SOULDERN
The parish lies on the southern borders of Northamptonshire, mid-way between the market-towns
of Banbury and Bicester. The area of the ancient
parish, 1,496 acres, was unchanged in 1951. (fn. 1) The
county boundary which runs through the southern
end of Aynho Park and follows Ockley Brook bounds
the parish on the north; the Cherwell forms the
western and the Aynho and Somerton roads most of
the eastern and southern boundaries. (fn. 2)
The eastern edge of the parish lies on the Great
Oolite, with a belt of Inferior Oolite forming a ring
round the village, and the Upper Lias Clay and
Marlstone appear between the latter and the alluvium
of the Cherwell valley. (fn. 3) The surface soil is composed
of sand and stonebrash on the high ground, clay and
loam near the river; and the subsoil, which varies in
different parts of the parish, consists of limestone,
ironstone, clay, and gravel. (fn. 4) The white limestone has
been much quarried for building purposes and roadmaking, but the ironstone is not known to have been
worked. (fn. 5) Most of the parish lies within the 300-foot
contour, except for the river meadowland, which is
liable to flooding, and the plateau on the eastern
side which rises to over 400 feet above sea level. At
the edge of the scarp there are a number of springs
which give a good water-supply.
The pre-Roman Portway may have crossed the
parish from north to south, and the important
medieval highway between Bicester and Banbury
was made a turnpike in 1791. (fn. 6) A toll-gate near the
eastern approach to the village was removed in 1876. (fn. 7)
The toll-house still remains. A number of 'private
highways' were created by the inclosure decree:
these included 'from the turnpike to Chadwell Gate'
(i.e. Mill Road), and from the town well to the
church. (fn. 8)
Sections of two former G.W.R. lines, Oxford to
Banbury, completed in 1850, and the main Birmingham to London line, completed in 1910, (fn. 9) and the
Oxford Canal, completed in 1790, run along the east
bank of the Cherwell. The nearest station, Aynho
Park, lies over the county border three miles distant.
A canal wharf was built and connected to the village
by Wharf Lane (originally called 'Haleway'), so that
Souldern, like other parishes bordering the canal,
was able to enjoy cheap coal. (fn. 10)
The village lies near the parish boundary on the
southern edge of Aynho Park, well protected by
trees on the north and by the high land to the east. (fn. 11)
Despite its comparatively high position it appears to
have been unhealthy: the death-rate among children
was high; in 1855 there was a severe cholera epidemic;
and later the local historian Wing noted that Souldern
was liable to a sort of fever, which was never long
absent. (fn. 12) The main village street runs from east to
west with two roads branching off to the south, and
one at the east end by the town well runs north and
down the hill past the site of the one-time manorhouse (see below) and the church to Ockley Brook.
In the 17th century and later there was an open
green and a bowling-green between Souldern Gate
and the village; these were given to the use of the
poor by the 1613 inclosure award. (fn. 13) A late-18thcentury map shows the village as triangular in shape
with three grass closes in the middle. A green is also
shown in front of the church. (fn. 14) Souldern's name,
meaning thorn-bush in a gully (O.E. Sulh-porn),
suggests that the original settlement was mainly by
the church and the manor. (fn. 15) The village had an unusual number of substantial houses in the second
half of the 17th century. Out of seventeen houses
listed for the hearth tax in 1665 three were gentlemen's houses: the manor-house of the Weedons and
Richard Kilby's were each taxed on ten hearths and
a third on eleven hearths, which was probably the
Rectory. (fn. 16) In addition there were three farm-houses
with four hearths apiece. (fn. 17)
The village is still a beautiful and well-preserved
example of building with local materials. Most of
the dwellings, many of them substantial houses, are
stone-built and have stone slates or thatch on their
roofs. The prevailing colour is silver-grey with
patches of yellow lichen. Among the many early
buildings that survive, the following are the most
notable. The Court was probably built about 1600.
Its plan is L-shaped and it has two stories with a
cellar and attic dormers. The date 1666 can be seen
on the garden gateway and there have been many
other alterations and additions in later periods. The
Hollies is also L-shaped in plan and dates from about
1600. It has preserved its original stone-mullioned
windows of three or four lights and a later stone
fireplace. The Barn House, although much restored,
was also originally a 16th-century or possibly an
early 17th-century building. Rectangular in plan, it
has two stories with a cellar and hipped dormers.
The ground floor has four-light windows with stone
mullions, the first floor three-light windows with
stone mullions. Greystones is similar in plan, but has
a steep-pitched roof of thatch. Its windows have
moulded stone frames and square labels. Souldern
House (formerly Souldern Lodge) is in origin another early 17th-century house of rectangular plan.
It has two stories, cellar, and attic dormers. The
house was for several centuries the home of the
Gough family and a gazebo in the garden is dated
'R. G(ough) 1706'. (fn. 18) The Hermitage is also rectangular in plan; it has two stories and attic dormers
and is of two builds, the west being of 16th-century
date and the east of 18th-century date. The house
is mainly built of coursed rubble but the gables are
coped with dressed stone. Its 17th-century staircase
is said to have come from the Court. (fn. 19)
The present manor-house, formerly called Souldern House, stands on the brow of the hill at the
western end of the village street. It is built of coursed
rubble and was probably erected in the second half
of the 17th century, as the date 1665 appears on the
stone-work of one of the rooms formerly known as the
'old vestry'. The west front has two projecting gabled
wings with stone finials, and the main entrance on
this side was once surmounted by a cupola. The
house has been considerably altered in later periods,
notably in 1850 and in 1955–6 for Lord Bicester.
The Roman Catholic chapel standing in the grounds,
erected in 1869, consists of an old stone outhouse and
a brick extension. (fn. 20) The manor used to be approached
by a fine avenue of sycamore trees, but only a few of
these remained at the end of the 19th century when
Blomfield described the house. (fn. 21) The history of this
house is uncertain: Blomfield thought it was built by
Bernard Weedon (d. 1679), who returned ten hearths
for the tax of 1665, and that after the Weedons had
moved to Staffordshire it was let to the Kilby
family from 1679 until Robert Kilby's death in
1757. (fn. 22) The Kilbys already had one substantial
house in Souldern in 1665, (fn. 23) and in 1717 Robert
Kilby was reported to have a freehold estate in
Souldern and 'Hyett House in his own possession'. (fn. 24)
About the same time Rawlinson noted that a Mr. Cox
was occupying the manor-house. (fn. 25) This must have
been Samuel Cox, the husband of Alice Kilby and
father of Samuel Cox, the infant lord of the manor,
who finally came to reside in 1757. (fn. 26)
Mention should also be made of Manor Farm's
fine stone barn, on the outskirts of the village. It is
75 feet long, has oak rafters, and had a thatched roof
until about 1950.
