two fields in a fixed four-year cycle. (fn. 166)
The mention of pease, barley, and wheat crops in a
single year, e.g. 1629, also suggests the introduction
of a four-course rotation. In 1638, however, an
agreement is recorded for the pease hitch to follow
an eight-year cycle, approximately a quarter of each
field to be hitched every other year. Few court rolls
exist for the period 1641–1737; that of 1700 shows an
eight-year cycle still in use, but the two surviving
rolls of Charles II's reign indicate that a six-year
cycle had been tried. How the rotation of crops was
affected by these changes is not clear. Rye and oats
are both mentioned in earlier rolls, and a hemp plot
'containing by estimacioun a quarter of a yard of
ground' existed at Northbrook in 1619; (fn. 167) but there
is no evidence of new crops in the common fields
until the 18th century. In 1738 Ramley Hill, above
Northbrook, was planted with 'saint foyn' for ten
years, and although the ground was reported worn
out at the end of the experiment (fn. 168) some part of the
fields was always under sainfoin for the rest of the
century. From 1739 there was a 'horse hitch' where
vetches or clover were grown for feed; grass seed
was sown in 1748 and subsequent years. Between
1747 and 1757 there was regularly an area of 'three
crop ground'. Turnips were grown by Sir James
Dashwood in 1751 (fn. 169) and in the common fields from
1764. The East and West fields were still spoken of,
but they had been subdivided into various 'quarters'.
In 1750 there were five quarters (in addition to the
park) in the East Field and seven, or eight including
Ramley Hill, in the West. (fn. 170) At least five quarters
were named; others were described by their bounding roads or tracks. No definite system of crop
rotation is discernible, although the court rolls show
that the same ground was sown with turnips every
fourth year with fair regularity.
Most of the medieval demesne of both Kirtlington
and Northbrook was unconsolidated, but in 1279
Kirtlington manor is described as having a new
park. (fn. 171) This park was probably inclosed from the
East Field, since in 1750 the 'old park', an area of
75 acres, was taken into Sir James Dashwood's new
park. (fn. 172) A few houses in the 13th century had small
closes. (fn. 173) The 1476 rental mentions 6 closes of
pasture and 8 of arable, totalling 39 and 60 acres
respectively. (fn. 174) Sixteenth-century surveys give no
estimates of acreage inclosed, but new inclosure does
not appear to have been extensive. It seems unlikely
to have caused the complicity of some Kirtlington
men in the Oxfordshire rising of 1596. (fn. 175) In 1750
about 400 acres of inclosures were concentrated
around the village and at Northbrook, of which
Sir James Dashwood owned 230 acres. (fn. 176) Strip cultivation was still in full operation; John Trafford's
New farm, for example, a copyhold of 245 acres, consisted of 278 pieces scattered through 115 different
furlongs. (fn. 177) The new park, comprising 496 acres,
reduced the size of the East Field, although the 1750
map shows many uninclosed strips inside it, a few
of which still survived at the time of the award. At
that date inclosures had increased to 900 acres, of
which the Dashwoods' Park farm accounted for 165
acres. Under the award 2,535 acres were inclosed.
