WATERSTOCK
The ancient parish covered only 653 acres. (fn. 1) It lay in
a bend of the River Thame which bounded it on the
north and west; on the east its boundary followed a
brook and then continued with several right-angled
turns along what was probably the line of furlongs in
the open fields. (fn. 2) Large hedgerow elms still mark its
course. The Draycott road also marked a part of the
eastern boundary. The Thame-Oxford road and the
main London-Oxford road which it joins, formed the
southern boundary of the parish.
In 1886 the parish was enlarged by the addition of
Tiddington Mead (11 a.), formerly in Albury parish,
by Draycott village, and by 250 acres from the Oxfordshire part of Ickford parish. (fn. 3) Thus Waterstock's
eastern boundary mainly followed the Ickford road.
In 1954 Draycott village with 60 acres was transferred to Tiddington-with-Albury, and Waterstock's
acreage was reduced to 903 acres. (fn. 4)
The soil is gravel and loam on Kimmeridge Clay
and alluvial soil is found in the meadows bordering
the Thame. (fn. 5) The parish is low-lying and is mostly
within the 200-foot contour, is liable to floods in the
north-west and rises to 225 feet in the south-east
only.
The main approaches to the village have probably
always been from the south by the road leading from
the Thame-Oxford road, or from the east by the
Tiddington-Ickford road. (fn. 6) It is possible that the
first of these was the 17th-century 'Gysgire'. (fn. 7) In the
early 17th century there are several documentary
records of Lincroft Bridge near some leyground (fn. 8) and
to Lincroft which is shown on a 17th-century sketch
map. (fn. 9) The name, in fact, goes back to the 12th
century. (fn. 10) There does not seem to have been a stone
bridge over the Thame until in 1790 Diana Ashhurst
built the present Bow Bridge and a carriage road
over Little Mill Meadow to connect with Curson's
carriage road from Waterperry House and bridge
over Back Ditch. (fn. 11) The bridge has a single brick
arch and solid outcurving parapets with a stone
coping.
Waterstock's nearest station is at Tiddington. The
Wycombe and Oxford railway, running except for
one short stretch to the south of the parish boundary,
was opened in 1864. (fn. 12) It absorbed 15 acres of Hedges
Great Ground, which was paid for at the rate of £200
an acre. (fn. 13)
The village stands near the river about 200 feet up,
and centres round its church and manor-house. (fn. 14)
Long ownership in one family has resulted in a well
preserved village, mainly composed of 17th- and
18th-century farm-houses and cottages, built of
local brick. It has never been large, but except for a
short period in the 19th century it seems to have
been more populous in the Middle Ages than it has
ever been since. (fn. 15) Eighteen householders were listed
for the hearth tax of 1662 and in the 18th century
about fifteen to seventeen houses were recorded. (fn. 16)
In 1665 there were four substantial farm-houses with
two to six hearths apiece besides the big house and
smaller houses. Many of these houses still survive.
The oldest dwellings in the village are four timberframed Elizabethan or early Jacobean cottages: they
are of brick construction, and are built in pairs on
opposite sides of the road. Their hipped roofs of
thatch are swept down at the ends over one-story
extensions. They have irregularly spaced casement
windows that are mostly leaded. Two of the ancient
farm-houses in the village street are still used as
such: Home Farm and the adjoining Park Farm.
The first is L-shaped and dates mainly from the
17th and 18th centuries. The 17th-century wing is at
right angles to the road and consists of two stories; it
is timber-framed with brick infilling and the tiled
roof is half-hipped at the end fronting on the road.
The north-west elevation of this wing has a timberframed gable to the right hand, a rectangular chimney-stack to the left hand, and one gabled dormer
window. The wing to the north-west is built of
18th-century brick and has a tiled roof. The farm
has an ancient thatched barn and a 17th-century
granary which is built of brick and timber. Park
Farm is a house of two builds: it stands back from
the road and appears to be of 18th-century date,
although it may incorporate some of an older building. The west front has three bays and is of ashlar
stone. Members of the Bull family have been tenants
of both these farms for several generations. (fn. 17) The
farm-house, once Church Farm, lies opposite the
church, but it is now three cottages. It dates from the
early 18th century and is a two-story house of rubble
facing north. It has casement windows, mostly of
four lights with mullions and transoms of wood and
leaded panes; a six-panelled door and a low stone
wall separating it from the street. The schoolhouse
(now two cottages) and the cottage for a schoolteacher next door also date from the 18th century.