The medieval manor-house was situated on the
east side of the road leading to the church, but it
seems to have become a ruin at an early date. A map
of 1767 shows no house south of the church and by
the 19th century only its foundations and fishponds
marked its site in Great House Close. (fn. 27)
Another house which has gone is the old Rectory.
This stood north of the church and was built before
1638 by the rector Thomas Harding. (fn. 28) It was repaired in 1809 by Robert Jones, whom Wordsworth
described as 'one of my earliest and dearest friends'. (fn. 29)
Wordsworth stayed in the house, probably in 1820,
and afterwards wrote the sonnet called 'A Parsonage
in Oxfordshire'. (fn. 30) Later, in another sonnet, he described 'this humble and beautiful parsonage', and
the church and churchyard. (fn. 31) The rectory had wellstocked fishponds in 1723 at least, when the rector
noted that 31 brace of carp had been taken out of
one. (fn. 32)
There was much modernization in the 18th and
19th centuries: for instance, the stone-mullioned
windows of Souldern House, many at the Hermitage,
and most of those at the manor-house were altered to
sash windows. Rooms were panelled as at the Hollies,
and many houses such as the manor-house and
Souldern House were re-roofed with Welsh slate. But
in the 19th century in particular new buildings were
added to the village. By 1824 seventeen cottages for
the poor had been built on the green; (fn. 33) a school and
Wesleyan chapel (1869) were put up; (fn. 34) and in 1890
the old gabled Rectory, which seems to have been
a house of some interest, (fn. 35) was pulled down and the
present Rectory was built on a new site for £1,434 by
the architect E. G. Bruton. (fn. 36)
In the 1850's there were three public houses, the
'Fox', the 'Crown', (fn. 37) and the 'Bull's Head'; the last
was mentioned in 1784, when the 'Fox' was also
licensed. (fn. 38) Only one licensed house is recorded in
1735 (fn. 39) and in 1939 there was again only one, the
'Fox'. (fn. 40)
There are a number of outlying farms: these seem
to have been built as a result of the inclosure of the
fields in 1613. Five are recorded in 1774, and Chisnell Farm, Hill House Farm, and three others are
marked on a map of 1797. (fn. 41) All show architectural
evidences of an earlier origin. Hill House is said to
have been built by the Westcars: (fn. 42) it is L-shaped and
has two stories with gabled dormers. The south-west
wing is earlier in date than the south-east wing,
which was probably added in the late 17th century.
The main entrance, through a door-frame with
fluted Doric-style pilasters and a dentilled cornice,
is in the north-east front of this wing, which has
six first-floor windows and six dormers. There is
evidence that in the 18th century it had an ornamental
Queen Anne garden with two summer-houses. (fn. 43)
During the Civil War the village suffered from the
quartering of troops and requisitioning of food
supplies by both the contending armies: in 1643,
for instance, six regiments of parliamentary troops
from London were quartered there; and in 1641
Souldern was ordered to send carts and provisions to
the king at Oxford. (fn. 44)
In the 19th century Souldern Gate was well known
as a meet of the Bicester Hunt. (fn. 45) Besides this sport,
the village still enjoyed a number of its ancient feasts
and customs. Children processed on St. Valentine's
day and May Day, and the village feast beginning
on 18th September lasted a week. It was accompanied by a fair. (fn. 46)
Thomas Harding (d. 1648), an eminent scholar
and schoolmaster, was Rector of Souldern. (fn. 47) Later
in the century Mrs. Bryan Stapleton (d. 1919),
author of Catholic Missions in Oxfordshire, was
brought up at Souldern House, then locally important as a centre of Roman Catholicism. (fn. 48)
Manor.
No Domesday manor has yet been
identified with SOULDERN, (fn. 49) but the exceptional
privileges it is known to have possessed in the 13th
century were said to date from the Conquest. It is
not impossible that it was among the lands in divers
counties that were granted to Robert de Rumilly by
the Conqueror and that it was inherited by his
daughter Lucy, the wife of Jordan de Say, lord of
extensive estates including another Oxfordshire
manor of exceptional importance, the nearby Kirtlington. He granted Souldern Church to Eynsham
Abbey some time before 1161, when his son William
was buried there. Another son Ranulf witnessed the
grant. (fn. 50) Souldern became attached to the honor of
Richard's Castle by the marriage of Eustachia de
Say to Hugh FitzOsbern, who was dead by 1140. (fn. 51)
Eustachia was co-foundress of Westwood Nunnery
(Worcs.), (fn. 52) and was of sufficient importance for her
sons Osborn and Hugh to adopt Say as their surname. Osborn died about 1185, and his brother
Hugh, who succeeded him, married Lucy, daughter
of Walter de Clifford, by whom he had at least three
sons and a daughter Lucy. Hugh died about 1190,
and his eldest son Hugh died some six years later. (fn. 53)
Lucy married Thomas de Arderne, (fn. 54) a tenant of the
honor of Richard's Castle at Astwood Savage
(Worcs.), (fn. 55) to whom her brother Hugh gave Souldern
manor in exchange for Kingston manor in Yeovil
(Som.). (fn. 56)
The overlordship of Souldern continued to follow
the descent of the honor of Richard's Castle. (fn. 57) Hugh
de Say, Lucy's brother, was succeeded by his
daughter Margaret, and Richard's Castle was held
by her and her three husbands, Hugh Ferrers
(d. 1204), Robert Mortimer (d. 1219), and William
de Stuteville. Margaret died in 1242, and William
held the overlordship of Souldern (fn. 58) until his death in
1259. It then passed to Hugh Mortimer, Margaret's
son by Robert, and followed the descent of the
Mortimers of Richard's Castle, (fn. 59) who as the 'heirs of
Say' were overlords of Souldern in 1279. (fn. 60) On the
death of Hugh (II) Mortimer in 1304 Richard's
Castle was inherited by one of his daughters, Joan,
whose first husband Thomas de Bykenore was overlord of Souldern in 1316. (fn. 61) Thomas died without
issue, and Joan's possessions eventually passed to
John, her son by her second husband Richard
Talbot. (fn. 62) John was overlord of Souldern in 1346,
the last occasion on which the overlordship is
mentioned. (fn. 63)
Thomas de Arderne was dead by 1231 (fn. 64) and his
widow Lucy continued to hold Souldern in free
marriage. (fn. 65) By 1255 she had been succeeded by
Ralph de Arderne, (fn. 66) presumably her son, who may
have died by 1259 when another Thomas de Arderne
was holding the family lands at Astwood Savage
(Worcs.). (fn. 67) By 1278 (fn. 68) Souldern was held of Thomas
by Lucy—a granddaughter of the first Lucy de
Arderne (fn. 69) and therefore probably his sister—and her
husband Thomas de Lewknor of Greatworth (Northants). (fn. 70) The hundredal inquisitions of 1279 show
that Souldern was an especially privileged manor,
'manerium liberum in se', whose lords had enjoyed
free warren, waifs, view of frankpledge and freedom
from suit of hundred ever since the Conquest.
