MIXBURY
The parish lies in the north-east corner of the county
with the River Ouse dividing it on the north from
Buckinghamshire, and the Northamptonshire border
on the west separating it from the parish of Evenley
(Northants). The modern parish (2,449 a.) is smaller
than the ancient one (2,972 a.), (fn. 1) which included a
detached portion of 523 acres in which Willaston
lay. This was transferred to Hethe parish in 1888. (fn. 2)
The nearest market towns are Buckingham, 6 miles
distant, and Bicester, 8 miles away.
The ground lies for the most part about 400 feet
above sea-level, but in the north-east it falls gradually
and then more sharply to the Ouse to about 320 feet.
The parish lies on the Great Oolite, but much of its
eastern half is covered by flint and oolite gravel. (fn. 3) In
the northern part of the parish the country is on the
whole bare, although Sainfoin Corner is a fair-sized
plantation. Here was the Bayard's Green of medieval
and later times (see below), and the 'downs' of the
Inclosure Act of 1730. The general impression, even
in summer, is still of a bleak exposed plateau. The
southern half of the parish is more sheltered: there
are two large plantations, Mixbury Plantation and
Park Thorns, in the south, and the Hulls and the
Pits in the south-west. A stream flows just north of
Mixbury village and joins the Ouse near Fulwell,
one of the parish's two ancient hamlets.
The main road from Buckingham to Banbury,
which became a turnpike in 1744, (fn. 4) bisects the parish;
the village is linked to this high road and to the
Oxford–Brackley road by minor roads. Other small
roads and foot-paths intersect the parish and also
two railways, the former London and North-Western
opened in 1850 to the north and the former Great
Central opened in 1899 to the east. (fn. 5) The nearest
station is the former L.M.S. Fulwell and Westbury
station. Half of Fulwell Bridge is in the parish, and
the other half is in Buckinghamshire. In 1877 it was
reported that the road here was often flooded and
that a rough causeway for foot passengers had been
provided. (fn. 6)
Mixbury village is placed fairly centrally within
the parish, just off the Buckingham-Banbury road.
The water lies near the surface here and the many
wells afford an ample supply. (fn. 7) Mixbury does not
appear to have ever been a large village. In 1662
and 1665 34 and 21 householders in Mixbury and
Fulwell were listed for the hearth taxes. (fn. 8) In 1665
two large houses had eight hearths each and there
were only three other small farm-houses. There seem
to have been about 43 dwellings in Mixbury itself,
few scattered houses outside and one manor-house
only at Fulwell in the mid-18th century. (fn. 9) By 1768
the house at Fulwell had been pulled down, but a
farm is mentioned at Willaston, by then an almost
deserted hamlet, and the total number of houses
was said to be about 60. (fn. 10) The village was at its
largest in the mid-19th century, but had considerably shrunk in size again by 1951, when there were
only 64 houses in the whole parish. (fn. 11)
Davis's map of 1797 shows the village dwellings
close to the stream and the church in a rather isolated position to the east, (fn. 12) but in 1955 the village
lay on either side of the minor road which connects
Mixbury with the main Banbury road. Its general
appearance, which is both neat and attractive, is
late-19th century, since in 1874 the thatched and
dilapidated cottages, built of local stone, were replaced by order of the Court of Chancery with about
40 semi-detached houses, built of coursed rubble
with red brick dressings. The twelve lime-trees,
planted between the cottages, were presented by
Squire Batson at the request of the rector in 1891. (fn. 13)
Charles Richardson, writing about 1823, states that
'until the last twenty years many of the cottage
chimneys were constructed of wood', (fn. 14) and Blomfield, writing at the end of the century, describes
them as 'huts . . . with here and there an upper room
reached by a ladder'. (fn. 15) Many of the cottagers had
lived rent free. (fn. 16) In 1955 the church, the Rectory,
Town Farm, and the village school, built in 1838, (fn. 17)
all lay at the northern end of the village street.
The early 19th-century Rectory probably replaced
the one which was repaired or rebuilt by Thomas
Walker (rector 1630–8) and which was taxed on
three hearths in 1665. (fn. 18) W.J. Palmer on his institution as rector in 1802 obtained a licence to rebuild
from the Bishops of Oxford and Rochester, and was
permitted to raise a loan of £390. (fn. 19) In 1805 the new
house, standing in about 4 acres of ground, was
stated to be stone-built. It had dormers and a roof of
blue Welsh slating. (fn. 20) It was enlarged in 1855. (fn. 21) The
schoolroom, approached by a flight of steps from
the churchyard, is raised above stone wagon-sheds,
once used by Glebe farm—an unusual and attractive arrangement. Beyond the church, on the north
side of Church Lane, the impressive banks and
ditches of Beaumont castle can be seen. (fn. 22) No
masonry remains above the ground and the earthworks alone survive of this important early medieval
fortification. This castle was probably built by
Roger d'Ivry and nicknamed Beaumont because the
ground north of it falls to the stream. (fn. 23) Recent excavations (1954–5) revealed a deep well or dungeon
at the north-west corner of the earth ramparts with
an underground passage leading out of it. (fn. 24)
Farther north are some council houses, and beyond
the stream Mixbury Hall, built by Charles Kayler in
about 1900, and a group of other modern houses.
The village has two shops and a sub-post office, but
the limekilns once in Church Lane and the smithy
at the south end of the main street (fn. 25) have ceased to
function. There is no public house and it is said that
in the early 19th century the incumbent refused to
allow one for fear of drunkenness. (fn. 26) But the 'Greyhound' throve in 1784 (fn. 27) and it is possible that earlier
there were two alehouses, as two different victuallers
were licensed in 1732 and 1735. (fn. 28)
The parish once had two hamlets, Fulwell, (fn. 29)
which lies in the extreme north-east, close to the
Ouse, and Willaston. Both were largely deserted by
the early 16th century. At Fulwell, Oseney Abbey
had a mill (fn. 30) and a large grange, which in the 16th
century became the residence of the new lord of
the manor. (fn. 31) It was inhabited by the Wellesbornes,
Sills, and Bathursts until the mid-18th century, but
in 1738 and 1759 the incumbents noted in their
returns that the lord did not usually reside there. (fn. 32)
It was 'pulled down' before 1768, (fn. 33) and the site,
roughly 55 by 46 yards, can still be clearly seen.
A 17th-century building adjoining the manor-house
continued to be used as a farm-house; (fn. 34) it is a substantial building of two stories. The hamlet now
consists of this farm-house, and a few 19th-century
cottages on the road to Mixbury. It had once formed
a separate manor and until 1435 was a separate
parish. (fn. 35) Numerous mounds and depressions and
traces of what appear to be stone paths or ruined
cottages are visible in many parts of the field in front
of the farm-house.
Willaston, a flourishing hamlet in the Middle Ages,
was depopulated by inclosure (fn. 36) and consisted of one
farm-house by the 18th century. (fn. 37) In 1955 the house
was inhabited by Mr. Dewar-Harrison, owner of the
ancient manor or 'lordship of Willaston' and of other
neighbouring property.
