MIDDLETON STONEY
Middleton Stoney is a parish of 1,853 acres,
bounded on the west by the Aves Ditch, (fn. 1) and on the
east by the Gagle Brook, a tributary of the River
Ray. Geologically, most of the parish lies on an
outcrop of the Cornbrash, at this point forming a
plateau between 300 and 350 feet above sea-level, (fn. 2)
and it is to the presence of this stone that it probably
owes the second part of its name, which is first
recorded in 1552. (fn. 3) There are several stone-pits
from which material for dry stone walling has in the
past been obtained. The parish is crossed from east
to west by the road from Lower Heyford to Bicester,
and from north to south by the main road from
Oxford to Brackley.
Until the early 19th century the nucleus of the
village lay to the south-west of the Lower HeyfordBicester road, in the vicinity of the church and
castle, although references to an 'Old Churchyard
Furlong' about 1,000 yards south-west of the present
churchyard suggest that there may have been an
earlier church on a different site. The castle is of the
motte and bailey type: it is first mentioned in 1215,
after the death of Gerard de Camville, but it may
well have been in existence in the time of his father
Richard. (fn. 4) King John ordered its destruction in 1216,
and there is no evidence that it was ever refortified.
When Leland saw it in the 1530's, it was already
'over growne with bushys', but he recorded that
'sum peces of the walls of it yet a litle apeare'. (fn. 5)
There are now no signs of masonry, but the mound
has been partly dug away on the west, and is covered
with trees. (fn. 6) Immediately to the west of the castle
stood the old manor-house of the Harmans, which
survived as a farm-house until the early 19th century. (fn. 7)
To the north was the Rectory, with its barn and
stables, (fn. 8) and, at a point approximately half-way between the latter and the road to Heyford, the village
cross, whose base is now preserved close to the
churchyard. (fn. 9)
The desertion of the old manor-house in favour
of an isolated mansion standing in its own grounds
appears to have taken place in the time of Sir Edmund Denton (1698–1712), to whom the building
of 'Middleton Park House' is attributed by
Rawlinson. (fn. 10) A map of 1710 shows it in miniature
as a three-storied house with a symmetrical front
set in a rectangular park of 67 acres walled round
and planted with trees. Soon afterwards it was considerably enlarged, for two wings flanking its
southern facade are shown in plan on a map of
1736: (fn. 11) they were presumably built by Lord Carleton. The house was again enlarged by the 3rd Earl
of Jersey soon after his acquisition of the estate,
but was destroyed by fire in 1753. (fn. 12) A new house,
described as 'a handsome brick structure', took its
place. No satisfactory representation of it appears to
exist, but a sketch (fn. 13) shows that it had a dome, and
that the wings were connected to the body of the
house by quadrant colonnades. In 1806–7 this
Georgian mansion was altered and enlarged by the
5th earl to the designs of Thomas Cundy of Pimlico,
who faced it with stone and added an Ionic portico
forming a porte cochère. (fn. 14) In this form it survived
until 1938, when the 9th earl demolished it in order
to build a new house designed by Sir Edwin and
Mr. Robert Lutyens. (fn. 15)
Until the end of the 17th century the only enclosed part of the parish was the park. Its formation
was authorized by King John at the same time (May
1201) as the grant of the market to Gerard de Camville, (fn. 16) and two years later he gave Gerard 10 bucks
and 40 does from Woodstock Park to stock it. (fn. 17)
It is described in an extent of 1328 as surrounded
by a stone wall half a league in circuit, (fn. 18) and its
original limits are now indicated by the bank and
ditch surrounding the Home Wood. In 1280 the
king gave Henry de Lacy 15 does from Woodstock in
order to stock Middleton Park, (fn. 19) and in 1295, soon
after the earl had obtained a grant of free warren in
the demesne lands of the manor, (fn. 20) it was stocked with
36 deer from Beckley Park, Woodstock Park, and
Wychwood Forest. (fn. 21) At the same time 11s. 8d. was
paid to the king's huntsman for catching wolves in
it. According to the extent of 1311, it was worth 10s.
a year in pasture and underwood if not stocked, but
nothing if it held deer. (fn. 22) The creation of the modern
park which occupies nearly half the parish was the
work of the 5th Earl of Jersey in the early 19th
century. In 1814 he came to an agreement with the
rector whereby the latter's glebe of 72 acres, valued
at £106 13s. 5d. a year, was added to his park. (fn. 23) In
exchange the rector received 106 acres of land
between the Bicester and Oxford roads valued at
£125 14s. 8d. a year, besides a new parsonage
designed by Thomas Cundy in the Tudor-Gothic
style. (fn. 24) This arrangement was confirmed by Act of
Parliament in 1816. (fn. 25) The eastward extension of the
park was completed in 1824–5, when the old manorhouse and the adjoining cottages were demolished,
leaving the church in isolation half-way between the
mansion and the park gates. (fn. 26) New cottages were
built elsewhere under Lady Jersey's personal direction, each with a rustic porch and a small flower
garden, conveying to a contemporary observer 'an
idea of comfort and respectability seldom enjoyed
by the lower classes'. (fn. 27) It was also in the time of the
Countess Sophia (who died in 1867 at the age of 82)
that the 'Eagle and Child' changed its name to the
'Jersey Arms'. This inn is of some antiquity, though
the existing buildings were reroofed and otherwise
modernized in about 1892. It stands at the junction
of the Lower Heyford-Brackley roads, in what is now
the centre of the village. Few of the adjoining cottages
show evidence of being of an earlier date than the
19th century, and the village as a whole, though wellbuilt and not unpleasing in appearance, lacks architectural distinction. The former rectory on the east
side of the Oxford road is now occupied as a private
residence, a new and smaller rectory having been
built on the Bicester road soon after 1920.
