NEWTON PURCELL
The parish lies on the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire border, six miles north-east of Bicester,
but with Buckingham as its nearest market-town. (fn. 1)
The ancient parish covered only 602 acres, (fn. 2) and was
long and narrow, being 1½ miles long and ½ mile
broad: it was a comparatively new unit, for at the
time of Domesday Book a part of its land lay in
Mixbury parish and a part in Fringford. (fn. 3) Its eastern
boundary has always been the county boundary, and
since at least the end of the 12th century, when there
is evidence that Newton had become an independent
parish, (fn. 4) its southern boundary has been a tributary
of the River Ouse which flows east from Fringford
Mill. The old western bounds used to lie just east
of Spilsmere Wood, but in 1932 (fn. 5) Newton Purcell
was amalgamated with Shelswell to form a new civil
parish of 1,424 acres. (fn. 6)
The parish lies between the 300- and 325-foot
contour lines: it is almost all on drift gravel overlying the Cornbrash, which appears in a band midway between Newton Purcell and Newton Morrell,
and which was quarried for road-stone there in the
19th century. (fn. 7) The soil is stonebrash with a clay subsoil. (fn. 8) Much of the ancient parish was once moorland; (fn. 9) the small Hopyard Spinney is the only wood
now lying within it.
The Roman road from Bicester to Towcester
traverses the parish. Near the middle of the village
it now diverges as a cart-track from the modern road,
which was straightened in 1939. (fn. 10) A bridle-track
running south of Spilsmere Wood connects Newton
Purcell with Shelswell, 1½ miles away, but it does
not follow the line of the 18th-century way marked
on Davis's map, nor does the road he shows to
Finmere exist now. (fn. 11) The turnpike from Bicester to
Buckingham, formed in 1813, made the parish more
accessible, and a coach between Oxford and Northampton ran through the village daily. (fn. 12)
A station called Finmere, less than half a mile
from the village, but in Shelswell parish, was opened
in 1899. (fn. 13)
The village of Newton Purcell, 'the new tun', (fn. 14)
like its offshoot Newton Morrell, was originally a
settlement where the Roman road crossed a spur of
higher ground. It took its second name from the
Purcel family, who held it in the 12th century, (fn. 15)
while its hamlet may have been called after the
Morrells, who held land in Addingrove (Bucks.) in
the 12th and 13th centuries and at Long Crendon in
Henry III's reign. (fn. 16)
Neither can have been a large settlement in the
Middle Ages. (fn. 17) In 1662 and 1665 only seventeen and
eleven houses were listed for the hearth tax and of
these even the Rectory and the two biggest farmhouses had only three or four hearths. (fn. 18) In the 18th
century there were probably about 22 houses in the
two hamlets. (fn. 19) These had increased to 28 in 1851,
but had dropped to 20 by 1901. (fn. 20) The village seems
to have once extended farther southwards than at
present, for the foundations of buildings were said
to have been found there in the last quarter of the
19th century. (fn. 21)
Today (1956) Newton Purcell consists of 27 cottages, which mostly lie on either side of the main
road. For the most part they are built of grey rubble
stone and are thatched. One bears the inscription
w w e 1662. Two groups of cottages at the south end
were rebuilt before the Second World War with their
original stone and the original type of thatched roof.
Another group was similarly rebuilt except that tiles
were used instead of thatch. On the east side of the
main village street a mound and three sections of a
moat mark the site of the medieval manor-house of
the Purcels. (fn. 22) In a lane, which makes a loop to the
west of the main village street, lie Elms Farm, built
above the level of the road on the site of the second
manor-house, (fn. 23) the red-brick 19th-century school
(1872), and the church. North of the lane is the
Victorian Rectory, built about 1844, (fn. 24) and near by
some glebe land has been converted into allotments.
Farther north still the main road dips into the valley,
where the new part of the village lies, quite distinct
from the old. Here is the station, the stationmaster's house, and three red-brick cottages, built
when the railway was cut; and the Shelswell Inn
(P.R.H.A.). (fn. 25)
Newton Morrell, a mile south of Newton Purcell,
now consists only of a farm-house and two adjoining
cottages built on rising ground.
'Griff' Lloyd (rector 1805–42) (fn. 26) was a well-known
hunting parson and for several years acted as deputy
to his cousin Sir Thomas Mostyn, Master of the
Bicester Hunt. Both men figure in an oil-painting
of the first meet of the Bicester Hounds. (fn. 27) 'Griff'
Lloyd was a 'character' and stories about him can
be found in the books of H. H. Dixon ('The Druid')
such as Silk and Scarlet (1856).