The school has a beam with the date 1751 on it. (fn. 18)
There have been some 19th- and 20th-century
additions: some cottages of red brick with slate roofs,
the stone pump-house at the entrance to the manor,
dated W.H.A. 1898, and a war memorial that was
erected on the small green after the First World War.
The pond which used to be at the cross roads has
been filled in, (fn. 19) but the stream running beside the
road to Home Farm remains. No council houses have
been built in the village.
The manor-house has experienced a number of
rebuildings. Nothing of the medieval house now
survives, but as it was successively lived in by several
important families of Oxfordshire gentry it must
have been a house of some size. The Bruleys inhabited it in the 13th and 14th centuries and the
Danvers family in the 15th century. (fn. 20) John Danvers
and his wife were given papal licence to have a portable altar to be used for the saying of mass for themselves and their household. (fn. 21) At the end of the
century Thomas Danvers brought distinction to the
village: he was a member of three parliaments and
also actively assisted in the foundation of Magdalen
College, for he was the friend of Bishop Waynflete
and the new learning. (fn. 22) It was from his Waterstock
house that Danvers wrote in 1494 to President Mayhew of Magdalen College telling that he was busy
with the affairs of the college and other learned institutions, and that he was in communication with
the king and the king's mother Margaret, Countess
of Richmond. (fn. 23) The windows of the house were
decorated with heraldic glass, for in his account of
the painted glass still there in the 17th century,
Anthony Wood mentions the arms of Danvers and
the related families of Bruley and Verney. (fn. 24) Later
the house was occupied by the Caves and then by the
Crokes. (fn. 25) Some details of the building in Sir George
Croke's day are known. It was by then one of the
larger houses in the county and was taxed on 23
hearths in 1665. (fn. 26) The arms of Croke and related
families as well as of Danvers were in the windows
of the upstairs drawing-room, the great and little
parlours and the hall. (fn. 27) Plot shows the house on his
map of Oxfordshire, and in his account of unusual
trees cultivated in the county he mentions the abele
tree grown by Sir George Croke, that 'learned and
curious botanist', who was one of the earliest
members of the Royal Society. (fn. 28)
The Crokes were strong supporters of the parliamentary cause and when General Ireton wrote from
Waterstock on 16 April 1646, about his preparations
for the siege of Wallingford, (fn. 29) it may be supposed
that he had his headquarters at the house of George
Croke, a friend of Baxter and Hampden. (fn. 30) This
house was pulled down in 1695 and was replaced by
a red-brick one in the time of Sir Henry Ashhurst. (fn. 31)
The new house, begun in 1695, was being completed
in 1696 when Mr. Thomas Hodges, joiner, of St.
Dunstan's, Stepney, was commissioned to wainscot
the hall and passage-way leading to the south-west
part of the mansion. He undertook to use 'good dram
stuff'; to make and fix handsome stone mouldings
round the windows of the hall, and 'breakes' in the
cornice over each of the windows; to make and fix a
seven-penny cornice round the hall; make doors of
eight or ten panels with six-inch stone moulding
round the door cases, 'pullexions to be laid into both
sides'. He was to be paid 3s. a yard for most of the
work, but 2s. 4d. for the wainscot in the passage. (fn. 32)
In 1787 Sir Henry Ashhurst, the eminent judge, took
down this building, and erected a new mansion of
stone rather higher up the slope above the church.