The 1279 survey shows a complicated structure of
land tenure within the parish. (fn. 178) Whereas Domesday
Book mentions only villeins (villani), bordars, and
serfs, (fn. 179) a noticeable feature in 1279 is the number of
small free tenants, not only in the main manor but
even more markedly in the smaller fees. The more
substantial of these resident free tenants, men of
3 or 4 virgates who in some cases had a few free
tenants of their own, made up the class which played
the leading part in village affairs. (fn. 180) The fact that
there were fees independent of the main manor was,
except from a legal standpoint, of much less significance than the existence of a single agricultural
system, the regulation of which must always have
been done in the Kirtlington manorial court. In 1279
the Prior of Bicester and Adam de Gay of Northbrook each had 9 villeins holding half-virgates or
less. On the main manor, villeins held 14 virgates, (fn. 181)
9 half-virgates, and l quarter-virgate, figures which
had changed little by 1422. (fn. 182)
The earliest surviving Ministers' Accounts (1389–
90) (fn. 183) show a rent of £3 17s. 6d. (entered among the
assised rents) being paid for part of the demesne
arable farmed out ex antiquo. The rest of the demesne
lands, with the labour services of free and customary
tenants, were being farmed jointly by three individuals, one of them the vicar, for the term of ten
years under an indenture entered into with the
attorneys of the Duke of Gloucester, then lord of
the manor. They paid a farm of £18 6s. 8d. In 1415 (fn. 184)
the position was quite different, and was substantially
that depicted in a new rental compiled in 1422. (fn. 185)
The demesne lands, amounting to about 233 acres
of arable, 69 of pasture, and 39 of meadow, were
let off piecemeal to some 20 of the manorial tenants,
mostly virgaters or half-virgaters. For most of the
15th century, farm of the demesne totalled £16 17s.,
and assised rents £17 14s. 6½d. All labour services,
which most 15th-century Ministers' Accounts set
out in detail, (fn. 186) were now commuted; their value of
£1 13s. 6d. compares with an estimated value of
£1 17s. 6d. in 1204. (fn. 187) By custom of the manor, copyhold leases could only be granted for one life, (fn. 188) and
in the 15th century, when virgate holdings seldom
stayed in one family for two generations, the parcels
of leased demesne did not become attached to particular holdings. In the 16th century this largely
ceased to be the case. In about 1511, for example,
Peter Frankelyng's holding comprised 1 messuage
and yardland; 1 toft and ½ -yardland called Gyllows; a
close, a 'more' and certain 'bordland' in Heryngdon;
pieces of meadow in Cranmere and Pyngeye; and a
piece of land in Rye Furlong. The same lands were
held, at unchanged rents, by John Horne in about
1530 and by Richard Hall in 1619. (fn. 189) The more
prosperous copyholders now became important men
in village affairs. Whereas, of the numerous village
families whose names occur in the rentals of 1422
and 1476 and the court roll of 1470–1, hardly one can
be traced a hundred years later, such familes as those
of Bath, Hall, Rayer, Walker, and Woodward, which
originated between about 1490 and 1560, were all
prominent for 200 and some for nearly 400 years. (fn. 190)
After the Dissolution, however, most freeholders
were still gentry; in 1544, for example, the list comprised Sir Michael Dormer, John Gay, Owen
Whitton, William Bourne, William Hampden,
Anthony Arden, John Stavely (all gentry); Thomas
Andrewes (not so styled); New College and Magdalen College. (fn. 191) By the end of the century the number of freeholds was increasing, and several village
families were owning freehold land. Between 1684
and 1750 Sir Robert and Sir James Dashwood
bought up most of the freehold farms, (fn. 192) with the
result that the substantial freeholder almost disappeared from the parish. In 1750 there were only
393 acres of freehold lands, other than those of Sir
James Dashwood, divided between 21 freeholders. (fn. 193)
Under the inclosure award (1815) this acreage was
slightly increased owing to the commutation of tithe
for land. Apart from Sir Henry Dashwood, whose
land amounted to 2,922 acres (including 395 held as
lessee of the rector, St. John's College), the only
freeholders of more than 10 acres were the vicar,
185 acres; New College, 127 acres; (fn. 194) John Hall, 114
acres. In 1908 the Kirtlington Park estate had 3,143
acres, (fn. 195) to which Vicarage farm (184 a.) was added
in 1916. (fn. 196) Many properties, however, including
Northbrook, were sold by the estate in the years
after the First World War.
In 1591 a freeholder or copyholder might keep
for each yardland he possessed 'five rother cattell
and seven ploughe beastes', and might graze 50 sheep
on the East Field when fallow, 40 on the West. (fn. 197)
The introduction of a 4-course rotation destroyed
this distinction between the fields; 36 sheep per
yardland might be grazed, on either field, in 1667
and 1700, 45 in 1683. (fn. 198) After 1700 the number of
sheep per yardland declined steadily until 1761,
from which year it remained at 22. The earlier
figurs, implying a very large total flock, suggest
that wool grown by small producers and sold to
middlemen buyers was the real basis of the village's
prosperity. One such middleman, John Cockes (d.