Manor.
Of the 5 hides (fn. 28) of NEWTON manor
held by the Purcel family in the 13th century, 2½
were held of the honor of St. Valery, 2 of the barony
of Arsic and the remaining ½-hide, a late acquisition,
of the honor of Gloucester. (fn. 29) No manor of Newton
appears in the Domesday survey and it is clear that
the 2½ hides of St. Valery were originally part of
Mixbury, held in 1086 by Roger d'Ivry, and that
the 2 hides of Arsic were part of Fringford, held by
Odo, Bishop of Bayeux. (fn. 30) Roger d'Ivry's lands, including Mixbury, passed in the 12th century to the
St. Valery family. (fn. 31) In 1213 Thomas de St. Valery
gave to Oseney Abbey Mixbury manor, including
the homage and service of Robert Purcel for his fee
in Newton. (fn. 32) The overlordship of this fee continued
to follow the descent of the honor of St. Valery (fn. 33) ,
which was later merged in the honor of Wallingford.
Thomas de St. Valery's grant was confirmed by
successive overlords, Robert of Dreux and Richard
of Cornwall, (fn. 34) and until the Dissolution Oseney
Abbey as mesne lord received an annual rent of
£1 4s. from the Purcels, who were also responsible
for the forinsec service of half a knight. (fn. 35) Odo of
Bayeux's Fringford estate passed to the Arsic family,
who were overlords of part of Newton until the
death of Robert Arsic in 1230. The overlordship then
followed the descent of the Grey manor in Fringford. (fn. 36) In 1198 Ralph Purcel was said to hold by
sergeanty 1 carucate in demesne in Newton. (fn. 37) The
lands attached to the usher sergeanty, which the
Purcels held of the king (see below), were in Wallbury
(Essex), (fn. 38) and this Newton sergeanty probably represents the lands they held of the Arsics, for in 1227
Robert Purcel undertook that when on duty as an
usher at the king's court he would perform certain
services for Robert Arsic. (fn. 39)
The Purcels of Newton were descended from Oyn
Purcel, an usher sergeant under Henry I. (fn. 40) The
sergeanty and the family lands at Catteshill (Surr.)
descended to Oyn's son Geoffrey, and Geoffrey's
son Ralph, on whose death about 1155 they were
granted to his uncle Ranulf. Ralph, however, had
married a sister of Robert Burnel of Shareshull
(Staffs.), another usher sergeant, and had a son
Ralph, to whom in about 1155 Henry II granted the
office and lands of his uncle Robert. (fn. 41) Although in
1283 it was asserted in a lawsuit that the Purcels
had held in Newton of the honor of St. Valery before
the elder Ralph's marriage, (fn. 42) it is more likely that
their Oxfordshire lands came to them from Robert
Burnel, who in 1130 had been excused payment of
danegeld on some 3½ hides in the county. (fn. 43)
Ralph Purcel the younger was still alive about
1180, (fn. 44) but the Ralph who held lands in Newton in
1198 was probably his son and successor, (fn. 45) and was
dead by 1213, when his widow Sybil claimed her
dower in Newton from his son Robert. (fn. 46) At some
time between 1189 and 1199 Robert's father Ralph
had acquired 2 virgates in Shelswell from William
de Weston in exchange for 2 virgates in Colly
Weston (Northants). In 1222 William's widow Alice
successfully claimed the virgates in Shelswell as part
of her dower, although it was agreed that they should
revert to Robert Purcel on her death. (fn. 47) In 1233,
however, Alice quitclaimed the virgates to Robert, (fn. 48)
and they became part of Newton manor, being held
of the lords of Shelswell, who in turn held of the
Earl of Gloucester. (fn. 49)
Robert, who also held lands in Bainton (fn. 50) and
Westcot Barton, was still alive in 1243, (fn. 51) but was
succeeded soon afterwards by his brother Henry. (fn. 52)
Henry was dead by 1247 and Newton passed to
Otwel Purcel, probably his son. (fn. 53) Otwel was holding
Newton in 1279, (fn. 54) but was dead by the following
year, when the wardship and marriage of his son
Otwel was granted to William and Joan Poure of
Oddington. (fn. 55) Otwel (II) became Sheriff of Oxfordshire in 1317–18 (fn. 56) and was apparently alive in 1327. (fn. 57)