A village reading-room was built in 1884 at the
expense of the 7th earl, (fn. 28) who also established a cooperative shop managed entirely by local people,
and did much else to improve the conditions of his
tenants. It was he who made the earliest attempts to
increase the water-supply of both village and mansion by sinking new wells, who extended the schools
and enlarged their scope, provided pitches for
cricket and football, gave an annual harvest-home
dinner to all his employees, and distributed beef
and game at Christmas. (fn. 29) Allotments had already
been instituted by the 5th earl in 1832, (fn. 30) and the 7th
earl built a barn for the benefit of those who rented
them. Few Victorian landlords, in fact, set a better
example than the earls of Jersey did at Middleton,
and their benevolent régime is still remembered
with gratitude by those who had the good fortune
to be their tenants.
Manor.
In 1086 MIDDLETON was held by
Richard Puingiant, a Norman tenant-in-chief of
whom nothing is known beyond the fact that he also
held Godington and had other estates in Wiltshire,
Berkshire, Hampshire, and Bedfordshire. Of his
Saxon predecessor, Turi, it is recorded only that
he had held Middleton freely in the time of
King Edward. (fn. 31) The subsequent history of Richard's
estates is obscure, but in the 12th century his
Hampshire and Bedfordshire manors are found in
the possession of the Chamberlain family, while
those in Oxfordshire and Berkshire had passed to
the Camvilles. Godington is known to have been in
the hands of Richard de Camville by the middle of the
century, (fn. 32) and he was evidently seised of Middleton
in 1130, when he was excused the payment of 20s.
danegeld in Oxfordshire, (fn. 33) for, at the rate of 2s.
per hide, this implies a tenement of 10 hides, which
is in fact the number of hides at which Middleton is
assessed in Domesday Book. The tenure of Middleton by the De Camville family is in any case carried
back to the reign of Henry I by Richard's Carta of
1166, in which he is said to owe the king the service
of one knight for the fee in Oxfordshire which he
holds of him of the 'old enfeoffment'—that is, an
enfeoffment made before 1135. (fn. 34) Middleton and
Godington were, with Avington in Berkshire, the
only manors which Richard de Camville held in
chief, and the existence at Middleton of a characteristic 12th-century castle suggests that it may
have been the head or caput of his barony, though
there is no definite proof that this was the case. (fn. 35) He
died in southern Italy in 1176 or 1177, while accompanying the king's daughter Joan on her journey to
Palermo to be married to King William II of Sicily. (fn. 36)
His manors passed to his elder son Gerard, who is
recorded on the Pipe Roll for 1186–7 as owing
½ mark for waste in Middleton. (fn. 37) Gerard married
Nichole, heiress of the Lincolnshire family of Hay,
thus bringing into his family the castellanship of
Lincoln castle which was their hereditary possession. (fn. 38) In the reign of Richard I he supported Count
John in his rebellion, and Middleton was no doubt
among the lands for whose restoration he paid 2,000
marks in 1194. (fn. 39) In 1201, however, his attachment
to John was rewarded by the grant of a weekly
market of two days at Middleton. (fn. 40) He died shortly
before January 1215, when the king ordered the
Sheriff of Oxford to render to his son Richard
the castle of Middleton, which was of his inheritance. (fn. 41)
Richard de Camville's relations with John appear
to have been less cordial than those of his father, for
in December 1215 his castle of Middleton was committed to the keeping of Engelard de Cigogné, one
of the king's most hated, if also most trusted,
servants, (fn. 42) and in the following May a royal order
was issued for its destruction. (fn. 43) Moreover Richard's
daughter and heir Idoine was by now in royal
custody in Corfe castle. (fn. 44) Her wardship was sold to
William, Earl of Salisbury, who arranged that she
should be married to his son William Longespée,
then, like his fiancée, a child under age. With her he
obtained the custody of all the lands which belonged
to her by right of her mother Eustachia, the daughter
of Gilbert Basset, lord of Bicester. (fn. 45) In view of these
circumstances it has been supposed that Richard
de Camville died within a few months of his father. (fn. 46)
But there is evidence that he was still alive in 1217
and 1218, and the forfeiture of his castle and the
granting away of his daughter's marriage in his own
lifetime can only be explained on the assumption
that he had taken up arms against John in 1215. In
February 1217, however, protection was granted to
him and to his mother Nichole de Hay, (fn. 47) and in 1218
he is recorded on the Pipe Roll for Northamptonshire and Berkshire as owing 300 marks for having
the lands which belonged to his father Gerard. (fn. 48)
But there is no entry to this effect under Oxfordshire, and in a list of royal escheats drawn up in 1219
it is stated that 'the heir of Richard de Camville is of
the gift of the lord king and she is in the custody of
the Earl of Salisbury, and her land in Middleton is
worth £15'. (fn. 49) Richard de Camville's death must have