1518), 'yoman, alias wolman, alias marchaunt', was
himself a Kirtlington man. (fn. 199) Common meadow was
allocated annually by lot; and in about 1260 a grant
to Aulnay Abbey included 1 acre in the meadow
called 'Brusserton' (i.e. Briton), 'in duobus locis sicut
in sorte accidere consuevit'. (fn. 200) Briton is described as
a 'lott meade' in 1626, and New College possessed
1½ lots in it in 1768. (fn. 201) Lots were also used for the
allocation of furze and heath, e.g. in 1557 and 1700,
and in 1748 the vetch crop in the horse hitch was
allotted in this way.
The view of frankpledge, with court baron, was
normally held once a year only, in October or early
November. In the early 16th century it was being
attended by three Bicester tithings, those of King's
End, Bignell, and the manor of Markyate Priory.
The performance of suit by Bicester King's End
only lapsed in the 19th century. (fn. 202) The tithings of
Kirtlington and King's End each paid 13s. 4d. at the
view. The lesser court, which usually took place in
March or April, and sometimes in other months,
seems to have been gradually discontinued after
1600. (fn. 203)
The early surviving court rolls make no mention
of elected officials other than the constable and
tithingmen. The warrener, (fn. 204) later also called the
woodward, was a paid officer appointed by the lord
of the manor, and after 1421 by the Crown; he
makes many presentments in the early rolls but
disappears by 1540. A hayward first occurs c. 1522,
the four fieldsmen and the common 'herd' late in
Elizabeth's reign. These were the regular agricultural officials for the remainder of the period of openfield cultivation, the hayward and fieldsmen being
elected and sworn annually. In 1638 and 1641 the
hayward's wage was 4d. and a peck of maslin for
every yardland. (fn. 205) By that date the regulation of agriculture was beginning to predominate in the court's
work. Earlier the range of bussiness, which was
exceedingly various, included the hearing of cases of
debt, theft, and assault. (fn. 206) In 1470 the village possessed
stocks, cucking-stool, and pillory. (fn. 207) A theft was
punished by pillory in 1515. The stocks were renewed in 1526 and were still in use in 1601. (fn. 208)
There is little evidence of local industries other
than agriculture. Cloth was being fulled and dyed
in the village in 1456; in 1543 Thomas Harres,
fuller, obtained a licence to erect 'a fuller's teynter'
on the green for an annual rent of 2d., and in 1619
Thomas Bull was paying 2s. 6d. annually 'for the
Fuller's Racke in Oldburie', the field immediately
east of the church. (fn. 209) The Prior of Bicester had a
quarry which was being worked in 1425. (fn. 210) A quarry
near the mill was leased in 1526 to Thomas Swetnam
and in 1619 to Thomas Bull. (fn. 211) A Kirtlington limekiln contributed to the building of Cardinal College. (fn. 212)
In 1638 Richard Hall was elected and sworn as clerk
of the market and water bailiff, (fn. 213) an office which,
possibly owing to the gaps in the court rolls, is not
found again. Plot's map (1676) (fn. 214) shows Kirtlington
as a market-town. A modern industrial undertaking
was the building of the Oxford Cement Company's
works beside the canal in 1905, (fn. 215) but they were
abandoned after 20 years when the present works
were built on the other side of the river.
The parish has always had a larger population
than most others in the hundred. In Domesday
Book Kirtlington, excluding Northbrook, had 71
villeins, bordars, and serfs; (fn. 216) this figure, however,
probably includes Bignell. In the 1279 survey about
90 landholders, free and unfree, are named in the
returns for Kirtlington and Northbrook. (fn. 217) The
hearth-tax returns for 1662 and 1665 show the
existence of at least 65 households; (fn. 218) then, as in
1801, (fn. 219) Kirtlington was exceeded in population only
by Bicester and Islip of the parishes in the hundred.