By 1332 he had been succeeded by his son Thomas,
who in that year conceded that the Abbot of Oseney
might make distraint in the whole manor—not only
in the St. Valery fee—for arrears of his annual
rent. (fn. 58) Thomas was still lord of Newton in 1340; (fn. 59)
a John Purcel was lord in 1375 (fn. 60) and another John
in 1425. (fn. 61) The family evidently retained the manor
until the 16th century, for a Thomas Purcel of
Newton is recorded in 1475, (fn. 62) and in 1521 payment
of the annual rent to Oseney Abbey was made by
the guardian of the Purcel heir. (fn. 63) Soon afterwards,
however, the manor seems to have passed to Richard
Duke, who was in residence by 1523. (fn. 64)
After the dissolution of Oseney Abbey, Sir John
Wellesbourne was granted in 1541 Mixbury manor
and all the Oseney lands in Newton, (fn. 65) in fact
Oseney's mesne lordship in Newton, for the manor
continued in the tenure of the Duke family. The
John Duke who signed the inventory of church
goods in 1552 may have been Richard's grandson
who held Frankton manor (Warws.) and died in
1565; (fn. 66) but by 1559 Newton was probably held by
Roger Duke, perhaps John's brother. His tenure
lasted until 1568 at least; (fn. 67) in 1596 his successor
Paul Duke and his wife Sabina conveyed the manor
to John Sill, (fn. 68) husband of Elizabeth, the granddaughter of Sir John Wellesborne. (fn. 69) The conveyance was later disputed by the Frankton branch of
the Duke family, (fn. 70) but the Sills retained the manor.
Elizabeth's husband John was dead by 1611 and in
1615 her second husband Edward Mole was holding
lands in Newton in her right. (fn. 71) In 1632 Wellesborne Sill, Elizabeth's son, and his step-father
Edward Mole conveyed Newton to Richard Blower. (fn. 72)
The Blowers were still lords of the manor in 1667
when Robert Blower and his wife Anne conveyed it
to Ambrose Holbech, (fn. 73) who in 1677 conveyed it to
Samuel Trotman of Siston (Glos.), (fn. 74) son of Samuel
Trotman of Bucknell (d. 1684/5). Samuel the
younger's only daughter Dorothea married her
cousin Samuel, son of Lenthall Trotman of Bucknell, (fn. 75) to whom she brought Newton manor on her
father's death in 1720. Samuel was succeeded in
1749 by his nephew Samuel, and on the latter's
death in 1775 Newton passed to his nephew Fiennes,
son of his brother Edward Trotman of Shelswell. (fn. 76)
Thereafter Newton followed the same descent as
Shelswell.
Economic History.
As Newton was colonized
after 1086, the first record of the community comes
from the Hundred Rolls of 1279. (fn. 77) Otwel Purcel
then had 18 virgates in demesne. Of his villeins
(nativi) 8 held half-virgates for 6s. 8d. a year–3 of
them owed labour services as well—and 1 held ¼ virgate for 1s. 8d. Six others, evidently cottars, held
only a messuage each for 2s. a year. He had no free
tenants, but there were 4 on the estate held of the
lord of Shelswell by John Fitzniel. John held 3 virgates in demesne and his 4 free tenants held 4 virgates
for suit at the hundred and county courts and for
rents varying from 2½d. to 1s. 4d. for a half-virgate.
A fifth freeholder in Newton held 3 virgates (possibly part of Mixbury manor) of Bicester Priory, which
held of Oseney Abbey. (fn. 78)
There are no manorial extents or court rolls to
throw light on the later agrarian history of Newton,
but there is one early 13th-century charter which
gives some information about the topography of the
parish. There was moorland, besides pasture,
meadow, and the fields. Some furlong names are
recorded, e.g. 'Brocfurlong' and 'Sunistedfurlong',
and it is revealed that meadow-land lay near Fringford Mill and was assigned by lot. (fn. 79)
The 14th-century tax lists show as one would
expect in so small a parish that the community was
neither populous nor rich. Between nine and twelve
persons were taxed, of whom only three had much
property. Among the three was Otwel Purcel, the
lord, but he was not always the biggest contributor.