The foundation stone was laid in 1787 and the family
moved in in 1791. (fn. 33) According to a manuscript
memorandum among the family papers the architect
was 'Sir Richard Coucerell', presumably an error
for S. P. Cockerell (1754–1827). (fn. 34) The south-east
and entrance front were of five bays with the centre
bay and its pediment slightly projecting. The entrance on the ground floor was by a double sixpanelled door in a Doric surround with sidelights
and a stilted arched fanlight. On the first floor there
was a central Venetian window with engaged Ionic
columns. There was a string-course at the first floor
level and a modillioned cornice and a hipped roof of
slate. The wall swept up in the north-east corner to
a square garden-house. Sir Henry Ashhurst improved and enlarged his garden by taking part of the
churchyard in exchange for certain undertakings to
the rector. (fn. 35) and it was perhaps in his day that the
bricks from the old house were used for making
the walled garden. It was, however, in 1807–8, in
the time of his son W. H. Ashhurst, that the grounds
were laid out 'under the direction of Sir John
Hopper' (presumably the architect Thomas Hopper
is meant). (fn. 36) The ornamental water shown on the tithe
map of 1848 may belong to this date. (fn. 37) The 18th century house was pulled down in 1953, owing to
the expense of its upkeep, (fn. 38) after the servants'
quarters, a square stone building of two stories
attached to the main house by a corridor, had been
converted in 1953 by Major and Mrs. Ruck-Keene
into a modern dwelling. Their house is of four bays
and has a one-story extension to the left hand. The
stone cartouche of arms, formerly over the central
door of the stable courtyard, is above the entrance
door; a marble mantlepiece, moved from the old
mansion, is in the drawing-room; and the staircase is
a copy, on a reduced scale, of the Georgian staircase
of the old mansion. The builders were Hinkins &
Frewin Ltd. of Oxford. The stables, built in the form
of a courtyard, and lying to the south-east of the old
mansion and the present house, remain. They are
built of stone and are probably contemporary with
the 1787 house. They are entered through stone gatepiers.
The only other gentleman's house in the village is
the Rectory. It was repaired in 1787 by Mrs. Ashhurst, the mother of Sir Henry, for the new rector,
R. B. B. Robinson. (fn. 39) In the main it is an 18thcentury stone house of two stories, but an older wing
remains. The south-west front is of three bays. The
19th-century bay window extending from the ground
floor to the second floor was added before 1857. (fn. 40)
The veranda with pent roof across the front is also
later. The house had a well-laid-out garden with
some fine trees, which include a female gingko. (fn. 41)
Away from the village street and approached by a
road across the fields is the picturesque mill-house on
an island in the Thame. It is in origin a 15th-century
house, but has been rebuilt in the Elizabethan period.
Its plan is L-shaped: it is timber-framed with brick
filling, and has two stories. In the south front there
is one half-hipped gable to the left hand, and two
gabled dormer windows to the centre and right. The
casement windows and entrance door are irregularly
spaced. Inside, one of the timber beams has the
initials of Sir Henry Ashhurst carved on it and the
date 1693. All the timber used is uncut tree trunks.
The oldest part of the house is the stone walling in
the south-west corner.
The village has been associated with a number of
families of interest who held the lordship and resided
at the manor-house. (fn. 42) The Ashhursts who were
resident from 1691 to the mid-20th century may,
perhaps, be specially mentioned. An event of minor
importance, but of some local interest, occurred in
1695 when Sarah Smith, the sister-in-law of the
vicar, Charles Hinde, (fn. 43) married in Waterstock
church White Kennett, (fn. 44) then Vicar of Ambrosden,
but later to be distinguished by high preferment in
the church and as the author of Parochial Antiquities
in the counties of Oxford and Bucks. (fn. 45)
Manor.