Thomas de Lewknor owed a pound of cumin every
year to Thomas de Arderne, the mesne lord, (fn. 71) but
neither of them seems to have owed any military
service for the manor, although it was described as
½ knight's fee in 1255 and as a whole fee in 1285. (fn. 72) In
1243 Lucy de Arderne had been said to owe no scutage for Souldern. (fn. 73) In 1285 Thomas de Arderne conveyed his annual rent of a pound of cumin to John
de Lovetot, (fn. 74) who may be identified as the Justice of
the Common Pleas who was removed on charges of
extortion in 1289. (fn. 75) He died in 1294 and the mesne
lordship of Souldern (fn. 76) passed to his son John. (fn. 77) By
1316, however, the manor was said to be held
directly of the honor of Richard's Castle. (fn. 78)
Thomas de Lewknor was dead by 1305, (fn. 79) and by
1307 his widow Lucy had apparently conveyed the
manor to Master Thomas de Abberbury, who died
in possession in that year. (fn. 80) The Abberbury family
took its name from Adderbury, but was subsequently
most closely connected with Donnington (Berks.),
another of Thomas's acquisitions. Thomas was succeeded in turn by his brother Walter and by his
nephew Richard. (fn. 81) John de Lewknor, possibly a son
of Lucy and Thomas, and a certain William de
Tingewike entered the manor by force. Later William
obtained a formal grant of it from John and died in
possession in 1316. (fn. 82) Richard de Abberbury had regained Souldern by 1323, (fn. 83) and held it at his death in
1333, when it passed to his son John. (fn. 84) John died
without issue in 1346, and Souldern passed to his
uncle Thomas, (fn. 85) perhaps the Thomas de Abberbury
who held lands in Wootton in 1316. (fn. 86) Thomas was
succeeded by his son Richard, the most distinguished
member of the family, by 1362. (fn. 87) Richard was a
knight of the shire for Oxfordshire in 1373 and 1387,
and a royal servant. He is best known for his rebuilding of Donnington castle and his endowment of
Donnington Hospital. (fn. 88) Both the hospital and the
Crutched Friars of Donnington received grants of
lands and rents in Souldern from Sir Richard. (fn. 89) The
latter was dead by 1401 (fn. 90) and was probably succeeded first by his brother Thomas, who had lands
in Souldern in 1399, (fn. 91) and then by Thomas's son
Richard. (fn. 92)
The younger Richard married Alice, widow of
Edmund Danvers of Chilton (Berks.), (fn. 93) but had no
children. By 1415 his heir presumptive was probably
Sir Richard Arches, the son of his sister Lucy, (fn. 94) to
whom with other feoffees he conveyed Souldern
manor in that year. (fn. 95) Richard Abberbury, on the
grounds of a defect in his uncle's grant, seized the
Crutched Friars' Souldern lands and in 1448 granted
them to William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, (fn. 96) on
whose death in 1450 they were put in custody of his
widow Alice. (fn. 97) Sir Richard Arches, whose father was
perhaps Simon Arches of Waddesdon (Bucks.), (fn. 98)
died in 1417. His only son John died without issue,
and Souldern manor descended to his daughter Joan
and her husband Sir John Dynham. (fn. 99) Sir John died
in 1458 (fn. 100) and Joan retained the manor (fn. 101) as her own
inheritance until her death in 1497, when she was
succeeded by her son, another Sir John Dynham,
who died in 1501. (fn. 102)
The Dynham estates were then divided among
four coheirs, Sir John's two surviving sisters Elizabeth and Joan, and his nephews, Sir Edmund Carew,
son of Margery Dynham and Sir John Carew, and
Sir John Arundell of Lanheme, son of Katherine
Dynham and Sir Thomas Arundell. (fn. 103) Souldern manor
was divided into four parts, each of which pursued a
separate descent through out the 16th century. Shortly
before his death in 1513 Sir Edmund Carew conveyed his quarter-share of another Dynham manor,
Oving (Bucks.), to feoffees of Sir William Compton, (fn. 104)
and it is likely that he conveyed his share of Souldern
about the same time, for Sir William held a quarter
of that manor at his death in 1528. (fn. 105) Under Sir William's grandson, Henry, Lord Compton, a quarter
of Souldern appears to have been held by Anker
Brente (fn. 106) of Little Wolford (Warws.), which was one
of the Comptons' manors. (fn. 107) Sir John Arundell held
a quarter of Souldern at his death in 1545, (fn. 108) and his
share descended through his son Sir John (d. 1557)
to his grandson, (fn. 109) a third Sir John, who died in
1590. (fn. 110) Elizabeth Dynham married three times: her
first husband Fulk Bourchier, Lord Fitzwarine, died
in 1479; her second, Sir John Sapcotes of Elton
(Hunts.), in 1501; and her third, Sir Thomas Brandon, in 1510. (fn. 111) In 1509 Elizabeth settled her lands on
herself and Sir Thomas for life, with reversion to
Richard Sapcotes, her son by her second husband. (fn. 112)
Richard duly succeeded her in 1516, and it is probable that he conveyed his share of Souldern as well
as his share of Steeple Aston to Sir Michael Dormer
of Ascot in 1539, for in 1547, two years after Sir Michael's death, there of his sons, Thomas, William,
and Geoffrey, conveyed a quarter of Souldern manor
to their brother John. (fn. 113) From John it appears to have
descended to his third son John (see below), and in
1604 his niece Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Dormer
of Yarnton, (fn. 114) and her husband John Stampe of
Compton (Berks.) quitclaimed a quarter of Souldern
to John Weedon. (fn. 115) The fourth share of Souldern
passed from Joan Dynham to her son John, Lord
Zouche, (fn. 116) but is lost to view from 1533 (fn. 117) until 1579,
when it appears in the possession of Paul Tracy of
Stanway (Glos.), who with his wife Anne and son
Sir Richard conveyed it to John Weedon in 1604. (fn. 118)
It has been stated that the four quarters of the
manor were sold to John Stutsbury of Souldern, (fn. 119)
Robert Weedon and his son John by Henry, Lord
Compton, Sir John Arundell of Lanherne, Paul
Tracy, and John Dormer. Robert Weedon married
John Stutsbury's daughter, (fn. 120) and at his death in 1598
held three-quarters of Souldern manor. (fn. 121) Robert
must have acquired two quarters by 1590, Sir John
Arundell having died in that year and Henry, Lord
Compton, in 1589. John Dormer Still held his quarter
of Steeple Aston in 1592. (fn. 122) The completion of the
purchase of the manor seems to have been John
Weedon's acquisition of Paul Tracy's quarter in
1604, and John certainly held the whole manor in
1615. (fn. 123)
The Weedons were Roman Catholics and in the
Civil War their estates were sequestrated. Although
it was alleged in 1646 that John Weedon had aided
the rebels in Ireland before the war and the king
throughout the war, he was permitted in 1653 to
receive a third of the rents of his estates. (fn. 124) The
family recovered their lands at the Restoration, and
John seems to have died before 1665, when his son
Bernard was living at Souldern. (fn. 125) Bernard died in
1679, and his son John in 1702. The last of the
family to hold Souldern manor was another John,
who died in 1710 and devised all his property there
to Samuel Cox, the infant son of Samuel Cox of
Farningham (Kent) and his wife Alice, daughter of
Richard Kilby of Souldern. (fn. 126) John Weedon's brother
William claimed, unsuccessfully, that John's will had
been obtained by fraud, (fn. 127) but in 1718 he gave up his
claim to the manor. (fn. 128) Samuel Cox was succeeded at
his death in 1781 by his nephew Robert Kilby Cox.