Newton's total contribution in 1327 places it among
the poorer parishes in the hundred. Its tax was
increased at the reassessment of 1334, but this may
denote earlier evasion rather than economic progress. (fn. 80) There had evidently been a decline in population before 1428, when there were fewer than ten
resident householders in Newton. (fn. 81) By 1524, when
seven small contributors paid to the subsidy, Newton was the lowest-taxed parish in the hundred. (fn. 82)
This was in part because of its small area, but also
on account of the absence of any marked concentration of wealth. By the middle of the century there
are signs that this had been taking place. In 1558
the lord, Roger Duke, paid on £7 worth of land,
and one other paid on goods worth £11. (fn. 83)
Little is recorded which throws light on the field
system or the process of inclosure. A terrier of 1634
shows that there were three fields: the field towards
Finmere, the field 'butting upon the Broad Meadowe',
and the field adjoining 'Willaston Lordship'. (fn. 84)
As the meadow-land mostly lay along the river
bank in the south of the parish, a glance at the map
makes it clear that these fields are the North, South,
and West Fields mentioned in a terrier of 1679. (fn. 85)
This terrier also shows that the Cow Pasture lay
south of the village, no doubt where the two presentday fields, Dairy Ground and Long Dairy Ground,
lie. (fn. 86) Mowing ground in the West Field is recorded
and many acres of furze. Much of the last lay in
Morwell, which was close to the ford by Fringford
Mill. The villagers were entitled to take furze from
South and West Fields for fuel. The parson's terrier
also states that besides meadow ground there were
'several hades (i.e. headlands) belonging to each
land in every field either at one end of the land or
at both wheresoever other neighbours have hades
belonging unto theirs'.
As the land still lay dispersed in strips in 1679
inclosure must have taken place after that date, but
there is no record of parliamentary inclosure. It is
likely that the open and waste land was inclosed by
private agreement at the end of the 17th century
after Samuel Trotman became lord of Shelswell. (fn. 87)
In the period 1786–1832 there were only two
estates in the parish, belonging to the lord of the
manor and the rector; they were assessed for land
tax at £32 and £6 6s. respectively. Both were occupied by tenant farmers. (fn. 88) In 1851 the parish was
divided between three large farms of 429 acres,
317 acres, and 226 acres. (fn. 89) In 1953 there were still
three farms, all belonging to Mr. Dewar-Harrison of
Willaston Farm. (fn. 90)
In the absence of constables' books or overseers'
accounts nothing can be said about local government
in the 18th and 19th centuries. The school log book,
however, attests that Shelswell Park played a vital
part in village life in the last quarter of the 19th
century. On 13 December 1878 it records that several
children had gone to Shelswell that morning 'to
fetch soup', and the villagers still remember this
weekly event at the 'big house'. (fn. 91) The charity of
Lady Louisa Harrison is also recorded on a tablet
in the church.
Agriculture has probably been almost the sole
occupation of the villagers. In 1279 one of the villeins of Newton was named William the miller, (fn. 92)
but there is no certain record of a mill in the parish.
When the parsonage was viewed for dilapidations in
1706 by five craftsmen, not one belonged to Newton. (fn. 93) In 1851, however, the census recorded a grocer
and a lacemaker. (fn. 94) In 1953 there were three tenant
farmers and the majority of the villagers lived in
tied cottages and worked on the Dewar-Harrison
estate. (fn. 95)
Population did not increase appreciably during the
late 17th and 18th centuries. In 1676 there were 60
adults and in 1738 the rector returned 12 houses in
the parish. At the first official census in 1801 there
were 93 inhabitants and this number rose to a peak
of 143 in 1821. Thereafter there was a steady decline
until 1881 when there were 90 inhabitants. In 1911,
when Shelswell was also included, there were 172
inhabitants: there were 103 in 1951. (fn. 96)
Church.
Architectural evidence shows that there
was a church at Newton by at least the mid-12th century, although the first documentary evidence dates
from the charter, probably c. 1200, by which Ralph
Purcel granted Newton church to Bicester Priory. (fn. 97)
His son Robert in 1213 claimed in the king's court
that it belonged to him, (fn. 98) but nevertheless later confirmed his father's grant. (fn. 99) Bicester may have remained as patron until its dissolution, but its last
presentation was in 1484. After the mid-14th century
the priory found the advowson of little value, for on
six occasions (1351, twice in 1353, 1492, 1513, and
1531) it allowed the right of presentation to lapse to
the bishop; in 1496 Notley Abbey presented, and in
1503 and 1528 the owners of Shelswell manor. (fn. 100) In
the post-Reformation period the advowson followed
the descent of Shelswell manor, (fn. 101) and from 1573 the
two livings were held together. (fn. 102) In 1850 the ecclesiastical parishes were united by an Order in Council, (fn. 103)
which gave legal recognition to a long-standing
practical arrangement. In 1955 the patron was the
lord of Shelswell manor.