Bishop Compton's Census (1676) showed a total of
285 persons over the age of sixteen. (fn. 220) In 1738 and
1759 the number of houses was 99; in 1811, when
the census showed 536 residents, there were said
to be 131 families. (fn. 221) The birth rate in the early 17th
century was not regularly exceeded until the sharp
rise of the second decade of the 19th century. There
were 167 baptisms in the decade 1623–32, 148 in
1723–32 and 236 in 1823–32. (fn. 222) The population rose
to 761 in 1871, had fallen to 594 in 1901, and was 636
in 1951. (fn. 223)
Assessments to taxation in the first half of the 14th
century suggest that Kirtlington, with Northbrook,
was one of the wealthiest parishes in Ploughley
hundred. Charlton and Islip each had a higher assessment in 1306, Chesterton and Bicester Market End
in 1316; but in 1327 and 1344 only Bicester Market
End exceeded the assessment of Kirtlington with
Northbrook. (fn. 224) Forty-eight persons, including 12
from Northbrook, contributed about £6 8s. 9d. for
the 16th of 1316; 44, including 13 from Northbrook,
£5 14s. 9d. for the 20th of 1327. (fn. 225) In 1523 the assessment of Kirtlington and Northbrook (£17 4s. 10d. on
the two payments) for the lay subsidy was exceeded
by assessments of Somerton, Chesterton, and
Bletchingdon. (fn. 226)
The degree of poverty existing in the parish at
various times is difficult to assess. In c. 1789 many
families with children were living on earnings of 6s.
a week. (fn. 227) In 1802–3 the figure spent on maintenance
and relief of the poor had increased steeply to
£476 17s. 6d. from an average of less than £200 in
the years 1783–5. (fn. 228) Of a total population of 525, (fn. 229)
75 persons, of whom 39 were adults, were permanently relieved out of the poor rate, and 13
others received occasional relief. Twenty-eight of
these cases were due to old age or permanent disability. In 1840 the parish owned four cottages on
the green; they were known as the College and
served as an almshouse for several families of the
labouring poor. (fn. 230)
In 1562 the inhabitants of Kirtlington received a
royal charter exempting them from payment of toll
elsewhere than in the Duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 231) It was
said in 1723 that this privilege was the reason for the
village's annual feast, called the Lamb Ale. (fn. 232) This
was a long-established celebration in 1679. At that
date it began on Trinity Monday and lasted two
days; later it apparently occupied a whole week. In
1849 three persons were sworn as special constables
'for the better preservation of peace and order at the
ensuing Lamb Ale Feast'. (fn. 233) The feast was discontinued in the 19th century, but has been revived in a
modified form.
Church.
There can be little doubt that there was
a Saxon church at Kirtlington, which was an important royal manor, but the earliest indication of its
existence comes from Domesday Book. It records
that Osmund the priest held in demesne in 1086 a
hide of land worth 20s. (fn. 234) The church was conferred
by Jordan and Lucy de Sai on the Norman abbey
of Aulnay, a Cistercian house founded by them in
1131. (fn. 235) The appropriation to Aulnay was confirmed
by Henry II in 1157, (fn. 236) by Bishop Robert de Chesney
(at the petition of Richard de Humez), and by
Pope Lucius III. (fn. 237) The benefice was one of the
most valuable in the deanery, being assessed at
£20 13s. 4d. including the vicarage, both in 1291 and
in 1341–2. (fn. 238) Hostilities with France made the king
take the revenues of the church into his own hand in
1324, and again in 1337. (fn. 239) In the latter year it was
arranged that the abbey's proctor should have
custody of its possessions in England at a farm of
£46 a year; this amount was increased to £50, and
the advowson of the living retained in the king's
hand, in 1342. (fn. 240) In 1392 licence was given by the
Crown to the new Carthusian Priory of St. Anne's,
Coventry, to acquire in parcellam fundacionis the
church and advowson of Kirtlington, along with
Aulnay's other English property. (fn. 241) In 1535 it was
being farmed under a 31-year lease, dated 1515, by
John Andrews of Kirtlington for a rent of £13 13s. 4d.