taken place between 1218 and 1225, for in the latter
year the Earl of Salisbury is recorded as owing the
300 marks previously debited to Richard de Camville, as well as £729 3s. 4d. and 16 palfreys for
having the custody of his daughter. (fn. 50) She had
married his son and attained her majority before
June 1226, when the king rendered to William
Longespée and his wife Idoine the lands late of
Richard de Camville her father. (fn. 51) Soon afterwards
the Sheriff of Oxford was ordered to desist from
demanding an ox for giving them seisin. (fn. 52)
William Longespée was killed while crusading in
Egypt in February 1250, and in October his widow
obtained seisin of the lands which she had inherited
from her Camville ancestors. (fn. 53) She died in 1251 or
1252, (fn. 54) and Middleton then descended to her son
William Longespée the third, who on 19 October
1252 did homage to the king for all the lands which
his mother had held in chief in Oxfordshire, (fn. 55) paying
for them a relief of 50s. Two years later, however, it
was decided by the barons of the Exchequer that he
should pay the full baronial relief of £100 on the
ground that he had inherited the barony of Richard
de Camville. (fn. 56) He died early in 1257 from injuries
received in a tournament at Blyth, (fn. 57) and his estates,
including Middleton, passed to Henry de Lacy,
Earl of Lincoln, who married his daughter and heir
Margaret. (fn. 58) On the earl's death in 1311, the manor
of Middleton was described as held of the king in
chief as 'parcel of the honor of Pontefract', of which
the Lacys were lords. (fn. 59) By the marriage of his
daughter and heir Alice to Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, Middleton became part of the great accumulation of fiefs held by the house of Lancaster. After
the execution of her husband in March 1322,
Alice was allowed to retain her inheritance, but she
sold many of her estates to Edward II for the
benefit of the Despensers, and although Middleton
was restored to her in July 1322, it was with remainder to Hugh Despenser the younger. (fn. 60) In 1324,
however, she forfeited her lands on her marriage to
Sir Ebles Lestrange without the king's licence, and
although she was allowed to retain Middleton,
among other manors, it was only for her lifetime,
and as the tenant of Hugh Despenser. (fn. 61) Upon the
fall of the Despensers in 1327 their reversionary
interest in Middleton was extinguished, the situation being that on the death of the Countess Alice,
the manors would come into the king's hand. But on
28 November 1328 Edward III granted several of her
manors, including Middleton, to Ebles Lestrange
for life, (fn. 62) and in 1331, in return for the latter's 'good
service', the king settled them on Ebles and his
heirs. (fn. 63) Ebles predeceased his wife, dying in 1335,
and on her death in 1348 the manor passed to Roger
Lestrange, lord of Knockin, in whose family it
remained for over a hundred years.
To the Lestranges, whose main estates were in
Shropshire, Middleton presented itself as a manor
which could conveniently be assigned in dower, and
it was so held, first by Joan, the widow of Roger
Lestrange (d. 1349), (fn. 64) then by Alice, widow of
Roger Lestrange (d. 1382), (fn. 65) and thirdly by Maud,
widow of John Lestrange (d. 1398). (fn. 66) In 1479 on
the death of John, the grandson of John Lestrange,
the manor came into the possession of the earls of
Derby, by the marriage of his only daughter and
heiress Joan to George Stanley, son of the 1st earl. (fn. 67)
In 1597 the 6th earl sold Middleton to Richard Cox,
a citizen and Merchant Taylor of London, (fn. 68) who in
1602 sold it to John Harman of Lewes for £1,100. (fn. 69)
Harman died without issue in 1629, having settled
the manor on his cousin Nicholas Harman of
Chelsea. (fn. 70) Nicholas is said to have erected a 'commodious residence' near the site of the castle, in
which he resided until his death in 1668. (fn. 71) He was
High Sheriff of Oxfordshire in 1648. His only
daughter Hester married in 1673 Alexander Denton
of Hillesden (Bucks.), whose eldest son, Sir Edmund
Denton, sold the manor to the Hon. Henry Boyle
for £12,500 in February 1712. (fn. 72) Boyle was the third
son of Charles Boyle, Lord Clifford of Lanesborough.
He had a successful political career, holding office as
Chancellor of the Exchequer and Principal Secretary of State under Queen Anne, and was created
Lord Carleton in 1714 for his services to the Whig
party. (fn. 73) He died unmarried in 1725, leaving his
estates in Wiltshire and Oxfordshire to his nephew
the 3rd Duke of Queensbury. In 1735 the duke
obtained an Act of Parliament (fn. 74) permitting him to
dispose of the Middleton estate in order to buy
other lands adjoining his Wiltshire property. In
March 1737 his trustees sold the house and park
with the immediately adjoining lands to William
Villiers, 3rd Earl of Jersey, for £6,000, and in June
they parted with the 426 acres of Wilson's Farm to
William Leigh of Southwark for £3,850. In 1740
Lord Jersey bought Abraham's Farm for £4,300,
and in 1748 he acquired the manorial rights and the
Duke of Queensbury's remaining lands for £2,780.