There are a number of outlying farm-houses: two,
Middle Farm and Cold Harbour, lie in the south of
the parish and apparently date from the inclosure; (fn. 38)
the other two are 17th-century houses. Monk's
House, standing south of the main road and near
the Northamptonshire border, bears the date 1683
on the north gable. It was, however, in existence in
1662, when the churchwardens presented that it
was an encroachment on the common. They described it as 'a new erected house at the race post
upon the common, built by one Monk of Evenley'
(Northants). (fn. 39) It is a T-shaped building of two stories,
constructed of rubble patched with brick and partly
cement-faced. It has casement windows still, and
a roof of red tiles and Welsh slate. The extension
to the west is probably of a later date. Lawrence
Broderick, rector from 1713 to 1743, lived there in
the latter part of his incumbency. (fn. 40) On the other
side of the parish Mixbury Lodge Farm lies just
north of the main road. It consists of two portions, an
early-17th-century part at the back and an incongruous 19th-century front. The original T-shaped
building is constructed of coursed rubble with stone
kneelers, is of two stories with attic dormers, and has
a brown tile roof. It has retained its two-light
windows with stone mullions and casements.
The parish is notable for a small round barrow,
Barrow Hill, under half a mile west of the village,
where human remains were found in the 19th century; (fn. 41) for its connexion with medieval tournaments,
since in 1194 the open ground between Brackley
and Mixbury was made one of the five licensed
tournament grounds in England; (fn. 42) for its 'lost'
hamlets of Fulwell and Willaston; (fn. 43) for horse-racing
in the 17th and later centuries on the one-time
tournament ground; and in the 18th and 19th
centuries for its connexion with several notable
men. Benjamin Bathurst, brother to Lord Bathurst
and M.P. for Gloucester, settled at Fulwell in 1738
and in 1741 married as his second wife the daughter
of the rector, the Revd. Lawrence Broderick, a Prebendary of Westminster. Of his fourteen children
by this marriage five were baptized at Mixbury and
six buried there. His third son Henry, a future
Bishop of Norwich, though born at Brackley in
1744, spent his early years at Mixbury after his
family's return to Fulwell in 1747. (fn. 44) In the 19th
century the Rectory was the home of the remarkable
clerical family of Palmer. William Palmer, the eldest
son of the Revd. W. J. Palmer, was born there in 1811.
He became a leader of the Oxford Movement and a
pioneer in the task of establishing friendly relations
between the Greek and Anglican churches. He died
in 1879 after entering the church of Rome. Palmer's
second son, Roundell, became Lord Chancellor and
the 1st Earl of Selborne, and another son had a distinguished academic career at Oxford, where he was
Corpus Professor of Latin Literature (1870–8). (fn. 45)
Manors.
In 1086 MIXBURY (Missberie) was
held by Roger d'Ivry of the king as 17 hides; (fn. 46) as
part of the Ivry barony it followed roughly the same
descent as the manor of Beckley and passed to the
St. Valery family. (fn. 47) As Ralph Basset, the justiciar,
made a grant of the advowson in about 1123 and of
the tithes before 1151, it is possible that the manor
passed into the hands of the Bassets for a short
period after the death of Roger d'Ivry in about
1120. (fn. 48) The St. Valery family had acquired it by
1213 at the latest, for in that year Thomas de
St. Valery gave Mixbury, with its appurtenances in
Newton Purcell, in free alms to Oseney Abbey. (fn. 49) He
reserved to himself the homage and service of his
tenant of Mixbury, but acquitted the abbey of the
service due to the king. (fn. 50) The grant was confirmed
by King John in 1214, and by Thomas's successors
as lords of the honor of St. Valery, Robert de Dreux
and Richard, Earl of Cornwall, about 1225 and 1230
respectively. (fn. 51) In 1243 Oseney was said to hold
1½ knight's fee in Mixbury, but in 1292 Edmund of
Cornwall agreed that in future he and his successors
would claim only the service pertaining to ½
knight's fee—which was all the abbot recognized—
for Mixbury and Newton Purcell. (fn. 52) The overlordship continued to follow the descent of the honor of
St. Valery which was eventually merged in the
Duchy of Cornwall. (fn. 53)
Roger d'Ivry held the whole of Mixbury in his
own hands in 1086, (fn. 54) but in the 13th century part of
it was held under the St. Valerys by the Darreyns
family, and by 1220 was called 'Muxeberi Aregnes'. (fn. 55)
The first of the family, which took its name from
Airaines (Somme), (fn. 56) known to be associated with
Oxfordshire was Miles Darreyns, who was pardoned
the payment of 10s. danegeld in the county in 1130. (fn. 57)
About 1211 Bernard Darreyns held ½ knight's fee
of Thomas de St. Valery in Oxfordshire, (fn. 58) and this
must certainly have been in Mixbury, where he was
Thomas's tenant in 1213. (fn. 59) By the end of the 12th
century Bernard had acquired a considerable holding in Northumberland, (fn. 60) and c. 1240 his son Guy,
who had succeeded him c. 1225, (fn. 61) gave Oseney
Abbey all his land in Mixbury, i.e. 6 virgates, all
held in villeinage, and the service of 4 virgates held
freely. (fn. 62) The remaining knight's fee (fn. 63) in Mixbury
does not appear to have been subinfeudated, and
the existence of Beaumont castle, and the reference
in the Oseney Cartulary to land held by the men
of the castle bailiff, argue that the D'Ivrys and
St. Valerys occasionally lived there. (fn. 64) The fact that
Mixbury was a far more valuable estate than Beckley
lends force to the suggestion that Mixbury and not
Beckley may originally have been the caput of the
honor. (fn. 65) Part of the estate acquired by Oseney in
1213 was held by free tenants. Between 1218 and
1270 the abbey gradually obtained their holdings, a
virgate from William Jordan in 1218, a virgate from
Alice of Mixbury in 1225, which in 1236 was confirmed to the abbey after a dispute, and other smaller
grants. (fn. 66) By 1279 the whole manor, save 3 carucates
of demesne, was held in villeinage under the abbey. (fn. 67)
Oseney continued to hold the manor until its dissolution in 1539. (fn. 68)
The adjoining manor of FULWELL ('Fulewelle')
was held in chief in 1086 by Robert d'Oilly as 3½
hides. (fn. 69) The overlordship followed the same descent
as that of Bucknell (fn. 70) and many other manors of the
honor of Hooknorton, passing in the 13th century
from the D'Oillys to the De Newburghs, and from
them to the De Plescys. Robert d'Oilly's tenant in
1086 was Gilbert Damory, (fn. 71) ancestor of the Damorys
of Bucknell who were recognized as mesne lords of
Fulwell until at least the end of the 13th century. (fn. 72)
In 1205 Adelelm of Fulwell, tenant of the manor
under Robert Damory, granted it for £40 down and
a rent of £2 a year to Oseney Abbey. The grant was
confirmed by Robert, by Adelelm's son and heir
John, his daughters Agnes and Melior, who were
each to receive £1 of the farm, and by their husbands
Walter Buti and Adam of Balscot. (fn. 73) Oseney became
responsible for the forinsec service attached to
1 knight's fee, but c. 1250 Walter Buti of Devon,
grandson of Agnes, and Adam of Balscot, son of
Melior, quitclaimed the £2 farm to the abbey. (fn. 74) In
the course of the 13th century Oseney acquired the
free holdings in the manor (fn. 75) so that by 1279 there
was none left. (fn. 76) The abbey held the manor until the
Dissolution. (fn. 77)
In 1539 the tenant of the Oseney estates at
Fulwell was Sir John Wellesborne, a gentleman of
the Privy Chamber, whose mother was a Poure of
Bletchingdon. (fn. 78) In 1532 Thomas Cromwell had
requested the grant of the farm of Mixbury for
Wellesborne, and in 1537 the latter, knowing that
the Abbot of Oseney was dying, suggested to
Cromwell that a new abbot might be persuaded to
give Mixbury and Fulwell to the king, who could
then reward Wellesborne with them. (fn. 79) In 1541
Wellesborne obtained his desire, a grant in fee of
both Mixbury and Fulwell manors. (fn. 80) In 1543 he
obtained further lands there by purchase. (fn. 81) Wellesborne died and was buried at Mixbury in 1548, (fn. 82) his
widow Elizabeth receiving both manors for life, with
reversion to his son John, then aged two, or his
younger son Edward. (fn. 83) Elizabeth married as her
second husband Edward Chamberlayne of Astley
(Warws.), who died in 1557. In 1566 she granted to
Arthur Wellesborne, her first husband's natural son,
an annuity of £2 from her manors of Mixbury and
Fulwell. (fn. 84) She subsequently married a third husband,
Richard Hussey of Coventry (d. 1574). (fn. 85) In 1565
Mixbury and Fulwell had been included in the
marriage settlement of the young John Wellesborne
and Ann Greenway, step-daughter of Michael Harcourt of Leckhampstead (Bucks.), and in 1593, by
which date his mother must have been dead, he
settled both manors on himself and his wife for life,
then on his only child Elizabeth and her husband
John Sill, and finally upon their son Wellesborne Sill
and his heirs male. (fn. 86) Ann Wellesborne died in 1606
and John Wellesborne in 1611, predeceased by John
Sill, whose widow married Edward Mole in 1608. In
1632 the manors were settled on Wellesborne Sill and
his wife Philippa: he died in 1634 and she survived
until 1656. (fn. 87) Their son Wellesborne continued to
live at Fulwell, but left no son although he married
twice. All traces of the Sill family disappear from
the records of Mixbury after his death in 1707. (fn. 88)
By 1718 the manors had passed into the possession
of Benjamin Bathurst, son of Sir Benjamin Bathurst
of Paulerspury (Northants) and brother of Allen,
1st Lord Bathurst. (fn. 89) Not long before his death in
1767 he sold his estates to Stanlake Batson of
Horseheath (Cambs.). (fn. 90) Batson was succeeded by
his son of the same name, who in 1823 sold a large
part of the estate to John Harrison of Shelswell.