and the obligation to pay certain other charges
totalling 50s. annually. (fn. 242) At the Dissolution, a
syndicate of some 77 persons, mostly Londoners,
bought the rectory and advowson, (fn. 243) but the sale was
evidently not completed; and, by a deed dated
17 November 1545, the living was acquired by John
Penne, armiger, and Lucia, his wife, to be held by
service of 1/40 knight's fee and annual payment of
26s. 8d. to the Crown. (fn. 244) A year later the Pennes sold
it to Vincent Poure, armiger, of Bletchingdon Park; (fn. 245)
and in April 1578 it was bought from Francis Poure
by St. John's College, Oxford, for £800, its yearly
value then being £46 13s. 4d. (fn. 246) In 1675 the impropriation was rented for more than £180 a year,
although to the incumbent the living was worth only
£22. (fn. 247) By the inclosure award of 1811 payments on
the great tithes were commuted for 301 acres of land,
while the glebe was exchanged for a further 93 acres. (fn. 248)
The college still holds the advowson, but sold its
rectorial rights to Sir Henry Dashwood in 1876. (fn. 249) A
chapel existed at Northbrook in the 12th century; it
belonged to the Gays, who gave the Northbrook tithes
to Aulnay. (fn. 250) Oseney Abbey, however, which acquired
the church of Hampton Gay c. 1185, (fn. 251) alleged that
Northbrook was a part of Hampton Gay parish (fn. 252)
and could also advance spurious evidence of its
right to two-thirds of the demesne tithes of Northbrook. (fn. 253) In an arbitration of July 1190 the former
claim was not upheld, but Oseney's right to the
tithes was substantially maintained. (fn. 254) The Oseney
tithe in Northbrook was worth 13s. 4d. in 1291. (fn. 255) In
1413, after further friction, Oseney agreed to farm
its share of the Northbrook tithe to St. Anne's,
Coventry, in perpetuity for 16s. 8d. a year. (fn. 256)
An agreement of 1263, which cites a previous
agreement of 1228, between Aulnay and Bicester
Priory, shows that Bicester enjoyed tithe of hay on
certain meadows of the Kirtlington demesne. (fn. 257)
There was also bitter dispute between these two
houses over the tithe of sheaves of Bignell, which
although a 'member' of Kirtlington manor was
infra territorium de Berencestr'. In 1304 it was agreed
that Bicester should have this tithe at a perpetual
farm of 40s. a year. (fn. 258) At the Dissolution St. Anne's,
Coventry, was receiving 51s. yearly from Bicester,
of which 11s. may have been tithe on the mill. (fn. 259)
A vicarage was ordained during the episcopate of
Hugh de Welles (1209–35), by which the vicar was
to receive the proceeds of the altar, rent of 23s. 4d.
from land belonging to the church, and 32 sheaves
of corn, valued at 15s., which the church received
from the demesne of Roger Damory in Bletchingdon. (fn. 260) In 1254 the vicarage was valued at 40s. and in
1291 at £4 6s. 8d. (fn. 261) The Hundred Rolls give a list
of the vicar's six free tenants, holding in all 4 virgates
and paying 24s. 7d. rent. (fn. 262) By 1341 it appears that
there had been a change in the ordination of the
vicarage, for the vicar was then receiving the small
tithes, mortuaries, and oblations, valued in all at
£4 3s. 8d., while the glebe, by this time worth 52s.,
and the great tithes belonged to Aulnay. (fn. 263) In the
16th century Kirtlington was a rich vicarage, valued
at £11 9s. 4d. net. (fn. 264)
After the Reformation the value of the vicarage
rose slowly, being worth £22 in 1675 (fn. 265) and about
£24 during Queen Anne's reign. (fn. 266) In 1731 it was
given £200 from Queen Anne's Bounty, (fn. 267) with
which was bought a farm of 64 acres in Eynsham
parish, part of the pasture called Freeland. (fn. 268) This
farm and Vicarage Farm in Kirtlington, consisting
of the 179 acres awarded the vicar when the small
tithes were commuted at the inclosure award in
1811, (fn. 269) formed the vicarage's only endowment in
the 19th century, being worth £358 in 1831. (fn. 270)
Vicarage Farm was sold to the Earl of Leven and
Melville in 1916. (fn. 271)
Some of the medieval vicars had unusually long
connexions with the parish. Gilbert de Wardington
was vicar from 1302 until probably carried off by
the Black Death in 1349; (fn. 272) Thomas de Pytchley,
a lessee of the manor's demesne lands, was vicar
for almost 40 years (1352–c. 1390); (fn. 273) and the 15thcentury vicar, William Coston or Constantyn
(c. 1422–60), also remained for about 40 years. Two
of the vicars left doubtful reputations: Jordan, early
in the 13th century, was defamed with a woman of
Kirtlington, and threatened with deprivation if again
found incontinent, (fn. 274) while in 1391 William Grene,
who had goods worth £40, was outlawed for killing
a man at Kirtlington. (fn. 275)
In the 13th century a house to be used as a Vicarage was acquired by Aulnay Abbey from Bicester
Priory. (fn. 276) This is, of course, to be distinguished from
the Rectory House, which existed in 1665 (fn. 277) and was
included in the property leased to the farmers of the
rectory. There was sometimes a curate in the parish
in the sixteenth century. (fn. 278) Eighteenth-century vicars,
who were often Fellows of St. John's College
dividing their time between Oxford and Kirtlington, were never more than part-time residents in the
parish. (fn. 279) In 1738 the vicar did not reside at all, and
his curate, who was also appointed by St. John's
College, usually stayed one night in each week in
order to conduct the two Sunday services. Most
vicars at this period, however, did not have curates,
although in 1814 a licensed curate was resident in
the Vicarage, the vicar being non-resident. In addition to the two Sunday services, the Sacrament was
administered four times annually, the number of
communicants varying between 25 and 40 during
the 18th and early 19th centuries. The Vicarage
House was situated on the north side of the church, (fn. 280)
but in 1840 St. John's College built a new Vicarage
adjacent to the church on the south. (fn. 281) This was sold
shortly before the Second World War, when the
present Vicarage was built.