In the Middle Ages Newton Purcell was so poor
a church that it was not included in the valuations of
1254 and 1291. In 1339 it was taxed at £2 13s. 4d., (fn. 104)
and was thus worth less than the 5 marks considered
desirable for the maintenance of a parish priest.
Even by 1535 it was worth no more than £3 15s. 4d. (fn. 105)
A reason for this poverty was that the parish of
Newton was not coterminous with the township.
Two tenements of 3½ yardlands and ½ yardland
respectively with appurtenances—common and
pasture—, though lying in the fields of Newton,
belonged to Shelswell parish, to which they paid
tithes. The furze and thorns gathered in the fields
by the tenants of these holdings were also tithable to
Shelswell. Their farm-houses lay in Newton village,
and in 1608 the holder of the larger farm was said
to be churchwarden of Shelswell 'in the right of his
tenement'. (fn. 106) The origin of Shelswell's claims probably lies in the tenurial arrangements of the 13th
century, when a half-fee in Newton was held of the
lords of Shelswell manor. (fn. 107)
A tithe case of 1614 shows something of the tithe
customs of the parish, and discloses incidentally
how well each farmer knew his neighbour's business.
For every colt born the rector received 1d., for
every sheep dying or sold between Candlemas and
shearing time ½d., and for every sheep sheared in the
parish he received the whole tithe. (fn. 108)
By 1675 the rectory was said to be worth £32, (fn. 109)
and in 1716 the combined livings of Newton and
Shelswell were worth £66. (fn. 110) In 1847 the tithes of
Newton were commuted for £132, (fn. 111) and in 1849
those of Shelswell for £186. (fn. 112)
Part of the income of the living has always come
from the glebe, valued at 13s. 4d. in the reign of
Edward III. (fn. 113) Terriers of 1601, 1634, and 1679 show
that it then consisted of about 35 pieces of land in
the open fields, (fn. 114) which were later exchanged for
28 acres. (fn. 115) It was thus smaller in area than the glebe
usually enjoyed by parsons, and was not increased
after 1850 by any land from Shelswell.
Owing to the poverty of the church in the Middle
Ages the living was difficult to fill and the incumbents changed frequently, especially after 1349. The
only known point of interest about these incumbents
is the sudden succession of eight graduates, who held
office between 1462 and 1503. (fn. 116) In the century
after the Reformation John Lawrence (1597 to at
least 1634) was clearly resident, for he built himself
a substantial new dwelling on the north side of the
church. (The medieval Rectory, consisting of three
bays, stood on the south side.) The new house had
stables of four bays, a five-bay barn, and a cowhouse. (fn. 117) Richard Addington (rector 1662–1705), a
member of the Addington family of Fringford, (fn. 118) was
resident in 1665 when he paid tax on five hearths, and
seems to have lived for many years in the parish. (fn. 119)
But subsequent rectors did not reside: in 1768 the
rector Samuel Trotman, who had been presented by
his brother Fiennes Trotman of Shelswell, was reported to be living in Gloucestershire although he
frequently officiated at Newton. (fn. 120) He had an unlicensed curate with a salary of 10s. 6d. a Sunday,
serving another cure and living a mile away. Nevertheless, there was a service each Sunday at Newton
and on other listed days, Holy Communion being
celebrated four times a year. In the early 19th century the ruinous state of the parsonage made nonresidence inevitable: Griffith Lloyd, rector from
1805 until his death in 1842, was licensed by his
bishop to reside at Swift's House, near Stoke Lyne,
on condition that he performed his duties. (fn. 121) As a
hunting parson, this arrangement suited him admirably for Swift's House was the home of his cousin
Sir Thomas Mostyn, the Master of the Bicester
Hunt. (fn. 122)
Of a very different type from Lloyd was his successor, John Meade (1843–83). (fn. 123) As the old Rectory
had been converted into four cottages, he at once
built a new Rectory, farther to the north of the
church. (fn. 124) There he resided continuously and exercised a faithful and fruitful cure of souls. (fn. 125)
The church of ST. MICHAEL is a small stone
structure covered with pebble dash. It comprises
a continuous nave and chancel with a bell-gable at
the west end. Originally a Romanesque building, the
church was repaired and 'beautified' in 1813 at the
cost of John Harrison of Shelswell House, when most
of the ancient features were destroyed. (fn. 126) A restoration by C. N. Beazley in 1875–6 at the expense of
Edward Slater-Harrison and the rector, John Meade,
almost amounted to a rebuilding, leaving only the
foundations of the original walls. (fn. 127) A 13th-century
piscina survives and the present 12th-century doorway was moved from the north, where it is shown in
Skelton's illustration, to the south side; (fn. 128) it has
chevron mouldings and a roughly carved tympanum
of a dove and two interlocked snakes. The restoration also included the removal of the old pews and
gallery, the restoration of the chancel, and the building of the bell-gable, vestry, and south porch. In
1875 a 13th-century incised stone, now on the north
wall of the chancel, commemorating a heart burial
and inscribed 'Hic jacet . . .' was discovered in a
niche (probably the old aumbry) in the chancel wall.