The latter resided occasionally at Souldern and died
in 1828. His son and successor Samuel died childless
in 1851, and the manor passed to Lt.-Col. Richard
Snead Cox, a great-nephew of Robert Kilby Cox. (fn. 129)
Lt.-Col. Snead Cox resided at Broxwood (Herefs.),
and although called lord of Souldern manor in the
1860's was not subsequently given that title, and
manorial rights may be said to have lapsed. (fn. 130)
Economic History.
Souldern cannot be
identified with any Domesday village and it may have
been omitted as it was so highly privileged a manor. (fn. 131)
It is known to have belonged in the early 12th century to the important Say family, (fn. 132) but the earliest
evidence for its economic history comes from the
hundred rolls of 1279. The manor then had 41 virgates of arabel land, almost the same number as in
the 17th century. Twelve were in demesne, 17½ were
held in villeinage and 11½ freely. Besides its arable
land, the large demesne had adjacent meadow and
pasture, including Goldenham Meadow, along the
Cherwell bank, and free fishing from this meadowa
to Fritwell Meadow. (fn. 133) There was a group of 7 free
tenants, holding 11½ virgates. The most prosperous
was Thomas Silvester, who had the water-mill and
3 virgates, while 4 others had 5½ virgates between
them, paying a rent of about 2s. a virgate, and Ralph
de Arderne, no doubt a relative of the lord of the
manor, held 2 virgates for 1d. Another virgate was
held in free alms by the Prior of Banbury. (fn. 134) There
were 10 villein virgaters and 15 half-Virgaters. The
rent paid by the Souldern villein was unusually
samall—19d. for a virgate, which may have meant that
he had to perform unusually heavy services. All
owed tallage and had to pay fines when their sons
left the manor (redimere pueros).
No cottagers are mentioned in the Hundred Rolls,
but an early 14th-century inquisition (fn. 135) lists sixteen
besides about the same number of free tenants and
villeins as that recorded in 1279. Thus the total
number of landholders was about fifty. The tax lists
of this period show a comparatively prosperous
population, with between 30 and 35 people assessed,
many of them relatively highly. The parish's total
assessment ranks high among the medium group of
contributors in the hundred. (fn. 136)
The next detailed information dates from the time
of the early 17th-century inclosure. Before this 150
acres near Somerton Hedge had been inclosed, but
the occasion for general inclosure was a dispute
between the lord of the manor, who was bent on
inclosing his demesne and extinguishing all right of
common, and the freeholders. When the case was
taken to law the judge advised the parties to accept
the arbitration of Sir Thomas Chamberlayne of
Wickham, and he ruled that the lands should be
'measured, divided and inclosed'. The parish was
survedyed by William Jourden and the award ratified
by Chancery in 1613. (fn. 137)
Out of 46 yardlands in the open fields, 12 belonged
to the manor. There were 9 substantial freeholders
with 2 or more yardlands, 5 with between 1 and 2
yardlands, and 8 with less than a yardland. There
were also 12 cottages for the poor, each with common. (fn. 138) The largest allotment (350 acres) went to the
lord of the manor, Edward Love of Aynho received
106 acres, and there were 6 allotments of between
50 and 100 acres, 9 of between 20and 50 acres, and
6 smaller ones. (fn. 139) The 12 cottagers were given 8 acres
and the herbage alon Haleway and Chadwell,
enough for a beast each; 13 acres were set aside for
the poor at Cole's Cross, on the Green, and the 'Pitt
and adjacent bowling place'; and the town meadow,
which later lay along the west bank of the canal,
seems to have continued as common land for the
freeholders. It is mentioned at various times; in 1669,
for example, the parishioners sold its second crop
for £30. (fn. 140) This meadow and the common, 65 acres in
all, were inclosed in 1856. (fn. 141)
At the end of the 17th century it was reckoned that
there were 45½ yardlands instead of the 46 fo 1613,
probably because of the many acres lost through the
making of hedges and ditches. The yardland usually
contained 30 or 32 acres, though some contained as
many as 40 acress. (fn. 142) A common fraction, an eihth of
a quarter, was equal tio an acre. (fn. 143) All yardlands were
rated equally, except the seventeen belonging to the
Weedons. Their lands, as they were so 'powerful', was
subject to a lower rate. (fn. 144) There was also other land in
the parish which was not rated at all and therefore
not reckoned among the yardlands.
There were various changes after inclosure, some
immediate and others gradual. A list of landowners
in 1676 shows that there had been little change in the
system of landholding since 1613: (fn. 145) the demesne had
somewhat increased in size, and the size of the
average estate had slightly decreased, but the parish
still consisted largely of freeholders. Eight came from
families which had been in the parish since the early
16th century. (fn. 146) By the mid-18th century the number
of non-resident owners had probably increased,
seven of the eighteen 40-shilling freeholders not
living in the parish. (fn. 147) By 1842, when there is another
complete survey, (fn. 148) freeholders farming their own
land had almost disappeared. With one exception, all
the farms were let to tenants; the few owner-occupiers
with 10 acres or less depended on some trade for
their living, two having bakeries, one a grocery, and
one a smith's shop.