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN comprises a nave, chancel, north and south aisles (the
south aisle prolonged to form a transept), south
porch, and central tower. The tympanum now over
the vestry doorway is early 12th century and the
foundations of an apse were discovered beneath the
chancel in 1877. (fn. 282) This was thought at the time to
have been Saxon, but was more probably contemporary with the tower-arches, which date from the
early 12th century. The eastern arch has been
much restored, but the western arch retains its
original jambs and imposts. The heads terminating
the moulding on its western face are, however, later
additions. The chancel was rebuilt on a rectangular
plan later in the 12th century, but has been so
heavily restored that none of its original features
remain.
The aisled nave of three bays was built in the
mid-13th century. The north aisle had a doorway,
now blocked, and a 13th-century piscina shows that
the chapel of St. Mary on the south side of the tower
was built at the same period. Some of the capitals
of the nave arcade are decorated with foliage sculpture, and one of the hood-moulds terminates in the
head of a woman wearing a nose-band. (fn. 283) The east
and west windows and the south and west doorways
were inserted in the 14th century. The south porch
and the clerestory were added in the 15th century.
At the same time the wall of the south aisle, which
had perhaps been pushed outwards by the original
high-pitched roof, was rebuilt and given new
windows. (fn. 284)

KIRTLINGTON
The pulpit is Jacobean. In 1661 six of the villagers
were 'at the charge to beautify this church'. (fn. 285) The
work perhaps included the hanging of the royal arms
over the chancel arch, where they remained until
1854. (fn. 286)
Sir Robert Dashwood, whose 'black' was buried
in the chancel in 1691, (fn. 287) converted the south transept
into a family vault and chapel in 1716, the transept
then being ruinous. (fn. 288) The wrought-iron gates bearing the Dashwood arms are said to have come from
Northbrook House. (fn. 289) He also constructed a gallery
across the west end (1726). (fn. 290) In 1757 the church
needed extensive repairs. (fn. 291) In 1761 'the parish
church of Kirtlington having of late been very
ruinous, as well in the body and structure, as in
the pews, and other parts of the inside thereof,
Sir James Dashwood 'repaired, new-pewed and
decorated' it at his own cost. (fn. 292) In 1770, however,
the tower was pulled down as unsafe. (fn. 293) Sir James
Dashwood's legacy of £300 for its rebuilding was
not taken up (1779), (fn. 294) and the church was without
a tower for 80 years. (fn. 295) Between 1852 and 1854 the
church was restored, partly at Sir George Dashwood's expense. (fn. 296) The work included the building
of the present tower (architect Benjamin Ferrey), the
erection of internal and external buttresses to support
the wall of the north aisle, the removal of the gallery
and the old square pews, paving with Minton tiles,
and the installation of a new font. In 1877 the
chancel was very thoroughly restored by Sir G.