There are two lancet windows at the west end, and
a window on the north side contains early 19thcentury glass after Raphael's 'Transfiguration'. The
font and pulpit are modern.
There are memorials to the Trotman, Harrison,
and Slater-Harrison families, successive owners of
Shelswell House. Those commemorated include
Edward Trotman (d. 1743); his sons Samuel Trotman, rector (d. 1773), and Fiennes Trotman (d.
1782); Gilbert Harrison, merchant of London (d.
1790), with a marble bust and elaborate emblems
of commercial enterprise; Mary, his widow (d. 1825),
with a monument by P. Rouw of Regent Street;
John Harrison (d. 1834); John Slater-Harrison (d.
1874); and Edward Slater-Harrison (d. 1911); and
one to George Tyrwhitt-Drake (d. 1915). (fn. 129)
The church once had some medieval silver: a
chalice and paten were listed in 1552. (fn. 130) The chalice
was doubtless the one presented by Leonard and
Margaret Verney, who mentions it in her will of
1530. (fn. 131) A pewter almsplate has disappeared since
1892, and the plate consisted in 1955 of a silver
chalice and paten of 1798. (fn. 132) In 1955 there were two
bells, as there were in 1552; both are 14th-century,
and one is inscribed 'Ave Maria Gracia Plena'. (fn. 133)
The registers begin in 1705, but there are transcripts for 1681–1705. The churchwardens' book
begins in 1759.
Nonconformity.
No record has been found
of Roman Catholicism.
There has been little Protestant dissent. One dissenting family was reported in 1778, and in 1793 a
single 'Anabaptist'. (fn. 134) In 1839 a house was licensed
as a place of worship, (fn. 135) but there never seems to have
been more than about one family of dissenters in the
village. In 1854 one dissenter was said to attend
church every Sunday morning. (fn. 136)
Schools.
There was no school in Newton Purcell
in the early 19th century. (fn. 137) By 1854, however, there
was a dame school supported by J. H. SlaterHarrison, (fn. 138) which was attended by 20 children from
Newton and Shelswell. There was also an evening
writing-school for 6 boys supported by the rector. (fn. 139)
Either the dame school or its successor had 18
pupils in 1871. (fn. 140)
Newton Purcell Church of England school was
built in 1873 at the joint expense of the patron, the
rector, the Revd. John Meade, and other residents,
on ground given by J. H. Slater-Harrison. (fn. 141) It was
attended by 14 children in 1889 (fn. 142) and, after being
enlarged in 1898, (fn. 143) by 31 children in 1906. (fn. 144) It was
reorganized as a junior school in 1929, when the
older children were sent to Fringford, and was given
aided status in 1952. There were 10 pupils in 1937
and in 1954. (fn. 145)
Charities.
There are no charities older than the
19th century. (fn. 146) By deed dated 1884 the Revd. John
Meade (rector 1843–83) gave £250 in stock. Of the
yearly interest £1 was to be paid to the sexton and
the remainder was to be distributed at Christmas to
widows, the sick and aged poor of Newton Purcell
and Shelswell. (fn. 147) In 1954, when the annual income
was £6 15s., the charity was still distributed by the
rector at Christmas. (fn. 148)