The second Stanlake Batson was followed by his
son Stanlake Ricketts Batson (d. 1871) and his
grandson Stanlake Henry Batson, (fn. 91) who mortgaged
the estate to Charles Edward Kayler. Between 1894
and 1903 Kayler foreclosed. (fn. 92) In 1935 Mrs. John
Aldworth was lady of the manor. (fn. 93)
Of the 17 hides of Mixbury in Domesday Book,
2½ seem to have later formed part of Newton Purcell
manor; (fn. 94) Oseney Abbey's manor of Mixbury was
rated at 10 hides in 1255, (fn. 95) and the remainder formed
WILLASTON manor in Mixbury parish. Like Mixbury manor it belonged to the honor of St. Valery,
but it was not included in Thomas de St. Valery's
gift to Oseney in 1213 and passed on his death in
1219 to Robert, Count of Dreux, and in 1227 to
Richard of Cornwall with the rest of the honor. (fn. 96)
Richard held Willaston in demesne as ½ knight's fee
and had the view of frankpledge there, but when his
successor Edmund founded Rewley Abbey c. 1281
he endowed it with the manor. (fn. 97) In 1303 Edmund's
widow Margaret unsuccessfully claimed a third of
Willaston in dower. (fn. 98) Rewley Abbey held the manor
until its dissolution in 1536, and in the closing years
of its ownership let it at farm to the Arden family of
Cottisford. (fn. 99) The manor was granted by Henry VIII
to Thomas Pope in 1537, but the Ardens continued
as tenants until at least c. 1590. (fn. 100) Little is known of its
subsequent history, but it seems to have descended
in the Pope family, no doubt following the same
descent as Ardley until 1655 when Thomas Pope,
Earl of Downe, conveyed it to Ambrose Holbech. (fn. 101)
By 1698 Willaston was held by Sir John Holman,
Bt., of Banbury and Weston Favell (Northants), and
on his death in 1700 descended to his nephew
William Holman of Warkworth (Northants). (fn. 102) After
his death in 1740 it was held by his widow Mary (d.
1744). (fn. 103) The lands of the manor continued to be held
separately until about 1815, when they were sold to
John Harrison of Shelswell, who soon afterwards
bought Mixbury manor. (fn. 104)
Economic and Social History.
The
place-names Mixbury, Fulwell, and Willaston indicate that all were Anglo-Saxon settlements. Willaston was the tūn of Wiglaf, while the other two are
derived from mixen-burgh and fūl-welle or ful-welle.
It may be that the 'foul stream' of the latter was the
result of the 'dunghill' of the former, or Fulwell may
have been named after the spring which still wells
strongly up on the site of the deserted village. (fn. 105)
At Mixbury in 1086 there was land for 15 ploughs:
on the demesne were 1 plough and 1 serf, while
18 villeins (villani) and 11 bordars had 6 ploughs.
There were 50 acres of pasture, and 2 mills rendering 9s. 4d. The value of the estate, £15, was the same
as at the Conquest. (fn. 106) There was evidently far more
land available than was under cultivation, although
Mixbury was a comparatively large community, and
it was no doubt the existence of extra land which
prompted the post-Conquest settlement of Newton
Purcell. (fn. 107)
Willaston, although not mentioned by name in
the survey, was apparently included in the account
of Mixbury, being the site of one of the two mills,
for there were never more than two in the parish. (fn. 108) In
1086 Fulwell was a separate manor and already
almost certainly a separate parish with a church of
its own. (fn. 109) There was land for 3 ploughs there, but
there were only 2 in use, there being 1 plough and
1 serf on the demesne, while 3 villeins (nativi) and
2 bordars had another plough. There was a mill
worth 10s. and 20 acres of pasture. Since 1066 the
value of the estate had dropped steeply from £6 to
£3. (fn. 110) Although its economic value was greatly increased after it came into the possession of Oseney
Abbey in 1205, the decline of Fulwell village may
well have been accelerated. (fn. 111)
The abbey added the neighbouring manor of
Mixbury to its estate in 1213 (fn. 112) and in about 1240 also
obtained the part of Mixbury consisting of 6 virgates
of villeinage and 4 free virgates which had been infeudated to the Darreyns family. (fn. 113) Thus of the land
of the two parishes only Willaston manor remained
outside Oseney's control.
The history of Oseney's estate is not well documented, but what evidence there is all points to an
emphasis on sheep farming in Fulwell in the 13th
century and to the gradual conversion of most of the
hamlet's fields into a sheep farm by the end of the
century. The abbey increased its demesne between
1205 and 1230 by the addition of 3 virgates in
Fulwell's fields from three freeholders, (fn. 114) and in the
second half of the century it acquired another acre (fn. 115)
and obtained the meadow of 'Winstonelake' in the
neighbouring parish of Westbury. (fn. 116) The hamlet was
still in existence in the 1230's, for when Oseney
appropriated Fulwell church it undertook to provide
a suitable secular chaplain, and there were arable
fields in the parish in the 1270's. (fn. 117) But in 1279 only
the abbey's grange was recorded under Fulwell, and
seven cottars (four of them women) holding lands of
the 'fee' of Fulwell are listed under Mixbury: six
held 2 acres and one an acre, mostly for rents of
2s. (fn. 118) It may be that Fulwell's remaining inhabitants
had been transferred to Mixbury by the abbey and
that the abbey's demesne arable was cultivated by
labourers resident at the grange.
Though Mixbury was predominantly an arable
estate, the abbey kept a fair-sized flock there too.