While some of the 17th-century yeoman families
(e.g. Dodwell, Bower, Bignell, King) had disappeared, two prominent families of that period continued as landowners. One was the Cartwrights of
Aynho (Northants), who from about 1660 owned
the mill and 4 yardlands, (fn. 149) and by the 19th century
nearly 300 acres. The other was the Gough family
who owned about 3 yardlands in the 17th century. (fn. 150)
They had bought some of the manor lands, (fn. 151) probably Chisnell Farm, by the 18th century, and in the
19th century owned some 200 acres. (fn. 152)
The effect of inclosure on the land was immediate
First, large tracts of land were divided into smaller
ones and hedged and ditched. (fn. 153) (These hedges, it was
said, took up 60 acres of land.) Secondly, the amount
of land used for meadow and pasture greatly increased. A possible reason for this may have been the
scarcity of grass in neighbouring parishes and another
the desire to keep tithes as low as possible. (fn. 154) While
16 or 18 teams were said to have been kept befor
inclosure, by 1676 it was alleged that there were not
more than five or six. It was alleged that 'quantities'
of land had been converted to pasture, traces of ridge
and furrow showing where this had been done, and
that by then no more than a third or a quarter of the
land was being ploughed. (fn. 155) The principal method of
conversion seems to have been the sowing of sain-
foin, which by about 1700 had at least doubled the
value of the land since inclosure, (fn. 156) making it far more
valuable than the open fields of Fritwell. (fn. 157)
Another change was that fattening stock had been
substituted for breeding stock, and that the proportion of sheep to cattle in the parish in the late 17th
century had been increased. (fn. 158) It continued largely as
a grazing parish, in 1842 being a third arable and
two-thirds meadow and pasture, (fn. 159) the same proportion as in the early 20th century. (fn. 160) The size of
farms, however, changed little. In 1842 there were
still as many as thirteen farms. They were mostly
of 30 to 100 acres, only three being more than
100 acres. (fn. 161)
In the 17th century there is mention of an unusual
number of trades. Of the four Dodwells in the village,
one was a tailor and one a mercer; (fn. 162) there were also
a smith, another tailor, a carpenter, a meason, (fn. 163) and
a weaver. As at Banbury, cheese-making was an
important farm-house industry. (fn. 164) In the early 20th
century it is said that as many as fifteen cheesemakers were employed at Manor Farm. (fn. 165) Souldern
still had a large number of craftsmen and small
traders in the mid-19th century. In addition to three
public houses (the 'Bull', the 'Crown', and the 'Fox'),
there were two bakehouses, a brewhouse, a beerhouse, a shoemaker's shop, a wheelwright's shop, a
carpenter's shop, two smith's shops, and a limekiln. (fn. 166)
The village had three tailors and a milliner and, being
in the stone country, eight masons amongst its craftsmen. Furthermore, the cottage industry of lacemaking flourished, having over 30 lacemakers in
1851. (fn. 167) At one time there were three lacemaking
schools, but towards the end of the century the
industry declined. (fn. 168) Millers have always been among
the village's chief tradesmen. The mill, on Ockley
Brook opposite Aynho, is first mentioned in 1279,
when it was rented together with 3 virgates by a freeholder for 18s. (fn. 169) Unlike most mills, it became
detached from the manor, and by the early 17th
century belonged to Edward Love of Aynho. (fn. 170) It
passed to the Cartwrights, and later in the century,
when two mills are mentioned, they were being let
for £20 with a ½ yeardland, (fn. 171) consisting of Floodgate
Mead, Miller's Lam, Miller's Little Close, Mill Lane
and Garden, Miller's Great Close, and Miller's
Mead. (fn. 172) The second mill was not permanent, but
one mill, which may have served Aynho as well as
Souldern, being called Aynho mill in 1797, (fn. 173) was
still being driven by water in 1920. (fn. 174) In 1939 there
were still eight private tradesmen and the Banbury
Co-operative store. (fn. 175)
The Compton census of 1676 provides the first
clue to the number of villagers: it recorded 130
adults. (fn. 176) In the first half of the 18th century the incumbent noted that there were about 50 houses; he
particularly noted that his figure included the houses
of the poor which 'are many in proportion to the
rest'. (fn. 177) Numbers rose in the second half of the century; about 60 houses are recorded in 1768 and in
1811 there were 93 houses for 96 families. (fn. 178) This
overcrowding was partly remedied by 1851 in spite
of the great increase in the number of inhabitants to
619, 225 more than there had been in 1801. They
occupied 132 houses. By 1901 the agricultural depression had reduced the population to 406, and it has
since dropped to 371 in 1951. (fn. 179)
Church.
The church was given before 1161 to
Eynsham Abbey by Jordan de Say to commemorate
the burial of his son William in the abbey. (fn. 180) The gift
was confirmed by Archbishop Theobald (1139–61),
and several times later. (fn. 181) Nevertheless Eynsham had
often to defend its right to present; between 1209
and 1219, for instance, Robert Mortimer claimed the
advowson, and the abbey, doubtless under compulsion, presented his nominee, but appealed to the
bishop. (fn. 182) He evidently upheld Eynsham's right, for
the abbey continued to present. In 1236, probably to
avoid further question, the lady of the manor quitclaimed the advowson to the abbot for 12 marks. (fn. 183)
During the vacancy of Eynsham in 1264 Bishop
Gravesend, because of his unusual position as patron
of the abbey, (fn. 184) collated, (fn. 185) although this privilege was
usually reserved to the king during the vacancy of
religious houses. In 1305, when litigation arose over
the patronage between the abbot and the lady of the
manor, the king's court decided in favour of Eynsham, (fn. 186) which remained patron until its dissolution
in 1539, although in 1505 the abbey sold one presentation to John Lihinde of Fifield.
In 1544 the king sold the advowson to Sir Ralph
Sadler, Master of the Great Wardrobe; (fn. 187) in 1551
John Hales of Coventry granted it to his brother
Stephen; (fn. 188) but by 1562 William Holt of Stoke Lyne
was patron. (fn. 189) From Hugh Throckmorton, patron in
1571, (fn. 190) who lived at Souldern and was lessee of the
rectory as late as 1590, (fn. 191) descended for the next
hundred years two rival claims to the advowson.
The Catholic conspirator Francis Throckmorton (fn. 192)
claimed to hold it by grant from Sir Hugh, and on
his attainder in 1584 it was argued that the advowson
had lapsed to the Crown. It presented in 1621 and
1622 (fn. 193) and in 1623 granted the advowson to John
Williams, Bishop of Lincoln, (fn. 194) who in turn gave it
with three other advowsons to St. John's College,
Cambridge, of which he was a Fellow. (fn. 195) The second
claim was based on a sale of the advowson in 1572
by Hugh Throckmorton to George Throckmorton of
Fulbrook (Bucks.) (fn. 196) for £100 and 100 sheep. The
latter presented Thomas Norbury in 1592 and sold
the advowson to him. A Chancery case of 1619 shows
that Throckmorton's right to present had been challenged and that although his nominee was allowed to
remain in possession the advowson had been awarded
to the Crown. (fn. 197) By the 1650's William Norbury of
Hanwell was in possession of the second claim. He
sold it to the rector Thomas Hodges for £40 and the
latter in 1662 granted it to St. John's College, which
thus became the possessor of both claims to the
advowson. The title to the second claim, which had
never been legally confirmed, was causing trouble to
the college as late as 1704. (fn. 198) The college was still
patron in 1955, when the living was held with
Fritwell.