In the same year he purchased the greater part
of the Priory Farm from the executor of John Kinge
for £1,900. (fn. 75) Finally, in 1765 he was able to buy
Wilson's Farm from Thomas Leigh (brother of the
original purchaser, who had died in 1740) for
£5,200. (fn. 76) Thus for a total expenditure of some
£20,000 Lord Jersey became the proprietor of almost
the whole parish. In the time of his grandson the 5th
earl (1805–59), described by 'Nimrod' as 'the hardest,
boldest, most judicious, and perhaps the most
elegant rider to hounds whom the world ever saw',
Middleton became celebrated for its kennels and its
stables, and the village gave its name to the Derby
winner of 1825. Middleton Park remained the
principal seat of the Jersey family until 1946,
when the 9th earl sold the house and estate to
Mr. A. C. J. Wall.
Lesser Estate.
Although the De Camvilles
were considerable benefactors to Bicester Priory and
other religious houses, their grants did not include
any land in Middleton, nor did their successors
part with any of their demesne in this way. In 1349,
however, three messuages and 200 acres of land in
the manor were conveyed to the Prior and Convent
of Bicester under a general licence in mortmain
obtained in the reign of Edward II. The nominal
grantors were three chaplains, but the real donor
was Thomas de Stapenhulle, who had conveyed the
lands to them a few months earlier. (fn. 77) The gift was
confirmed by royal letters patent on 3 October
1350. (fn. 78) After the dissolution of Bicester Priory in
1536 these lands, valued at £2 a year. (fn. 79) were among
those granted by Henry VIII to Roger Moore of
Bicester for £187 17s. 2d. (fn. 80) The 'Priory Farm' was
subsequently acquired by Thomas Martyn from
Moore's coheirs, Mary, the wife of Sir Michael
Blount, and Elizabeth, the wife of Sir John Brocket
of Brocket Hall (Herts.). (fn. 81) On Martyn's death it
passed to his sister and heir Marian, the wife of
Henry Standard, whose son Thomas is said also to
have acquired a small estate in this parish formerly
belonging to Oseney Abbey. (fn. 82) In the inquisition
taken after the death of Thomas Standard in 1623,
his estate in Middleton Stoney is described as
a 'manor' comprising 3 messuages, 1 dove-house,
2 cottages, 3 tofts, 200 acres of land, and some acres
of meadow. (fn. 83) It is also reputed a manor in an earlier
conveyance of 1590. (fn. 84) Thomas Standard's son
Henry settled at Middleton and lived at the Priory
Farm during the greater part of his life. Henry's
son Henry, a Fellow of All Souls, died in 1670 at the
age of 23, and in the following year he sold the estate
to Gabriel Merry of Heyford Warren for £800. In
1679 Merry sold it to William Kinge of Lilbourne
(Northants) for the same price. After the death of
William Kinge's son John in 1742, the latter's
executor sold 24½ acres known as the Moor Ground
to Lord Jersey for £290, and in December 1748
Lord Jersey purchased the capital messuage and
153 acres known as King's Closes for £1,900. (fn. 85)
Thus the greater part of the property came into the
possession of the Jersey family, and the mansion
house, being no longer required, was demolished
or allowed to fall into decay. (fn. 86)
Economic History.
In the absence of a
continuous series of manorial records, the economic
history of Middleton before its inclosure in the
early 18– century depends almost entirely upon the
meagre documentation afforded by the Hundred Rolls,
two surviving account rolls, and a series of extents
made in connexion with the inquisitions held after
the deaths of successive lords of the manor.
In 1086 (fn. 87) much of the parish was occupied by
woodland (8 × 8 furlongs). There was, however,
land for 16 ploughs; 3 were in demesne and 13 in
the hands of 25 villeins (villani) with 7 bordars.
There is no reference to any meadow or pasture.
Its omission is significant, for in the 14th-century
extents (fn. 88) there are said to be only 5 acres of meadow
belonging to the manor, 3 in King's Sutton, 8 miles
away in Northamptonshire, and 2 in Lower Heyford.
The circumstances in which this unusual arrangement arose are not recorded, but the connexion
between Middleton and King's Sutton was a feudal
one, the latter manor having been granted to Richard
de Camville by Henry II in or before 1155. (fn. 89) In 1241,
when William Longespée, as Camville's successor,
granted the manor of King's Sutton to his brother
Stephen, he was careful to reserve 'a certain meadow
in Sidenham which my men of Middleton were wont
to mow' and to stipulate that Stephen and his heirs
should provide food and drink for 25 men of Middleton on the day when they came to mow it. (fn. 90) The surviving account for 1295–6, in recording the expense of
providing bread and beer for 36 villeins and cottagers
raising hay for one day, duly notes that 'the lady of
King's Sutton finds food for the mowers'. (fn. 91)
William Longespée's charter implies that the
number of villeins was the same in 1241 as it had
been in 1086. This is confirmed by the account of
Middleton in the Hundred Rolls of 1279, which
gives the names of 27 villein tenants, each holding
a single virgate, and paying 3s. 9d. a year, besides
performing unspecified 'works and customs'. There
were in addition 4 free tenants holding a total of 9
virgates, and 14 burgage-holders, 10 of whom paid
1s. a year, the other 4 paid 6d. (fn. 92) The existence of
these 'burgesses', coupled with the grant of a weekly
market in 1202, and of a market and annual fair in
1294, (fn. 93) indicates an attempt on the part of the lords
of Middleton to establish there something more
than a purely agricultural community, as Robert
Arsic had done at Cogges. (fn. 94) By 1295–6 the burgage
rents received had risen to £1 1s. 11d., while the
profits of the 'market court' amounted to 3s. 10d.