Gilbert Scott at Sir Henry and Lady Dashwood's
expense. (fn. 297) Some further restoration was done in
1891 and 1905. (fn. 298)
Wall-paintings of St. George and St. Christopher,
which were rediscovered in 1905, are mainly of the
late 15th century. (fn. 299)
The organ was placed in the Dashwood chapel in
1877; since about 1839, when 'the old Church band
of clarinet and bassoon' had been done away with,
singing had been accompanied by a barrel-organ. (fn. 300)
The organ obscures a monument, made by William
and Thomas Williams of Middleton Stoney in 1724,
to many of the Dashwoods (including the first three
baronets) on the east wall of the transept, a 13thcentury piscina in the south wall, and a number of
hatchments. (fn. 301)
Brass plates in the south transept and chancel
commemorate the 4th and 5th baronets. The earliest
monuments are of the 17th century. An undated
tablet in the north aisle commemorates Rowland
Bennet, who acquired Bennet's Farm at Northbrook
in 1605; (fn. 302) three other 17th-century tablets to members of the Hall family are on the exterior of the
south wall. The only 18th-century wall monuments,
other than the Dashwood memorial, are to James
Evans, described as regius satelles (i.e. a royal sergeant) (d. 1702), and Ralph Rawlins of Northbrook
(d. 1725) and Mary his wife, who died at the age of
97. In the nave is a tablet to John David, Earl of
Leven and Melville (d. 1913). There are also two
tablets to 19th-century incumbents, both Fellows of
St. John's: James Saunders (d. 1838) and James
Guillemard (d. 1858).
In 1552 the church owned a chalice, two copes,
and four vestments, and there was a light with lands
worth 1s. a year. (fn. 303) A silver-gilt service, consisting of
chalice, paten cover, large paten, pair of flagons, and
an almsplate, were given by Sir Robert Dashwood in
1723. (fn. 304) Nearly all the bells, and also the sanctus bell,
date from 1718, when the original peal of five was
increased to eight at the Dashwoods' expense. (fn. 305)
The parish registers earlier than 1800 have been
lost, with the exception of one for the years 1558–
1699, (fn. 306) and a register of marriages for 1754–1818.
Nonconformity.
In the late 16th and early
17th centuries the holders of the manor, the Ardens,
of the same family as the Ardens of Cottisford, (fn. 307)
were Roman Catholics. Henry Arden was fined in
1592, (fn. 308) and Jane and Mary Arden some years later. (fn. 309)
The latter was still a recusant in 1643, as was
Margaret Arden, (fn. 310) who married George Napier
(d. 1671), a prominent Oxford Catholic. (fn. 311) There
were also a number of other Catholics, including
several yeomen. (fn. 312) George Napier, 'the martyr' (d.
1610), is said to have been arrested in Kirtlington. (fn. 313)
In the second half of the century Roman Catholicism
died out; there was only one Catholic both in 1676
and 1706. (fn. 314)
Four Protestant nonconformists were listed in
1676, (fn. 315) but otherwise dissent scarcely existed until
the early 19th century. In 1821 the first meetinghouse was licensed, and several others were licensed
in the next ten years. (fn. 316) By 1824 Kirtlington was in
the Oxford Methodist Circuit, (fn. 317) and in 1830 a
Wesleyan chapel was built, (fn. 318) which was replaced in
1852 by the present chapel, 'a very neat stone building' served by local preachers. (fn. 319) At that time the
congregation was said to number between 70 and
100; (fn. 320) some were described by the incumbent as
'bigoted Dissenters'. He also stated, incorrectly it
seems, that there were two dissenting places of
worship, a Wesleyan and a Reformed Methodist. (fn. 321) In
1867 the chapel came under the United Methodist
Free Church organization. (fn. 322) There are now (1954)
about six members. (fn. 323)
Schools.