Eynsham Abbey never appropriated Souldern, although in about 1200, when the abbot's nephew was
made vicar, (fn. 199) it was probably planning to do so. By
1197–8 the abbey was receiving from the church the
large pension of £5, allocated to its kitchen. (fn. 200) In the
mid-14th century the rector Thomas Solers (1350–
61) withheld payment of this pension, but was
finally condemned in 1361 by the king's court to pay
arrears of £52 10s. plus damages of £10. (fn. 201) His successor, Master Simon of Lambourne, continued the
suit, but unsuccessfully, (fn. 202) as the pension was still
being paid in the early 15th century. (fn. 203) By 1535 it had
been reduced to £2 13s. 4d., (fn. 204) a sum which the Crown
continued to receive until the 18th century. (fn. 205)
Had it not been for this medieval pension to
Eynsham, worth originally about a half and later a
third of the living, Souldern would have been one
of the richest rectories in the deanery. Even so it was
a moderately good one, valued at £6 13s. 4d. in 1254 (fn. 206)
and £10 in 1291, (fn. 207) a value which by 1535 had declined
to £8 14s. (fn. 208) During the 17th and 18th centuries,
according to the two tithe agreements of 1613 and
1676 (see below), it was worth about £100 and then
£150. After the tithe agreement of 1808 its value
was increased to about £500. (fn. 209)
Souldern in common with other churches was
often involved in litigation. One dispute, of unexplained origin, was with Oseney Abbey. Robert de
la Haye (rector 1231–44) claimed by the 'custom of
churchscot' an acre of grain from the abbey's
demesne in Mixbury and 4d. from Fulwell, claims
which he ultimately gave up for a composition of
£5. (fn. 210)
More serious trouble was caused by the glebe of
Souldern, which mainly consisted of a hide in the
fields of Fritwell. Known as the 'Chercheyde de
Souldern,' this land was once held by William the
clerk, who presumably served the church of Souldern, but in 1199 was given by Eynsham Abbey to
Miles and Millicent of Fritwell, to be held of the
church of Souldern for a pound of pepper, in exchange for a ¼ knight's fee in Wood Eaton. (fn. 211) The
exchange was probably made at the time that the
abbey was planning to appropriate the church, but
the appropriation did not take place, and a few years
later the rector demanded the return of his glebe.
After at least two years' litigation, in the course of
which Stephen of Fritwell, Miles's son, was excommunicated, papal judges ordered the return of the
land to the church. (fn. 212)
Further litigation occurred when the Rector of
Souldern refused to pay tithes on it to St. Frideswide's Priory, the appropriator of Fritwell. In 1229,
before papal commissioners, one rector promised to
cause no further trouble about these tithes, (fn. 213) but his
successor Robert de la Haye refused to pay them. A
multitude of people from both parishes attended the
hearing of the case; many gave evidence, and it was
again decided that the land lay in Fritwell. (fn. 214) Finally
in 1237, before papal commissioners, a compromise
was made: the rector was to collect the tithes but was
to pay 2s. pension to St. Frideswide's. (fn. 215) After the
Reformation the land was exempt from all tithes. (fn. 216)
Another part of the glebe consisted of a few acres
in Souldern, part at least of which had been granted
to the church in about 1200. (fn. 217) In 1291 the rector was
at law over his land with the lord and lady of the
manor. (fn. 218)
At least one early rector, John Barnewell (d. 1305),
resided in Souldern, for he was allowed to divert the
stream so that it ran through the court of his house. (fn. 219)
He was accused of having abducted the daughter of
the lord of the manor. (fn. 220)
Several later rectors came from distinguished
clerical families. From 1317 to 1349, for instance, the
living was held by three members of the family of
John Dalderby, Bishop of Lincoln, one of whom,
Master Peter de Dalderby, later became Precentor
of Lincoln. (fn. 221) Two others, Master Simon of Wells
and Master Simon of Lambourne, who was also a
Fellow of Merton College and a University proctor, (fn. 222)
were probably relatives of two 14th-century abbots
of Eynsham. (fn. 223) Early 15th-century rectors were not
graduates and the church was the subject of frequent exchanges. Later, graduate rectors were again
instituted: they included Master Robert Darcy
(1462–6), Master Walter Bate (1466–79), a benefactor
of Lincoln College, (fn. 224) Master Thomas Warner (d.
1514) (fn. 225) and his successor. The last was studying in
Oxford in about 1520, with the result that the
episcopal visitors found the church defective, the
rectory farmed, and the walls of the cemetery broken,
so that cattle wandered in. (fn. 226)
The state of confusion in the church during the
religious changes of the 16th century is illustrated by
a case in the archdeacon's court in 1584–5. John
Hale, once churchwarden, admitted having sold the
chalice to buy a communion cup; the cross, crucifix,
and altar cloths were in the hands of three parishioners; another parishioner, shortly afterwards
returned as a recusant, had bought the chalice for
40s.; and another admitted to having a sepulchre
which was used as a cupboard. (fn. 227)
Seventeenth-century rectors were above the average in competence and were resident. Norbury (see
above), a 'preaching minister' and a married man, (fn. 228)
brought much trouble on the church by agreeing to
the terms of the inclosure award of 1613, whereby
the tithes were commuted for 40s. a yardland. (fn. 229) This
agreement was to prove increasingly disadvantageous, and in 1638, on the petition of Norbury's
successor Thomas Harding (1622–c. 1645), was reversed by a decree of Chancery. (fn. 230) Harding, who was
removed from his living, was a characteristic 17thcentury divine of the Laudian school, (fn. 231) and was long
remembered at Souldern for his rebuilding of the
parsonage (fn. 232) and for his 'hospitality and charity to
the poor'. (fn. 233) Thomas Hodges (1647–62) (fn. 234) and William
Twine (1663–6), (fn. 235) on the other hand, were Low
Church sympathizers. In the time of Bryan Turner
(1666–98), a well-known preacher, (fn. 236) the tithe dispute again flared up. The farmers wanted another
money settlement in lieu of tithes, (fn. 237) while the rector
protested against various practices of tithe-evasion,
comparing Souldern with the neighbouring parish of
Fritwell, where the great tithes were worth £120,
while at Souldern, where the land was much more
valuable, the tithes could only be let for £90. (fn. 238) The
dispute was eventually referred to the Bishop of
London, who in 1676 made an award, which was to