The burgages are not mentioned as such in the
extent of the manor drawn up after the death of
Roger Lestrange in 1349. (fn. 95) But their occupants may
have been among the free men formerly rendering
£2 15s. 9½d. a year, whose holdings were reported to
have come into the lord's hand owing to the death of
the tenants, and whose lands were 'lying untilled
and uncultivated and worth nothing'. Their tenants
had in fact perished in the Black Death, as had
'certain villeins who also died in the same pestilence',
and whose lands and tenements were likewise lying
'uncultivated and in common'. No one, the jurors
stated, would take them up, 'because almost all the
men there are dead'. The perquisites of the court
and view of frankpledge, valued at 24s. in 1328, were
now worth only 6s. 'and not more in these days on
account of the aforesaid pestilence'. Subsequent inquisitions are unfortunately not accompanied by
detailed extents, so that it is impossible to say to
what extent the economy of the manor may have
been permanently affected by the Black Death. It
is equally uncertain whether the extinction of the
burgage tenements is to be attributed to the same
calamity; but no further reference to them has
been found, and with their disappearance Middleton became once more a normal agricultural
community engaged in the cultivation of its open
fields.
The history of the fields themselves is not well
documented. In 1348 and 1349 it was stated that of
the lord's demesne of 200 acres, half could be sown
each year, that each acre when sown was worth 4d.,
and if not sown, nothing. (fn. 96) In 1355, however, a
tenement of 1½ acres is described as lying in three
different fields, one ½-acre in the field towards
Chesterton, another in the 'Middelfeld', and the
third in the field 'towards —'. (fn. 97) It would therefore
appear that there was a change from a two- to a threefield system between 1349 and 1355, but only two
fields—North and South—are described in an elaborate terrier made in 1554, and still in use in 1639. (fn. 98)
According to this, 'every yardland hath 40 acres
in the fields in the south field and north field,
except three yards for every yardland in the north
field only'. The testimony of the 17th-century glebe
terriers is ambiguous, for in those of 1679 and 1701
the parson's land is said to lie partly in 'the South
Fields' and partly in the North Field, while in 1697
the South Field is referred to in the singular. (fn. 99) In
1554 the total arable land amounted to some 1,986
acres. The demesne, consisting of 9 yardlands,
accounted for 352 acres; 330 acres were held by
freeholders, and the remaining 1,304 acres were
copyhold. These 'acres' were 'not of measure, but
as the acres lie, little and big'—that is, they represented the actual 'lands' or strips into which the
fields were divided. The amount of grass-land is not
stated in the terrier, but in October 1636 Nicholas
Harman, as lord of the manor, and Edward Fitzherbert, as 'his farmer of the demesne there', agreed
with the parson and the tenants 'to lay down for
every yardland of the said farm and demesnes, 6 acres
for grass every second year in the North field, and
that every one of the said tenants shall lay down
for every yardland which they hold 5 acres for grass
yearly in the Cornfield'. A similar agreement was
made at the court baron and court leet held on
6 October 1656, when it was 'ordered and agreed
that every one of the said Manor shall lay down
from ploughing 4 acres of land for a yardland in
each field and so after that rate for any greater or
lesser quantity of land and this order shall continue
for four years next ensueing the date hereof'. (fn. 100)
The inclosure of the parish began in about 1686,
when part of the glebe—hitherto lying in over 50
distinct 'parcels'—was 'taken out of the common
field . . . and inclos'd by a general consent of the
inhabitants'. (fn. 101) In 1706 it was stated that this inclosure
concerned 'part of a common field which was barren
land and lay remote from the town, and is since
found a very profitable improvement of the said
rectory.' (fn. 102) In the following year, however, the 'three
grounds then laid out for the rector' were exchanged
for 'two grounds improv'd by Sanfoyn-grass' of
slightly greater acreage. (fn. 103) Finally, in November 1709,
Sir Edmund Denton and the other proprietors of
land in the common fields 'having proposed that
some considerable improvement might be made of
their said lands by inclosing of some part thereof …
came to an agreement and entered into articles', as
a result of which the remainder of the parish was
inclosed, the rector was freed from the obligation of
keeping a bull and a boar 'for the use of the cattle …
in the parish', and the lord was to 'hold and enjoy all
the rest and residue of the said manor … inclosed
and free and discharged of common'. (fn. 104) This agreement was confirmed by a decree in Chancery in
July 1714. (fn. 105) A map of the parish made in 1710 shows
it as it was 'immediately after the inclosure'. (fn. 106) There
were then five principal farms, totalling 1,247 acres.