As early as 1216 there is evidence showing that
Oseney had its separate pasture in Mixbury and
a flock of at least 300 sheep. (fn. 119) Later the pasture
appears not to have been fully stocked, for after a
tithe dispute in 1251 the rector was allowed to
pasture 150 sheep and 8 cattle there. (fn. 120) The account
of 1279 reveals a flourishing community: Oseney
had 3 carucates and a water-mill in demesne; 37
villeins held a virgate apiece, worked, were tallaged
at their lord's will, and had to pay a fine when their
sons left the manor (redimere pueros). Eight of them
had also to contribute to the abbot's scutage when it
was demanded; of eleven cottars ten held 6 acres
each for works and 2s. rent, and the eleventh held
1 acre for 1s. Thus Mixbury had a total of 55 tenants,
including the Fulwell tenants.
On the Willaston manor at this date the Earl of
Cornwall had in demesne only a water-mill (apparently one of the two Mixbury mills recorded in
Domesday) worth £1 4s., and a meadow worth £2
a year. There were 16 villeins holding virgates for
5s. a virgate and 2 holding half-virgates for 3s. each
a year, while 1 cottar paid 1s. (fn. 121)
The decline of Fulwell in the 13th century is confirmed by early 14th-century tax lists. For purposes
of taxation it was merged with Mixbury, and
Willaston, which belonged to Rewley Abbey, was
assessed separately. Willaston's lands, rents, mill,
view of frankpledge, and court were valued in 1291
at £8 17s. 10d. (fn. 122) For the tax of 1306 there were
32 contributors in Mixbury and Fulwell, and 27 in
1316 and 1327, but it is significant that the grange
of Fulwell, which had become the headquarters of
one of Oseney's bailiwicks, accounted for nearly
half the total assessment in 1306. Willaston had at
least 16 contributors in 1306, 13 in 1316, and 10 in
1327. (fn. 123) At the reassessment of 1344 Mixbury's contribution was fixed at £1 13s. 8d. and Willaston's
at 15s. 10d. Both figures, unlike those of other
villages in the hundred, are remarkably smaller than
the assessments for 1327. (fn. 124)
Both Mixbury and Willaston hamlets seem to have
survived the Black Death without serious depopulation, for in 1377 Mixbury had a population of at least
80 and Willaston of 32 adults. (fn. 125) There is no record of
Fulwell among the poll-tax returns nor is it listed in
1428 among the hamlets with under ten inhabitants.
The reason no doubt was that it had long ceased to
be regarded officially as a hamlet or a separate parish,
and in 1435 only one man and his family were living
in the parish. (fn. 126)
When Oseney's Fulwell estate is next recorded in
1510 its water-mill was being leased separately for
£1 10s. and the manor was being leased for £6 13s. 4d.
a year to William Councer, who was keeping in addition 400 sheep for the abbey. (fn. 127) He was among the
inclosers proceeded against in 1517, when he was
accused of having hedged 30 acres and converted
them to pasture. (fn. 128) By 1535 the rent of the manor had
been raised to £10 15s., and in the opinion of the
lessee John Wellesborne the estate was worth more
than £20 a year. (fn. 129) It is clear that his main interest
was sheep, for the reason he put forward when
negotiating for a grant of Mixbury manor was that he
wanted more pasture and water for his flocks. (fn. 130) Mixbury was bringing into the abbey £22 8s. 4d. a year,
£14 1s. 8d. of this sum being from the rents of customary tenants. (fn. 131) Wellesborne eventually acquired
the freehold of both Fulwell with its water-mill and
Mixbury with its warren, (fn. 132) and at his death in 1548
Fulwell was worth £10 15s. a year clear, and Mixbury £21 15s. 4d. (fn. 133)
For the subsidy of 1523 Mixbury, including
Fulwell and Willaston, paid £2 6s. There were 27
contributors, of which Thomas Yardley, who was
probably Oseney's lessee, with his payment of £1,
was far the largest. Fifteen paid between 1s. and
3s., and twelve the lowest contribution of 4d. (fn. 134)
Willaston, a much larger estate than Fulwell,
was being leased from Rewley Abbey in the early
16th century by John Arden, perhaps a son of John
Arden of Cottisford, for £10 a year. (fn. 135) It is likely
that he almost depopulated the village at a stroke by
his inclosure in 1502 of 200 field acres of arable.
They were converted to pasture; 7 ploughs were
put down and 42 people evicted'et otiosi lacrimose ab
inde recesserunt'. (fn. 136) Nevertheless, there were still a
few inhabitants in Willaston in the 17th century. (fn. 137) Six
were recorded in the Overseers' Book in 1666, three
of them Wellicombs, a yeoman family of standing. (fn. 138)
By 1658 the Grantham family were lessees of the
manor: they held 280, 62, and 12 acres respectively
and paid a total rent of £235. Part of the land at this
time was used for pasture and stocked with sheep
and cattle, and part was sown with barley, oats, rye,
and peas. (fn. 139) Wheat, the growing of which had been
encouraged by the rector Thomas Russ (1667–86),
was grown soon after, (fn. 140) and possibly sainfoin. It is
uncertain when the latter crop was first introduced
into the parish, but it must have been well established
by 1740, when the Mixbury field-name Sainfoin
Corner occurs. (fn. 141)
It is probable that Willaston's land was all inclosed by the time the Granthams were tenants.
Field names show that besides the Cow Common
and a number of closes there were an Upper Mill
Field, a Nether Mill Field, and three or four other
'fields'. (fn. 142) Certainly by the early 18th century Willaston was almost all one large farm, which was
rented for £200 a year. In 1698 the fine for a 21-year
lease was £150 and in 1728 £630 for a 40-year lease. (fn. 143)
When the property was bought by John Harrison in
the early 19th century the remaining derelict cottages
were pulled down. (fn. 144)
In 1699 the hamlet or 'inship' as it was called had
been rated at 55 yardlands out of the 195¼ at which
the whole parish was rated. Fulwell was rated at
36¼ yardlands, Monk's House at 1 yardland, Mixbury rectory at 20, the town at 51, and the lord of
the manor at 32 yardlands. He was assessed on his
warren, fishpond, North Heath, and castle, i.e. on
the field in which the castle had once stood. (fn. 145) In
1700 a Quarter Sessions case shows that Thomas
Grantham of Willaston complained that he had
been overtaxed in comparison with the inhabitants
of Mixbury, who were rated at £2 a yardland instead
of at £4, the true value of their estates. (fn. 146)
At this time Mixbury had three open fields,
Sandfield, West Field, and Middle Field. A glebe
terrier of 1662 shows that the rector's acres were
still divided into acre and ½-acre strips, which were
said to be 'marked with the parsonage mark, which
is a picked baulk betwixt the lands at each acres'. (fn. 147)
In the early 18th century, when the glebe consisted
of 65 field acres, they were divided between the three
fields in the proportion of 26, 25½, and 9, (fn. 148) a distribution which suggests that there had been originally
two fields. There were extensive common lands.