stand until the early 19th century, commuting the
tithes for £2 12s. 6d. a yardland. (fn. 239)
With one exception 18th-century rectors were
resident. One, John Russell (1735–72), is memorable
for beginning the unusual practice of holding services
on Wednesdays and Fridays, as well as for having
two services on Sundays. He administered the
sacrament four times a year, catechized the children
in summer, and was able to report 20 to 30 communicants and a parish 'very regular about going to
church'. (fn. 240) The same number of services were continued by his successor, John Horseman (fn. 241) (1772–
1806), well known in the neighbourhood as an inclosure commissioner. (fn. 242) He continued, however, to
accept the tithe agreement, by this time very disadvantageous to the church, as he preferred to
remain on good terms with his parishioners. (fn. 243) His
successor Robert Jones (1806–35) (fn. 244) was determined
to overthrow the composition, which brought in
about £120 for all tithes, instead of their estimated
value of over £300. (fn. 245) In 1808, backed by St. John's
College, Cambridge, he made a settlement with the
landowners for £435 a year, (fn. 246) and in 1842 the tithes
were commuted for £431. (fn. 247) The rectory thus became
a very comfortable one, for the rector in addition to
the tithes had his glebe: a few acres in Souldern, and
about 55 acres in Fritwell (fn. 248) with commons for 8 beasts
and 62 sheep, (fn. 249) which were exchanged in 1808 for
Inland farm (123 a.). (fn. 250)
Because of the bitterness of the tithe dispute and
the dilapidated state of the Rectory, Jones did not
come to Souldern until the bishop forced him to do
so in 1809. (fn. 251) His expenditure on the repair of the
Rectory (fn. 252) and farm buildings, (fn. 253) on top of expenses
for inclosure in Fritwell, so crippled him financially
that from 1822 he was allowed to be non-resident
and to hire a resident curate. (fn. 254)
The religious revival of the mid-19th century was
covered by the long incumbency of Lawrence
Stephenson (1835–89), considered an Evangelical
Anglican (fn. 255) and rather conservative. In 1854, when
there were between 30 and 40 communicants and a
congregation of 150, he said he made no effort to fill
his church, as the Wesleyans did theirs. (fn. 256)
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN is a
stone building consisting of a chancel, clerestoried
nave, south aisle and porch, and a western tower. (fn. 257)
The earliest parts of the church are the tower and
the north wall of the nave, which, together with the
north doorway, date from the second half of the 12th
century. The foundations of an eastern apse are
said to have been discovered when the chancel was
rebuilt in 1896, and the original Romanesque church
probably consisted of an aisleless nave with apsidal
chancel and western tower. The presence of a 12thcentury capital reused as the base of one of the
columns of the arcade on the south side of the nave
may, however, indicate that a south aisle was added
before the end of the 12th century. Early in the 13th
century the chancel was rebuilt on a rectangular
plan and given a new chancel arch with sculptured
capitals. During the first half of the 14th century the
south aisle was rebuilt on a larger scale, and the
spacious south porch with stone benches was added.
The existing arcade was reconstructed with new
arches, but the old circular pillars were reused. Late
in the 15th or early in the 16th century the highpitched roof of the nave was replaced by a flat roof
and clerestory of small rectangular windows. (fn. 257) In
1698 nearly £100 was spent on repairs, (fn. 258) and about
twenty years later Rawlinson found the church neat
and well kept. (fn. 259) Repairs were ordered in 1757 and in
1758 the church was painted. (fn. 260) In 1775 the condition
of the chancel was serious: the roof had fallen in and
the walls were crumbling. The medieval chancel was
pulled down by the rector and a much smaller one
erected in its place. (fn. 261) This filled only about half of
the chancel arch, the top part of which was blocked
up and three lancet windows inserted. (fn. 262) Blomfield
described this building as a 'low-roofed, room-like,
mean erection'. (fn. 263) In 1815 a western gallery was
erected and in 1855 the original carved seats were
removed from the nave and replaced by pews. (fn. 264) In
1877 the church was again in urgent need of repair:
the architect A. Hodgson of Bloxham proposed that
the chancel should be rebuilt (fn. 265) by the lay rectors and
in 1878 restoration work was started by J. Cox of
Souldern, who removed the gallery and the plaster in
the nave. A new chancel and organ-chamber were
built in 1896–7 to the designs of Bucknall and J. N.
Comper, and in 1906 the tower was taken down and
rebuilt by G. F. Bodley. (fn. 266)

SOULDERN
The 12th-century stone font is plain and circular. (fn. 267)
The wooden pulpit is 19th century and the organ
was built by Jackson of Oxford. Nothing remains of
the coats of arms seen by Rawlinson in the chancel
windows. (fn. 268) There are the remains of a wall-painting
—probably St. Christopher—on the north wall.
Among the memorials in the church is a restored
heart brass of c. 1460. The commemorative inscription has been lost, and its place is now occupied by a
modern restoration of a 16th-century inscription in
memory of John Throckmorton. (fn. 269) There are also
brasses to Thomas Warner, parson (d. 1514), and to
an unknown female of the 16th century. There is
a tablet in the nave to f. and a. g. dated 1664 and
many other 18th-and 19th-century inscriptions to
the Gough family. Inscriptions to other prominent
Souldern families, Kilby, Dodwell, and Weedon, (fn. 270) which were recorded in 1882, are now nearly
illegible.
In 1552 the church was furnished with a silvergilt chalice, two brass candlesticks, some vestments,
and two copes. (fn. 271) The chalice was sold in about 1578
for 40s. and replaced by a communion cup. (fn. 272) In the
17th century the church owned a communion cup,
a pewter flagon, a silver bowl and salver. (fn. 273) In 1955 the
plate included a Cromwellian chalice, a silver paten
(1633), and a flagon (1790) given by John Gough in
1899. (fn. 274) In 1552 the church had three bells and
a sanctus bell; in 1955 there was a ring of six bells,
three of which dated from the 17th century and were
made by Henry Bagley. The fourth, dating from
about 1550, was recast in 1910. The sanctus bell is
17th-century. (fn. 275)
The registers date from 1667, and there are churchwardens' accounts 1774–1838.
Roman Catholicism.
Souldern, owing to
its lords of the manor, was an important Roman
Catholic stronghold in the north-east of the county.