By 1737, however, when another map was made for
Lord Jersey, (fn. 107) three of the farms had been bought
up by the Duke of Queensbury, and Lord Jersey had
begun to make possible the later extension of the
park by acquiring lands adjoining it on the south and
east. There are now five farms in the parish: Manor
(formerly Middleton Grounds) farm, Park farm,
Dewar's farm, Rectory farm, (fn. 108) and Copse farm, (fn. 109)
the two last being run as a single agricultural unit.
Little is known about the population before the
19th century. In 1676 the Compton census recorded
90 adults, (fn. 110) and in 1759 the rector returned that
there were between 30 and 40 houses. (fn. 111) In 1801
there were 309 inhabitants. A peak of 340 was
reached in 1821 and this was followed by a steady
decline. The more marked fall of 1861 was due to
Lord Jersey not being in residence. In 1881 the
figure was 293, but this had risen to 324 by 1901. In
the early 20th century there was a declining population, but between 1931 and 1951 it increased rapidly
from 251 to 477. (fn. 112)
Church.
The remains of the existing mid-12thcentury building constitute the earliest evidence for
the existence of a church at Middleton. It is not
known at what date the advowson was granted to
the Abbot and Convent of Barlings (Lincs.), but
the donor was probably Gerard de Camville, who by
his marriage to Nichole de Hay had become the
patron of this Premonstratensian abbey, founded by
his wife's uncle Robert de Hay in 1154. (fn. 113) The gift
was, however, disputed by William Longespée,
Earl of Salisbury, in the time of Bishop Hugh de
Welles (1209–35), whose rolls record that in view of
the contention between the earl and the abbot over
the advowson of Middleton, he had, at their request,
presented Gervase de Pavely by authority of the
Lateran Council. (fn. 114) The case was evidently decided
in favour of the abbot, for he continued to present
to the rectory throughout the 13th century. (fn. 115) A
further dispute arose when Peter Durand, rector in
the reign of Edward I, died at the Roman curia. For
the Pope claimed the right to present to all benefices
whose incumbents died in his court and proceeded
to provide Richard de Celleseye, professor of canon
law. The abbot's presentee was induced to resign, and
Richard was admitted to the rectory in May 1300. (fn. 116)
In 1322 Alice de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln, then
lady of the manor, confirmed the gift of the advowson to the canons of Barlings, (fn. 117) but in 1334, for
reasons unexplained, the abbot and convent obtained
a licence to convey it to the Bishop of Lincoln. (fn. 118)
During the vacancies of the see in 1342 and 1424
the king presented. The presentation remained in
the hands of the bishops of Lincoln until 1856,
when, by an Order in Council, it was transferred to
the Bishop of Oxford in accordance with an arrangement made by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners
whereby livings in episcopal patronage were transferred to the bishop in whose diocese they were
locally situated. (fn. 119)
The rectory was valued at £5 in 1254, (fn. 120) at £10
in 1291, (fn. 121) and at £12 16s. in 1535. (fn. 122) Much information survives for its value in the late 17th century,
for two of the rectors have left records of tithes
received, ranging in value from £62 in 1666 to £116
in 1683, (fn. 123) plus the value of the glebe. At the inclosure
of the parish in 1709, the tithes were commuted at
the rate of £2 2s. 6d. per yardland, making a total of
£100 15s. (fn. 124) In 1842 a new tithe award was made and
the tithes commuted for £436 10s., (fn. 125) thus bringing
the total value of the rectory to well over £500.
The glebe, valued at 13s. 4d. in 1341, (fn. 126) was rated
at 2 yardlands in the 17th century. (fn. 127) At the general
inclosure of 1709 the rector received about 70 acres. (fn. 128)
In 1749 he and Lord Jersey exchanged about 30
acres of land, (fn. 129) and in 1814 the rector exchanged his
entire glebe, including the Rectory house, for a
larger estate, which he sold in 1920. (fn. 130)
Owing to extensive alterations in the 19th century,
the architectural history of the church of ALL
SAINTS is in some respects not easy to follow,
and there is little documentary evidence to supplement that afforded by the fabric itself. The earliest
parts of the existing church are the chancel and the
enriched south doorway, which date from the mid12th century. The latter, however, is not in its
original position, having been moved to its present
setting when the south aisle was built in the 14th
century. Late in the 12th century the existing
chancel arch was built, and the nave was enlarged
by the addition of a north aisle. The 'Transitional'
arcade of three arches is supported on cylindrical
columns with carved capitals. The arches are remarkable in that they are moulded on the south side
only, their north face being flush with the wall
above. There is a north doorway of similar date,
with a hood-mould terminating in animal heads.
The west tower was added early in the 13th century.
Its most conspicuous feature is the arcaded upper
stage of 'Early English' character, surmounted by a
battlemented parapet. It was rebuilt from the ground
in 1858, but the old materials were reused, and
comparison with the old engraving of 1846 in A Guide
to the Architectural Antiquities in the Neighbourhood
of Oxford shows that the design of the original was
carefully reproduced.