Race Hill and the 'hill towards Cottisford' are
mentioned in the 16th century, when it was complained that the poor of Evenley (Northants) were
encroaching there. (fn. 149) At that time, and probably
until the inclosure, there were still lot leys, and
every landholder, including the rector, had an allotment of grass and thorns there according to his
number of yardlands. (fn. 150)
A valuable part of the manor was the rabbit
warren. The Abbot of Oseney had been granted free
warren at Mixbury in 1268, (fn. 151) and in 1279 the
'warren' was recorded under the heading of the
abbey's grange in Fulwell, but the Mixbury rabbit
warren was certainly meant. (fn. 152) In 1535 it was being
farmed for £8 a year, and it was probably the first
large inclosure in the township. (fn. 153) The profits to be
derived from rabbits may be judged from the complaint of 1662 that all the burrows on Sweetingtree
Hill were an encroachment, there being no ancient
burrow there but ploughed land belonging to the
landholders of Mixbury and 'known and distinguished by acre and ley'. (fn. 154)
Inclosure of the open fields did not come until
1730. There were then only two proprietors in Mixbury and Fulwell, Benjamin Bathurst, the lord of
the manor, and the rector, and these alone had rights
of common. Agreement between the two was easily
reached, and open fields, leys, Mixbury Meadow, and
Warren, about 2,400 acres in all, were inclosed by
private act in 1730. (fn. 155) Lands were exchanged to make
a compact glebe for the rector, and Bathurst undertook to build a wall between the glebe and that part
of the ancient warren which he proposed to stock
with rabbits.
One immediate effect of inclosure was to double
the rents. The estate had been rented for £321, but
after inclosure, when it was slightly increased in
size, it was proposed to raise the rents to £700 and
after nine years to £900. (fn. 156) Another consequence was
a decrease in the number of tenants and a probable
increase in the size of farms: at the time of inclosure
the manor had twenty tenants but by 1786 there
were only five. (fn. 157) The only evidence found for the
size of Mixbury farms before inclosure is a reference
in 1703 to a small farm of 2 virgates. (fn. 158) In 1832 there
were two large farms, which were rented for over
£200, four of which were rented for between £90
and £160, and two smaller properties. (fn. 159) The usual
tendency for farms to increase in size after this date
occurred here. In the 1850's there were five farmers
in the parish and though there were six farms in
1939 all were over 150 acres. (fn. 160) By 1956 there were
13 farms. Out of a total of 1,592 acres of cultivated
land, 811 were grassland and 781 arable. (fn. 161)
Farming has remained the main occupation of
the villagers. In about 1823 61 families were engaged
in agriculture, compared with 12 engaged in trade
and crafts. (fn. 162) In the 1850's the village had a blacksmith, a baker, two shopkeepers, and a carrier. (fn. 163)
As late as 1903 there were a blacksmith and a shopkeeper, but by 1939 the only tradesman left was
a shopkeeper. (fn. 164)
Mixbury had the usual parish officers. Some record of the 17th-century churchwardens and overseers of the poor, who presented their accounts
on Rogation Monday, and of the way-ward and
cowkeeper, chosen by the 'concert of the neighbourhood', have been preserved in extracts made by
Blomfield. (fn. 165) He also quotes from constables' accounts,
now lost. (fn. 166) Overseers' accounts for 1732 to 1755 have
survived; the annual expenditure varied between
£11 6s. and £34 7s. until the year 1754–5, when
there was a sharp increase to £52 15s. The overseers
were the leading farmers: John Westcar, tenant of
Willaston, for example, or Thomas Wellicomb. (fn. 167) By
1776 the annual expenditure exceeded £73; from
1783 to 1785 there was an average of over £141 and
in 1803 over £500. The poor rate of 8s. in the pound
was then the highest in the hundred. (fn. 168) The parish
continued poor and neglected and in 1854 the
children were still leaving school at eight or nine
years of age to work in the fields or to make lace. (fn. 169)
Bishop Wilberforce in 1855 noted the poverty and
the poor condition of the cottages, for which he
blamed the old and non-resident squire. (fn. 170) The rector,
W. J. Palmer, also complained that although the
squire owned the whole village and half the parish
he never did anything for it. Palmer could only
remedy the effects of the landlord's neglect and the
continued agricultural depression by encouraging
emigration. (fn. 171)
As elsewhere in the hundred population increased
in the second half of the 18th century. In 1665
21 houses were listed for the hearth tax, and they did
not include those worth less than 20s. of which there
may have been several, and in 1676 the number of
adults over sixteen was 106. In 1738 the incumbent
described Mixbury as a small village with about 40
houses. (fn. 172) By 1759 this number had risen to 43 and
in 1768 to about 60, almost certainly an exaggeration, as in 1771 only 40 were returned and in 1781
50 houses. (fn. 173) Official returns for 1801 and 1811 gave
population figures of 304 and 336. (fn. 174) The greatest
number of baptisms in the century was in the decade
1840 to 1849, and in 1851 the population reached
the peak of 402. Thereafter, owing to the agricultural
depression, it declined to 221 in 1901 and to the
further low figure of 184 in 1951. (fn. 175)
Church.
As in other cases in the hundred, parish
and township were not coterminous at Mixbury.
The parish included Mixbury, Willaston, and after
1435 Fulwell, and a fraction of the township of
Newton Purcell. Although Willaston had its own
chapel, it was always dependent on Mixbury. (fn. 176) The
inclusion of some of Newton Purcell probably dated
from the early Middle Ages, when Mixbury manor
included land in Newton Purcell, (fn. 177) and the arrangement survived into the post-Reformation period. In
1582 two houses in Newton, one with a close and
3 acres in the fields of Newton, belonged to Mixbury
parish. One paid all tithes to Mixbury, the other paid
a third of its tithes to Mixbury and the rest to
Newton. (fn. 178) The inhabitants of these houses went
to church at Newton but paid church dues to
Mixbury, where they went four times a year for
Communion. (fn. 179)
In the early Middle Ages Fulwell was a separate
parish. In 1074 Robert d'Oilly, the lord of Fulwell,
granted two-thirds of the demesne tithes to the
church of St. George in Oxford castle. (fn. 180) In 1149
these passed to Oseney Abbey (see below). Oseney
was given the advowson of Fulwell with the manor
in 1205 by Adelelm of Fulwell. (fn. 181) Shortly after 1235
the church was appropriated to the abbey on condition that 26s. 8d. was distributed annually to poor
scholars at Oxford, a condition which was still being
fulfilled in 1535. (fn. 182) The appropriation was confirmed
in 1319/20. (fn. 183)
Fulwell church was valued at 10s. in 1254, (fn. 184) but is
not mentioned in later valuations. In 1435, when
Fulwell's independent parochial status ended, the
church was said to be worth 40s., less the 26s. 8d. due
to the Oxford scholars. In that year the bishop confirmed an arrangement between James Job, the
Rector of Mixbury, and Oseney Abbey whereby, in
return for certain concessions (see below), the rector
agreed to minister to the spiritual needs of Fulwell's
single parishioner and his household, instead of the
chaplain whom Oseney had formerly maintained
there. (fn. 185) The rector was to receive in Mixbury church
for services and sacraments all who stayed within the
parish of Fulwell's church of St. Michael the Archangel. He was to give them penance, extreme
unction, and other necessary sacraments. If any
person was too ill to attend Mixbury church the
rector was to administer the appropriate sacrament
at Fulwell, except for burial, purification of women,
and baptism of children. He and his successors were
to say mass in the church of Fulwell every year on
the feast of St. Michael as long as there were sacred
vestments and books there. The inhabitants and
those staying in Fulwell, like the parishioners of
Mixbury, were to give the rector their personal
tithes at Easter and mortuaries when they fell due. If
they failed to do so the abbey was to see to the payment under penalty of 20s. A like sum was to be paid
to the abbey by the rector if he neglected to administer the sacraments. (fn. 186)
During the 13th century the ownership of the
tithes of Fulwell was disputed between Oseney and
successive rectors of Mixbury. The first dispute was
settled in 1216, and in 1251 the tithes of sheaves in
Fullewelheth formed one of the subjects of a composition between Oseney and John de Exeter. (fn. 187) In 1263
the abbey's right to receive these tithes was reaffirmed after further dissension. (fn. 188) One of two undated bulls of Nicholas V (1447–55), apparently
confirmations of the 1435 agreement, included the
Fulwell tithes amongst those granted by Oseney to
the Mixbury rectors, but the other specifically reserved to the abbey all the greater and lesser tithes
of Fullewelheth, except a few personal ones. (fn. 189) Oseney
certainly retained them, for in the 16th century they
were farmed out with the manor. (fn. 190) After the abbey's
dissolution they were granted in 1541 to Sir John
Wellesborne. (fn. 191) The rector received a modus of
£1 12s. (fn. 192)
The earliest evidence for the existence of the
church at Mixbury dates from the grant of its tithes
in 1074 (see below). Willaston's were granted at the
same time and it may already have had its own
chapel, although it is possible that its tithes still
formed part of the endowment of the mother church.