In 1583 John Phillips, an Oxfordshire
woollen draper, bequeathed a house in Woodstock,
rented at £1 a year, towards the finding of a Schoolmaster in Kirtlington, if it shall fortune any school
to be built or erected there'. (fn. 324) A free school for
32 poor children appears to have been founded by
1603, (fn. 325) but no building had been erected by 1613,
when a tenement called the Church House was being
used as 'a schoolhouse, courthouse and townhouse',
and when it was alleged that the Ardens (fn. 326) had failed
to implement the terms of Phillips's bequest. The
Commissioners for Charitable Uses appointed
trustees for the Church House, which continued to
serve as a school, and ordered that the endowment
should be used as originally intended. (fn. 327)
In 1702 it was complained that the rents, then £6
a year, were often paid to a schoolmistress: a new
master was therefore appointed. (fn. 328) By 1759 the school
had closed, as the Woodstock property was too decayed to yield any rent. (fn. 329) In 1766 the property was
let to the Duke of Marlborough on a repairing lease
at a rent of £4 4s. a year. (fn. 330) Between 1774 and 1778
the school reopened with Sir James Dashwood and
the vicar as its governors (fn. 331) and was subsequently
supported by the Dashwoods as well as by the endowment. It had 30 pupils, 22 of them free scholars,
in 1808, but taught only reading to the boys and
reading and plain sewing to the girls. (fn. 332) Instruction
in the catechism had been introduced by 1811. (fn. 333)
In 1824 the £4 4s. rent was being used to pay part
of the expense of teaching and clothing the free
scholars, then 20 in number, Sir Henry Dashwood
meeting the rest. (fn. 334) By 1833 the endowed school
appears to have been virtually amalgamated with
two other schools which had been founded in the
village. (fn. 335)
Two 'common day schools for the poorer class',
with 15 and 8 pupils respectively, had appeared by
1808. (fn. 336) One of these may have been the infants'
school with 20 pupils which was supported by Sir
Henry Dashwood and the parents in 1815. The
other was replaced by a day school opened in 1814
which was supported by the weekly payments of the
scholars, and which received the children who left
the infants' school at the age of five. It was run on the
National Society's plan, which was unpopular with
the wealthier farmers since it put their children 'on
a level with the poor', and because its methods of
instruction seemed too elementary, especially when
they were used to 'hear their children read, as they
imagined well, in the Bible'. There were 41 children
on the books, but attendance was so irregular that
'from want of practice the teachers are unequal to
their office'. (fn. 337)
In 1833 (fn. 338) the three schools had an attendance of
40 boys, 34 girls and 64 infants. (fn. 339) New buildings
were erected in 1834 on land leased from Sir
George Dashwood. (fn. 340) Evening classes in winter and
a singing class for adults were held in 1854. (fn. 341) As late
as 1871 there were said to be three schools, (fn. 342) but it
is likely that they had long been three departments—
boys, girls, and infants—of the same school. In 1867
the endowment, no doubt augmented by the Dashwoods, amounted to £40 a year. Some pupils paid
2d. to 6d. a week, and there were three teachers, a
certificated master, a sewing-mistress, and an infantmistress. Attendance figures were 96 in 1867, 133 in
1889, and 111 in 1906. (fn. 343) Senior pupils from Bletchingdon came to Kirtlington from 1928 to 1947, when
the school was reorganized for juniors and infants,
and seniors were transferred to Woodstock Voluntary Secondary School. Kirtlington school was given
aided status in 1951, and there were 91 pupils on the
books in 1937 and 83 in 1954. (fn. 344) The endowment
brought an income of £72 a year in 1955. (fn. 345)
Charities.
By will dated 1616 John Whicker,
a London merchant, son of Adrian Whicker (vicar
1599–1616), left about 6 acres of land in Ambrosden
to endow a charity for poor widows of Kirtlington. (fn. 346)
In the 1820's the rent of the land, £8, was distributed annually to poor widows and widowers,
each receiving from 6s. to 9s. (fn. 347) The income was £6
in 1954, when it was distributed to old people at
Christmas. (fn. 348)
Robert Slatter gave £3 to the poor in 1649, and in
1664 six benefactors gave £2. These two charities,
which were producing 3s. and 2s. a year respectively
in 1786, (fn. 349) had been amalgamated under the name
of Slatter's Charity by 1824, when 5s. was annually
divided among ten poor widows. (fn. 350) Slatter's Charity
was still in existence in 1852, (fn. 351) but it appears to have
subsequently lapsed.
By the inclosure award of 1815 10 acres in Breach
Furze were awarded to trustees for the poor in lieu
of the poor's right of cutting furze for fuel on the
Breach Common. (fn. 352) In 1954 this land was let at
£12 10s. a year, and the rent was distributed to
old people at Christmas in cash, instead of in the
customary coal. (fn. 353)