The south aisle and its arcade of two arches were
added early in the 14th century. The eastern bay of
the aisle appears to have been separated from the
nave by a solid wall, the existing plain arch being a
modern insertion. The new aisle was lighted by two
four-light windows with flat soffits. Similar windows
were inserted in the north wall of the north aisle at
the same time. Later in the 14th century two windows were inserted in the south wall of the chancel,
one of two, the other of three lights. The latter
survives, but the other was destroyed when the
organ-chamber was built in 1868. Buckler's sketch
of 1823 (fn. 131) shows that there was also a 'low-side'
window at the west end of the south wall of the
chancel. The original high-pitched roof of the nave
was replaced by the present clerestory in the 15th
century, but the evidence of its former existence
remained until 1858 on the east side of the tower. (fn. 132)
The south porch in its present form dates from the
same period, but it incorporates the moulded jambs
and voussoirs of an early 13th-century arch which
presumably formed part of an earlier porch.
No medieval fittings survive, but the cutting
away of the 'dog-tooth' ornamentation of the chancel
arch immediately above the capitals shows where
the framing of the chancel screen or rood beam
formerly rested. (fn. 133) A cross, two candlesticks, and a
holy-water 'stoke', all of brass, are mentioned in an
Edwardian inventory, (fn. 134) and in 1545 Richard Smith
left 4d. towards the maintenance of the two 'standards' before the high altar. (fn. 135) In 1583 several
parishioners confessed that they had portions of a
cope and other church ornaments in their possession,
and were ordered to restore them. (fn. 136)
Any alterations which may have been made to
the fabric of the church in the 16th, 17th, or 18th
centuries were obliterated in 1858, and as no
churchwardens' accounts survive, no record of
them has been preserved. It is known, however, that
it was in the time of the Revd. William Offley, rector
from 1689 to 1724, that the communion-table was
first railed in, for he recorded the fact himself. In
1699 he wrote that 'There are usually five Communions in the year, 1 on Palm Sunday, Easter Day,
Whitsunday, 1 after Michaelmas—Christmas Day.
All the people come into the chancel, the women
kneel on the north side, and the men on the south
side of the chancel. I begin the sacrament to those of
the north side first, and thence proceed to those on
the south side, without any respect of persons, but
as they kneel in order, they receive. After the bread
and cup are deliver'd, the clark sings a Psalm and
then I go on to conclude the office.' But in 1702 he
notes that 'Since I rail'd in the Communion Table
the people kneel at the rail, only the dark comes
with the rector within the rail—to be ready to fetch
the wine during the administration of the sacrament'. (fn. 137)
In 1805 the Jersey chapel was built on the north
side of the chancel in order to contain the family
monuments. It was originally Gothic in style, as can
be seen from the engraving in Shelton's Antiquities
of Oxford (1823), but at a later date it was given
a 'Norman' character by rebuilding the window,
archway, and pinnacles, and the interior was
decorated with heraldic shields. (fn. 138) The principal
monuments are to Anne, Countess of Jersey (d.
1762), George, 5th Earl of Jersey (d. 1859), and
his daughters Sarah, Princess Nicolas Esterhazy
(d. 1853), and Clementina (d. 1858).
The restoration of 1856–8 was carried out under
the direction of S. S. Teulon. (fn. 139) It involved the rebuilding of the tower, the whole of the north aisle,
and of the south aisle to the west of the porch. The
roofs of both nave and chancel (previously covered
by a flat plaster ceiling) were rebuilt, as also were
those of the aisles. A new east window was substituted for the plain window with a central mullion
shown in Buckler's drawing of 1823. In 1868 a
vestry and organ-chamber were added on the south
side of the chancel to the designs of G. E. Street,
and the interior of the church was completely refitted with a new pulpit, lectern, altar, reredos,
piscina, rails, candlesticks, and other furniture. The
organ was installed in 1871, and in 1881 the last of
the pre-Victorian fittings disappeared when Lord
Jersey's private pew at the west end of the nave was
removed. (fn. 140)
The present font, which replaces a former marble
one of 18th- or early 19th-century date, was presented to the church by Julia, Countess of Jersey,
in about 1860. It is said to have come from the
King's Chapel at Islip, but before the end of the
17th century it had passed into the possession of
the Brown family of Kiddington, who believed that
it was the font in which Edward the Confessor was
baptized and had an inscription cut on the base to
that effect. (fn. 141) Its decoration is of 14th-century character, but it is possible that this has been cut on an
older tub-shaped font.
In addition to the Jersey monuments there are
two late-17th-century cartouche tablets in the
chancel in memory of the children of the Revd.
William Offley, and there is a brass on the floor
commemorating Elizabeth, wife of John Harman,
'Lord of this towne', who died in 1607. (fn. 142)
In 1552 there were three 'great bells' in the tower,
one sanctus bell, and two hand bells. (fn. 143) In 1955 there
were five bells, all made by Henry Bagley in 1717
and rehung in 1883, when the tenor was recast.
They were again rehung in 1910. (fn. 144) Two of them
bear the name of Lord Carleton, who gave a set of
silver-gilt communion plate to the church in 1718.
This consists of a chalice, with cover, a large
paten, and a flagon. There is also a silver chalice
dated 1575, (fn. 145) and a silver alms-dish given by
Mrs. Susannah Harman shortly before her death
in 1688. (fn. 146)
The registers begin in 1598. The parish records
include constables' accounts for the years 1740–57.