A chapel there was first specifically recorded in a
charter of 1151 confirming a grant in about 1123 of
Mixbury advowson. (fn. 193) The chapel always remained
dependent on Mixbury and was still being used,
at least for christenings and burials, as late as
1645. (fn. 194)
In the late 11th and early 12th centuries the advowson of Mixbury was probably held by the
D'Ivrys, but after the death of Roger d'Ivry in
about 1120 or possibly earlier it must have passed
to the justiciar Ralph Basset. (fn. 195) In or soon after 1123
Basset gave to a clerical son all his advowsons.
These, including the advowson of Mixbury and its
chapel of Willaston, were granted by the latter to
Oseney Abbey perhaps on its foundation in 1149,
and were confirmed to the abbey in 1151 by Archbishop Theobald. (fn. 196) In the confusion of Stephen's
reign the abbey perhaps lost the advowson, for by
1213 it was in the hands of Thomas de St. Valery,
the lord of the manor. When he granted Mixbury
to Oseney in that year he reserved the advowson to
himself and his heirs. (fn. 197) Confirmations by Robert,
Count of Dreux, in 1225, and Richard, Earl of
Cornwall, in 1230, made the same reservation. (fn. 198) But
between 1274 and 1277 Edmund, Earl of Cornwall,
gave the advowson to Walter de Merton, Bishop of
Rochester, and his successors, in part exchange for
the advowson of St. Buryan (Cornwall). (fn. 199) Nevertheless, in 1334 John of Eltham, Earl of Cornwall,
unsuccessfully attempted to claim it from Bishop
Hamo Hethe as belonging by right to his honor of
St. Valery. (fn. 200) Oseney Abbey also tried at this period to
secure the advowson. In 1352 and 1354 Edward III
granted it licences to exchange the advowsons of
Bucknell and Swerford for that of Mixbury. (fn. 201) Nothing
came of this, and a further attempt to exchange (the
advowson of Cornwell being substituted for that of
Swerford) was made in 1396, the year in which
Oseney was given permission to appropriate the
church. (fn. 202) The exchange did not materialize, even
though Bishop Bottlesham of Rochester was apparently willing and obtained a similar licence. (fn. 203)
The advowson remained in the possession of the
bishops of Rochester, the Crown presenting during
vacancies of the see, until 1852, when it was transferred to the Bishop of Oxford. (fn. 204) Since the union of
the benefices of Finmere and Mixbury in 1931, the
bishop has presented for one turn and the Misses
Ashwell for three turns. (fn. 205)
Mixbury rectory was valued at £8 in 1254. (fn. 206) In
1291 its net value, which included the glebe worth
13s. 4d., was £10 13s. 4d. (fn. 207) It had risen to £15 9s. 4d.
by 1535. (fn. 208)
The church's endowment consisted of tithes from
Mixbury, Willaston, and a portion of Newton
Purcell, together with the income from its glebe
land. (fn. 209) The rectors' claim to the tithes of Fulwell
was abandoned finally in 1435 (see above). In 1074
Roger d'Ivry granted two-thirds of the demesne
tithes of Mixbury and Willaston to the church of St.
George in Oxford castle: in 1149 they passed, with
the rest of that church's property, to Oseney Abbey. (fn. 210)
During the 13th century there were several disputes
between the rectors of Mixbury and the abbey about
the tithes of Mixbury. The first, under eight headings, was settled in 1216. (fn. 211) In 1251 it was decided
that Oseney among other things was to have twothirds of the tithes of sheaves in the Earl of Cornwall's
demesne in Willaston hamlet and the abbey's own
demesne in Mixbury, and a tithe of the water-mill at
Mixbury. The abbey was to pay the rector a pension
of £2 a year and to allow him pasture for 150 sheep
and 8 beasts in its special pasture, in addition to his
rights in the common pasture. This arrangement was
reaffirmed in 1263 after another dispute with a later
rector. (fn. 212) There was further dissension in 1311 when
some of the beasts of John, the parson of Mixbury,
were said to have been taken and unjustly detained
by the abbey. (fn. 213) Clearly the arrangement was unsatisfactory, and in 1435 a new agreement was concluded. (fn. 214) In future the Rector of Mixbury was to be
responsible for the cure of souls in Fulwell (see
above). He surrendered his pension of £2 (fn. 215) and all
rights of pasture outside the parish. In return the
abbey conceded certain tithes to him and his successors. The confirmatory bulls of Nicholas V
appear to be contradictory (see above), or they may
refer to two distinct agreements. One of them confirmed the rectors' right to all tithes from lands
within the parish of Mixbury, except those of Fulwell. The other acknowledged their right to the
tithes of Fullewelheth alias le Breche, of Brondlond,
and to two-thirds of those of Castellond and Willaston, though with reservation to the abbey of certain
lesser tithes. (fn. 216) Despite this settlement, there were
further tithe disputes in the 16th century. (fn. 217)
After the Reformation, as was often the case elsewhere, the payment of tithes caused continual
trouble. The commutation of the tithes of Willaston
for a modus of £4 is first recorded in the time of
Ralph Pontisbury (rector 1521–59). (fn. 218) Lessees of the
rectory later in the century testified that they received almost all the tithes of Willaston in kind, but
William Rickard (rector 1587–99) again accepted
the £4 modus from John Arden, the influential
tenant of Willaston, in the hope that he would be
'better unto him, but found him otherwise'. (fn. 219)
Rickard was unsuccessful in his attempt to break the
modus, which with rising prices had become very
prejudicial to the rector, but Thomas Walker (rector
1630–8), who was also Rector of Somerton and no
doubt a richer man, after repeated legal action recovered the right to tithe in kind worth £24. (fn. 220) During the Civil War the modus was reimposed, (fn. 221) and
the efforts of Timothy Hart in 1658 and 1659 to
recover tithes in kind were unavailing, the inhabitants denying that such tithes had ever been paid. (fn. 222)
In 1664 he made an arrangement with his parishioners by which every Good Friday 2s. should be
paid for a tithe lamb, 1d. for the tithe milk of a new
milch cow, and 9d. for that of an old milch cow. In
lieu of the tithes of Mixbury Warren, the rector
received 30 couple of rabbits yearly. (fn. 223) Later these
tithes were leased, and at the inclosure in 1730 were
commuted for £105. (fn. 224) At the same time the scattered
glebe (65 field acres), which consisted of 2 yardlands in 1662, was exchanged for a holding of 49
acres. (fn. 225) In 1730 it included Parsonage Meadow by
the river and Parsonage Quarry, which were exchanged in 1825 for Home Piece and Slade Piece. (fn. 226)
Throughout the 19th century the rent of the
glebe, £105 for Mixbury's tithes, and the two small
moduses for Willaston and Fulwell, made up the
endowment of the rectory. In 1831 it was valued at
£180, making it one of the poorer rectories in the
deanery. (fn. 227) In 1955 there were 8 acres of glebe. (fn. 228)
Being a moderately rich church, Mixbury had
some medieval rectors of good standing. Master
William de San Maxentio in the early 13th century
was a university graduate and a canon of Lincoln. (fn. 229)
He had a chaplain in Mixbury, who among other
things collected his tithes. (fn. 230) Another clerk of his
gave a virgate of land to Oseney Abbey, and was
buried there. (fn. 231) At that time there was a married
clerk (clericus conjugatus), Thomas de Mixbury,
living in the parish. He was a member of a prosperous local family, for he held 2 virgates of land,
and his sister held another as her dowry. (fn. 232) Of later
medieval rectors, it can be said that one 14thcentury rector was responsible for alterations to the
chancel, that from 1425 the living was usually held by
university graduates, and that in 1535 James Arden,
a member of a local family of gentry, was rector. (fn. 233)
The tithe dispute of 1216 between the rector and
Oseney tells something of the early church customs
of the parish. The canons complained that when a
married man died leaving two beasts the rector took
one; when a widow or unmarried person died, he
took the best beast. The rector replied that this was
the custom in the archdeaconry, and he seems to have
won his point. (fn. 234)
Mixbury was fortunate in the 17th and 18th
centuries in having mostly resident rectors, which
partly made up for the disadvantage of absentee
landlords in the second half of the 18th century.