The first record is the recusancy in 1577 of John
Stutsbury, who is again mentioned as a leading recusant in 1592. (fn. 276) He was the father-in-law of Robert
Weedon, and this family remained Roman Catholic
throughout the 17th century, John and Eleanor
Weedon being first fined as recusants in 1603. (fn. 277) In
the Civil War their estates were sequestrated. (fn. 278)
Another prominent recusant family were the Kilbys; (fn. 279)
in the late 17th century the Weedons were said to
have mortgaged land to the Benedictine nuns of
Dunkirk and the Kilbys to the priests of Douai. (fn. 280)
The Coxes, descendants of the Kilbys and the 18thcentury lords of the manor, were also Roman
Catholics. (fn. 281)
From the early 17th century there was a comparatively large Roman Catholic community. About
eight recusants were fined, (fn. 282) and in 1643 nine were
assessed for the subsidy. (fn. 283) The numbers increased: in
1676 there were 21, in 1690 the constables reported
19, (fn. 284) and 25 in 1706. Besides the Kilbys and
Weedons, there were a carpenter, a tailor, and some
labourers, servants, and poor people. (fn. 285) During the
18th century the number varied between ten and
fourteen. (fn. 286) In 1767 the community consisted of
Samuel Cox and his household, a tallow-chandler, a
shopkeeper, and a labourer with their families, and
a single woman who earned her living by spinning. (fn. 287)
Although the 18th-century visitations state that
there was no place of papist worship and there was
almost certainly never a resident priest, there was
a chapel in the attic of the manor-house. In 1877 a
priest's hiding-place was discovered under the floor. (fn. 288)
The chapel ceased to be used for worship in 1781
but was reopened in 1852 by Dr. J. T. Dolman, the
lessee of the house, whose wife was a Cox. (fn. 289) When
he died in 1867, Souldern House was leased by his
son-in-law, the Hon. Bryan Stapleton. (fn. 290) In 1869 his
sister-in-law Mrs. J. J. Dolman erected the chapel
of St. Joseph in the grounds of Souldern House in
memory of her husband. (fn. 291) All this led to a revival of
the declining faith (fn. 292) and at the end of the century the
community consisted of about nine families. (fn. 293)
St. Christopher's chapel at the American Air
Force base, established in 1956 at Upper Heyford, is
in Souldern parish. (fn. 294)
Protestant Nonconformity.
Except
for two Anabaptists at the end of the 17th century, (fn. 295)
there is little record of dissent before the 19th century. In 1818 and 1819 dissenting meeting-houses
were licensed, (fn. 296) and in 1850 a small Wesleyan
Methodist chapel was built. (fn. 297) Local preachers came
every other week and every effort was made to fill the
chapel. (fn. 298) The Wesleyan Methodists died out, but in
1869 the present chapel was built by the Wesleyan
Reform Union, (fn. 299) of which it is still (1955) a member. (fn. 300)
Schools.
In 1808 three small schools taught
reading and writing to 40–50 children; they were
supported by the parents except for 12 children paid
for by the rector. (fn. 301) In 1816 (fn. 302) a schoolroom was built
at the expense of William and James Minn. In 1818
it was being used for a Sunday school of 30 boys, and
as a day school; the rector was paying for 13 boys. (fn. 303)
By 1833 the Minns' school had 40 pupils, and a
legacy of £200, bequeathed in 1820 by Elizabeth
Westcar for the support of a master of a National
school, (fn. 304) had been applied to its endowment. (fn. 305) It
seems to have been affiliated to the National Society
by 1847. (fn. 306)
In about 1851 James Minn bequeathed a plot of
land for a new Church of England school, and two
cottages for the teachers. (fn. 307) The school was built
shortly after 1856 and was endowed with the Westcar legacy and apparently with another left by Minn,
for by 1864 its endowment was producing about £60
a year. (fn. 308) There were 45 pupils in 1871, (fn. 309) and soon
afterwards the school was enlarged and a new
master's house was built. (fn. 310) The average attendance
was 60 in 1893 and 77 in 1906. (fn. 311) Senior pupils were
transferred to Fritwell in 1930, and the school was
controlled in 1951. The number of pupils was 47 in
1937, but only 17 in 1954. (fn. 312)
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic School was built in
1879 on a site given by Lt.-Col. R. S. Cox. (fn. 313) There
were one mistress and 18 pupils in 1887, but only
8 pupils in 1903. (fn. 314) The school was closed in 1904. (fn. 315)
Charities.
The inclosure award of 1613 assigned
to the poor 13 acres of land (fn. 316) and a rent of 5s. a year
paid by the rector for waste ground by the parsonage.
Up to 1814 the allotment was used as common
pasture by the inhabitants, and was the subject of
frequent disputes. Responsible trustees were only
appointed in 1815. By 1824 seventeen cottages, with
gardens, had been built on the allotment either by
the parish or the poor themselves, and there were 40
other gardens. Poor families paid the trustees 1s. 6d.
a year for a cottage and garden or 1s. for a garden
only. Vacancies were filled from the oldest poor inhabitants. The remainder of the allotment was let,
and the annual income of the whole including the
rector's 5s. was about £5, which was distributed to
the poor by the vestry, those without cottages or
gardens getting 5s. each, and those with them 1s.
A small surplus was reserved for poor widows and
old men. (fn. 317) In 1948 sixteen cottages brought in
£108 13s. 6d. and 48 gardens £4 7s.; land was rented
for £6 6s. and with the rector's 5s. and a rent charge
of £7 on part of the Souldern manor estate the total
income was £126 11s. 6d. (fn. 318)
Thomas Dodwell, by deed dated 1694, gave a rent
charge of £1 10s. a year to buy clothing for two poor
people to be chosen by those Protestant parishioners
who held ¼ yardland or more. In the 1820's five or
six poor Protestants received cloth to make jackets
or petticoats, the oldest married parishioners not receiving relief benefiting in turn.
By other deeds, dated 1694 and 1699, Dodwell conveyed about 20 acres of land on trust that its successive owners should distribute threepenny loaves
to four poor people every Sunday morning in the
parish church. Recipients were to be chosen in the
same way as for the clothing charity. In 1824, however, four poor widows were nominated by the
vestry.
Richard Cartwright of Aynho, by will dated 1634,
left a rent charge of £9 19s. 4d. to provide bread for
the poor of Aynho, Croughton (Northants), and
Souldern. In 1824 £2 3s. 4d. charged on lands in
Aynho was spent on eightpenny loaves for five poor
widows chosen by the vestry. (fn. 319)
Elizabeth Westcar of Hill House, by will dated
1820, left property in trust to raise £600, of which
£400 was to be invested and the income used to
purchase bread and clothing. These were to be distributed to the poor on Christmas day. (fn. 320)
In 1832 John Westcar bequeathed £506 6s. 7d. in
stock to provide clothing for the poor. The income of
the charity was £15 3s. 9d. in 1870. (fn. 321)
The Souldern charities were regulated by a scheme
of the Charity Commissioners made in 1891, but in
the early 20th century their administration and distribution were irregular and caused many disputes. (fn. 322)
Under a new scheme all the charities were amalgamated in 1949, and the income was to be used to buy
medicine and appliances for the sick, to help young
people to enter trades, to supply food, fuel, and
clothes for the needy, and to make loans of money in
cases of special distress. (fn. 323) Many of the cottages on
the poor's allotment were condemned after 1948,
and charity funds had temporarily to be employed
to repair others. In 1955 the total income was
£89 16s. 4d. and was made up of poor's allotment:
£57 11s.; Westcar charities: £26; Dodwell charities:
£4 2s., and Cartwright charity: £2 3s. 4d. (fn. 324)