Nonconformity.
There has been practically
no nonconformity, either Roman Catholic or Protestant. In the early 18th century there was one
Roman Catholic family, the Williamses. (fn. 147) In 1797
the house of Mary Benham was licensed as a dissenting meeting-place, (fn. 148) but 19th-century reports
emphasize the absence of dissent.
Schools.
Rawlinson mentions that the rector
(William Offley, 1689–1724) had educated the poor
children of the place for more than 20 years. (fn. 149) In
1724 it was stated that four children were taught at
the charge of the minister. (fn. 150) The school had closed
by 1738, (fn. 151) and the village was without a school until
the early 19th century. By 1808 Sophia, Countess of
Jersey (d. 1867), had established three schools, one
an industrial school for 12 girls who were taught
reading, writing, arithmetic, sewing, and housework
during a three- or four-year course of training as
domestic servants. In the second school 30 younger
girls were taught reading and needlework, and in
the third 20 or 30 younger boys were taught reading,
net-making, and 'odd jobs'. The rector ran an evening school where about 15 older boys learned the
three R's. All four schools gave instruction in the
catechism and all were supported by Lady Jersey,
who also bore the expense of boarding and clothing
the girls of the industrial school. (fn. 152) By 1815 Lady
Jersey's three schools had been reorganized into
a girls' school with 40 pupils, including the 12
boarders, a boys' school with 34, and an infants'
with 18 children. (fn. 153) The separate infants' school was
closed by 1819 and its pupils divided between the
boys' and girls' schools. (fn. 154) Both schools had Sunday
meetings, and in 1833 each had 36 pupils, though
there were only 6 boarders. The evening school had
10 to 15 boys attending it. (fn. 155)
New school buildings for Lord Jersey's Church of
England School appear to have been erected about
1837 on his land (fn. 156) and the infants became a separate
department. In 1854 there were 30 boys, 20 girls,
and 15 infants, but the evening school had closed. (fn. 157)
By her will, proved in 1867, Lady Jersey bequeathed
£4,500 for the endowment of a training school for
domestic servants. Six girls chosen from Middleton,
Chesterton, and Somerton schools continued to be
boarded and clothed at Middleton and were placed
under a matron. (fn. 158) In 1871 there were 107 pupils
in all, (fn. 159) and by 1887 the departments had again
been reduced to two: boys, with 35 pupils under a
master; and girls and infants with 68 pupils under
a mistress. (fn. 160)
The two departments which had 29 and 38 pupils
respectively in 1906 (fn. 161) were amalgamated in 1924,
and in 1933 the school was reorganized as a junior
school, senior pupils being transferred to Bicester.
The school, which was controlled in 1951, had
25 pupils on its books in 1937 and 23 in 1954. (fn. 162)
Lady Jersey's foundation of 1867 was regulated by
a Board of Education scheme in 1931, and in 1955
when its endowments, amounting to nearly £10,000
in stock, were producing a gross yearly income of
£289 6s. 6d., it was proposed that it should be
amalgamated with Lady Jersey's Almshouses
Charity. (fn. 163)
Charities.
In the early 19th century it was the
custom to purchase coal for the poor out of the
poor rates. As this was made illegal by the Poor Law
Act of 1834, a parish meeting decided in 1835 'that
a sufficient sum to purchase the usual quantity of
coals should be raised by voluntary subscription'. (fn. 164)
This was the beginning of the Coal Club, to which
all the cottagers subscribed 6d. a week throughout
the year. At Christmas, with the help of a generous
subscription from Lord Jersey, a large quantity of
coal was ordered from the colliery and delivered to
Heyford station, whence it was carted by the earl's
teams and those of his tenant farmers to the homes
of the cottagers. The average allocation was about
25 cwt. in the time of the 7th earl (1859–1915). (fn. 165)
The club has since been discontinued.
By her will proved in 1867 Sophia, Countess of
Jersey, left money to found a charity for the benefit
of the occupants of four cottages built by Lord
Jersey and known as almshouses. In 1925 the
capital, consisting of £1,736 in stock, was producing
an annual income of £52. The 'almshouses' were
maintained by successive Lords Jersey, but were
never handed over to the trustees of the charity. (fn. 166)
They were sold with the rest of the Jersey estate in
1946 and were subsequently let as ordinary cottages.
In 1955, when the endowment amounted to
£2,045 16s. and the annual gross income to £61 7s. 6d.,
it was proposed to amalgamate the Almshouses
Charity with the Countess of Jersey's Foundation.
Pensions already authorized by the trustees were to
continue. (fn. 167)
The scheme finally established in May 1955 provided that the trustees should apply £30 a year for
the benefit of the aged poor in Middleton or its
neighbourhood. They were to use the residue of the
net income for the benefit of boys and girls of
Bicester or the Rural District of Ploughley. First and
second preference was to be given respectively to
residents of Middleton and to girls. The money was
to be applied in a variety of ways: for awards of
scholarships, &c., tenable at an approved place of
learning; for grants for foreign travel or for studying
music or other arts; and for the promotion of the
social and physical training of the beneficiaries. (fn. 168)