The first who calls for remark is Timothy Hart
(1656–66). He was presented by the parliamentary
government and, in spite of the fact that he conformed in 1662 and obtained a royal presentation,
he remained, together with his brother, Theophilus
Hart, Rector of Wappenham (Northants), an object
of suspicion to Charles II's government. (fn. 235) Hart
took a great interest in his rectory and parish, and
was a diligent recorder of parochial matters. Among
other things, he kept a list of communicants: from
1657 to 1662 they varied between 38 and 65 in
number, but there were usually 45 at least. (fn. 236) He
was, as his monumental inscription in the church
stated, a 'godly, faithful and vigilant rector'.
Various 17th-century church customs are recorded
in the parish records. The old churchwardens presented their accounts, and the new ones were chosen,
on the Monday of Rogation week; it was agreed in
1695 that the parish clerk was to receive 10s. from
the churchwardens at Easter, in addition to 4d. from
every house in Mixbury and 2s. from Fulwell and
Willaston; (fn. 237) for every parishioner who died worth
£30 or more a mortuary of 10s. was paid to the rector,
who also received 2d. at Easter from every family. (fn. 238)
At that time the church possessed lands assigned
to its maintenance. These were carefully recorded
by Hart in 1662, when £1 of the income from them
was being used to augment the parish clerk's wages. (fn. 239)
It was the custom to let the land from year to year
to the highest bidder, the rent being received by
the churchwardens. After the inclosure Benjamin
Bathurst, as lord of the manor, took over these lands
at an annual rent of £3. (fn. 240) In 1751 he stopped paying,
and in spite of various attempts to induce payment,
Bathurst and his widow remained obdurate. The
matter was allowed to drop and the lands were lost
to the church. (fn. 241)
Among 18th-century rectors may be mentioned
Lawrence Broderick (rector 1713–43), an active magistrate in the county, whose daughter married Benjamin Bathurst; (fn. 242) and James Johnson (rector 1744–
59), who became Bishop of Worcester. (fn. 243)
The benefit of a resident rector was demonstrated
in this period by the greater frequency and regularity
with which services were held than in some of the
neighbouring parishes. In 1738 there were two
services and a sermon every Sunday; Communion
was celebrated three times a year, and there were
about 30 communicants; the children were catechized. (fn. 244) Much the same state of affairs prevailed
during the long incumbency of Just Alt (1759–1801),
except that he also conducted services on the great
feast and fast days. (fn. 245) He has been described as 'a
proud, imperious priest', and was also a magistrate. (fn. 246)
The number of communicants tended to drop (in
1781 the average number was fifteen), and in 1784
Alt reported that there were 'too many who are
chiefly absent' from church. (fn. 247) With the advent of
W. J. Palmer (rector 1802–51), also Rector of Finmere, who rebuilt the Rectory, built the school, and
restored the church, church life began to improve.
Already in 1808 there was a celebration on the first
Sunday of every month as well as on the three chief
festivals, though in 1831 the number of communicants at each celebration was still very small and
only about two-sevenths of the population attended
church. (fn. 248)
The church of ALL SAINTS is a stone structure
comprising a nave, chancel, north aisle, western
tower, and south porch. (fn. 249)
The building dates from the 12th century, but the
only Romanesque feature left is the south door.
Repairs in 1842 to 'one of the chancel windows'
revealed the head of a circular window carved with
chevrons after the style of the south doorway. (fn. 250)
There was considerable rebuilding in the early
14th century. New windows were inserted in the
north, east, and south walls of the chancel. The
east window of three lights with Geometrical tracery
is a good example of the period, and was once
decorated with medieval coats of arms in stained
glass, which were noted by Rawlinson in about
1718. (fn. 251) In addition, a tower of three stages, with a
battlemented parapet and gargoyles, and having a
west doorway, was erected and remains unaltered;
an arcade of three arches supported on octagonal
pillars and an aisle were built on the north side
of the nave; windows were inserted in the south wall
of the nave. (fn. 252) The north wall of the aisle was decorated with a wall painting. (fn. 253) A clerestory, lighted
by three two-light windows on either side, was
added. (fn. 254)
In the 17th century many changes were made to
the fabric. In 1630 a storm blew in one of the windows, and in the next few years repairs were executed
for which a special rate was levied. (fn. 255) In 1662 another
storm did further damage. (fn. 256) At some time during
the century the south wall of the chancel was rebuilt,
although the 14th-century windows were preserved;
a roof of very low pitch was put over nave and
chancel; and a large south porch was added, rising
to the middle of the clerestory. At the end of the
century a Latin inscription was placed in the chancel
commemorating the successful struggle over poor
rates with the hamlets of Willaston and Fulwell and
the restoration of the church. It ran 'in memoriam
. . . templi insuper primaevi redditi elegantiae
utinam et pietati quarum alteram perennet alteram
provehat Deus. P.W.F. 1696'. (fn. 257) Although declared
to be in a state of 'sufficient repair' in 1761, (fn. 258) this
was no longer the case 50 years later. The rector,
W.J. Palmer, began by removing in 1807–8 the old
pews and inserting new and additional oak ones, and
the churchwardens reported that he was 'making
alteration' to the church. (fn. 259) In 1843 he restored the
chancel; (fn. 260) and it is likely that it was at this date that
the Romanesque chancel arch was rebuilt.
He also proposed to make extensive repairs to the
rest of the fabric, and to remove the old screen
between the belfry and the nave, making it 'good in
a handsome way', on certain conditions which the
vestry refused to accept. In 1848, on receipt of a
letter from the bishop concerning the repair of the
church, the vestry at last agreed to do what was
legally necessary. George Wyatt, builder, of Oxford,
reported that the south wall was so much 'bulged
and shaken' that it ought to be rebuilt; that the
dressings of the door and windows and the string
course could be mostly reused; that the upper portion of the north wall up to the clerestory windows
should be rebuilt; and that the roof should be retimbered with oak and releaded with new lead. His
estimate, which included replastering the interior
and renewing the roof corbels in Bath stone,
amounted to £402. The rector offered to meet the
bill if the vestry would agree to a repayment of £280
raised by rates levied in the years 1849–51. His offer
was finally accepted and the work was put in hand. (fn. 261)
At this time also the south porch was rebuilt on a
smaller scale in the Romanesque style. The dates of
the construction and removal of the west gallery are
not known. (fn. 262)
The elaborate restoration, especially of the chancel, with the installation of a new carved altar,
stained glass, tiles, panelling, the Lord's Prayer
and Creed framed in Gothic stonework, and other
furniture, is of interest, as it was the earliest work of
the kind undertaken in the Bicester deanery. Palmer's
object, in his own words, was 'to restore the older
character of the church, and get rid as much as
possible of that of the period of the last repair'. (fn. 263)
Various other additions, including an organ, candlesticks and lamps, stained-glass windows, the gift of
Lord Selborne, and an alabaster pulpit given by
Archdeacon Palmer, were made later. (fn. 264) The font also
belongs to this period.
The incised slab to Sir John Wellesborne (d. 1548)
and his wife, showing the full-length figures of
themselves and two daughters, which Rawlinson
noted in the chancel, has disappeared except for
some small fragments now embedded in the floor of
the nave; it was probably destroyed during the 19thcentury restoration, since Skelton mentions it as
greatly obliterated in 1823. (fn. 265) There is a floor slab to
Wellesborne Sill (d. 1706/7), a tablet to Benjamin
Bathurst (d. 1767) and his widow, and tablets commemorating the donors of charities: Stephen
Painter, Simon Rogers, Anne Rogers, and the
Revd. W. J. Palmer. The inscription to Timothy
Hart, rector (d. 1666), and various inscriptions to
17th-century members of the Sill family, noted by
Rawlinson in about 1718, cannot now be traced.
Painted records of charitable gifts dating from 1639
to 1711 are on the west wall. (fn. 266)
Mixbury is unusually rich in inventories of church
goods. There are lists for 1552, 1662, 1757, and 1884, (fn. 267)
and W. J. Palmer noted the communion plate in
1805. (fn. 268) The plate now (1956) includes two silver
chalices with paten covers, inscribed respectively
with the names of Thomas Rus, rector, 1681, and
W. J. P[almer], rector, 1847; and a silver alms plate,
hall-marked 1682, inscribed Ecclesia de Mixbury
1716 and bearing the Glover arms. (fn. 269) There are also
a heavy pewter flagon (c. 1699), two pewter plates,
both 18th century, and another flagon inscribed
'1847, W. J. P[almer]'. (fn. 270) In 1552 there had been
a parcel-gilt chalice. (fn. 271)
In 1552 there were two bells, a sanctus bell, and
two hand bells. In 1956 there was a ring of three
bells hanging in a 17th-century oak frame. John
Wellesborne gave the tenor, inscribed 'God save
King James, 1609', and his grandson gave the second,
inscribed 'God save King Charles, 1627'. (fn. 272)
In addition to the goods listed in the inventories,
the church owned, in the mid-16th century, two
cows and some sheep, given by John Hogges and
Joan Gloucester, widow, to pay a priest to keep their
obits. (fn. 273)
The registers begin in 1645, and the first volume
contains notes on church customs made by Timothy
Hart in the 1660's. There is also a manuscript
history of the parish and church compiled in 1851–2
by the rector W.J. Palmer. There are later additions
ending in 1948.
Nonconformity.
There have occasionally
been Roman Catholics in Mixbury: two were fined
in 1610; (fn. 274) a poor Papist was recorded in 1706; (fn. 275) and
there was one in 1738. (fn. 276) In the second half of the 18th
century one of the farmers was a Roman Catholic.
He and his family and servants were returned as such
in 1767. (fn. 277) In 1781 there was also a Roman Catholic
labouring family. (fn. 278) All had disappeared by about
1800. (fn. 279)
Protestant dissent appeared in about 1830, for in
that year and in 1831 certificates for meeting-houses
were granted. (fn. 280) It did not flourish: in 1854 there
were two dissenters, and in 1866 none. (fn. 281)
Schools.
There was no school in the 18th century, (fn. 282) but about 1803 the rector opened one which
in 1808 taught reading, the catechism, and handicrafts to about 20 children. (fn. 283) In 1815 it was reported
that the girls were starting lace-making at seven
years of age and that the boys were leaving school at
ten to work on the farms. There were then 25–30
pupils, and the parish clerk was teaching reading,
writing, and the catechism to about 20 older boys at
winter evening-classes. (fn. 284) In 1818 there were only
12 children at the day school, (fn. 285) and in 1833 there
was no day school at all. (fn. 286)
The Revd. W.J.Palmer, the rector, built a school
on part of the glebe in 1838, and in 1852 endowed it
with £103 4s. 6d. and a close in Finmere, which
produced an income of £16 a year. By 1853 £9 18s.
had also been left by Mary George for the schooling
of one or more poor children. (fn. 287) There were 60
children in the school in 1854, although they were
still leaving at eight or nine years of age. (fn. 288) The
rectors continued to support the school, which had
one teacher and an attendance of 57 in 1889 (fn. 289) and
47 in 1906. (fn. 290) It was successively reorganized as
a junior school in 1928 and as an infants' school in
1948: the older children were sent to Fringford
school. It was granted aided status in 1954. There
were 23 pupils on the books in 1954, (fn. 291) but it was
closed in 1955 as no one could be found to clean the
school. The income from Palmer's endowment was
then £22 11s. 4d. and £5 8s. 8d. was also received
from other legacies. (fn. 292)
Charities.
Between 1611 and 1727 a series of
small bequests amounting to £43 was made by John
Wellesborne, Julian Webb, Thomas Gibbs, John
Wellicome, George Gibbs, Richard Strange, Aaron
Gibbs, and Moses Gibbs. (fn. 293) As early as 1738 these
charities were administered as one: the money was
held by the lord of the manor, and the interest he
paid was distributed annually on New Year's Day,
in bread to the poor and in money to widows. (fn. 294) The
annual income was £2 3s. in 1786 (fn. 295) and in 1824,
when the distribution was in bread only. (fn. 296)
By will dated 1812 Simon Rogers (d. 1820) left
£100 in trust for the poor, the interest to be distributed annually as the rector and churchwardens
thought fit. (fn. 297) Stephen Painter (d. 1834) left £100,
the distribution to be in bread on 1 January, and
Ann Rogers (d. 1835) left £100, the interest to be
applied for the benefit of the poor or their children
each Christmas. (fn. 298)
All the foregoing charities were amalgamated in
1932 by a scheme of the Charity Commission, their
endowment then amounting to about £360 in stock. (fn. 299)
In 1955 the total annual income was £8 17s. 8d. The
charity was then distributed yearly in the form of
vouchers for the purchase of goods at 2s. in the £
discount. Distribution was on a three-yearly basis—
to children under 7 years of age in the first year, to
children between 7 and 15 in the second, and to old
people in the third. Each voucher was worth about 10s. (fn. 300)
By will dated 1890 the Revd. G. H. Palmer left
£100 to purchase coal for the poor. The legacy was
paid in 1922 and invested in stock. (fn. 301) In 1954 the
annual income of £4 6s. 6d. was distributed in coal
to old people at Christmas. (fn. 302)
By will proved 1928 C. C. Barrett of Finmere
left £100 for the benefit of five of the oldest and
poorest parishioners who had lived good lives, the
annual income to be distributed on New Year's Day. (fn. 303)
In 1954 £3 9s. 2d. was distributed to five old people
at Christmas. (fn. 304)