An estate, assessed at 5 hides, at Waterstock was held freely by the Saxon Alwi in the
time of the Confessor. In 1086 it was held by Sawold
'of the fee of St. Mary of Lincoln'. (fn. 46) This Sawold
should perhaps be identified with the Sawold who
was one of the bishop's knights and held 4 hides of
the manor of Thame. (fn. 47) As later evidence shows that
Waterstock was a member of Thame manor throughout the Middle Ages the identification seems highly
probable, and it must be supposed that the Domesday scribes duplicated the entry relating to Sawold. (fn. 48)
In the early 16th century the bishop still received a
relief of 50s. on the death of the lord of Waterstock. (fn. 49)
In the earliest list of the bishop's knights in 1166
the holder of the fee is not named. (fn. 50) A Richard
Foliot, however, had land in neighbouring Waterperry in about 1190, (fn. 51) and the family had held land
in Waterstock at an earlier date, for Richard's father,
possibly Bartholomew Foliot, (fn. 52) had granted it to
Oseney Abbey. (fn. 53) The Foliots' relatives, the Chesneys, were overlords of Albury, another neighbouring parish. (fn. 54) As one of them was Robert de Chesney,
Bishop of Lincoln (1148–66), it is not unlikely that
Bishop Robert enfeoffed the Foliots with Waterstock. Bartholomew Foliot, a knight, and known to
have had a tenant there in 1218, (fn. 55) was certainly in
possession of the manor in 1235 or 1236, when he
presented to the church, (fn. 56) and perhaps as late as
1250. (fn. 57) He had been succeeded by Sir William
Foliot, probably by 1255 and at latest by 1268. (fn. 58) The
latter was dead by 1276 when his widow Agnes
latter was dead by 1276 when his widow Agnes
claimed a house and ½-virgate in Waterstock as her
dower. (fn. 59) William Foliot's heir was Katherine, his
daughter apparently by his first wife, (fn. 60) who carried
the estate to the Bruley family through her marriage
with Sir Henry Bruley, knight of the shire for Oxfordshire in 1297. It remained in the family for five
generations. Sir Henry was returned in 1279 as lord
of Waterstock (fn. 61) and as the holder of a ½-fee in 1305. (fn. 62)
He was presumably dead by 1315, when Katherine
settled the manor on her second son John, to be held
of her during her lifetime at a rent of £50 and after
her death for a rose. (fn. 63) Her heir was her eldest son
(or grandson) William, who inherited the family
manor of Aston Bruley in White Ladies Aston
(Worcs.) (fn. 64)
John Bruley was lord of the manor in 1316 and
1327. (fn. 65) The date of his death is uncertain and his
heir according to the herald's pedigree was John. (fn. 66)
He appears to have been succeeded at Waterstock,
however, by a Thomas Bruley: in 1346 John Bruley
was returned as holding the manor, 'sometime held
by Thomas Bruley'. (fn. 67) It is likely that this Thomas
was John Bruley's younger brother whom he had
presented to the rectory, and that he acted as guardian to John II when he was a minor. (fn. 68) John II, who
was probably the husband of Bona Fitzellis and
collector of the subsidy in Oxfordshire in 1350, (fn. 69)
may have been dead by 1361, when Thomas Bruley
is said to have presented a certain Thomas atte
Fortheye on the death of the rector Thomas Bruley, (fn. 70)
but it is more probable that John was still patron and
that the appearance of 'Thomas' as patron is the
result of a scribal error. (fn. 71) By 1372 at all events John
II was dead and his heir John III was a minor. (fn. 72)
The boy may never have succeeded, as in 1380
Waterstock was in the possession of William and
Agnes Bruley. (fn. 73) The suggestion that William Bruley
was John's son is hardly possible and he was more
probably a cousin, a descendant of Henry, the
youngest brother of John (I) Bruley. (fn. 74) There seems
little doubt that his wife Agnes was his cousin and
the descendant of William Bruley, John I's eldest
brother or nephew. (fn. 75) The fine made by Agnes and
William in 1380 implies that Agnes had a claim to
Waterstock in her own right: they settled the pro
perty first on the heirs of their bodies; secondly on the
heirs of Agnes by a second marriage; and thirdly on
the collateral heirs of William. (fn. 76)
William Bruley, knight of the shire for Oxfordshire in 1395, outlived his wife and their son John,
who had married Maud Quatremain, sister and coheiress of Richard Quatremain of Rycote. (fn. 77) Before
1423, however, he had enfeoffed his granddaughter
Joan and her husband John Danvers, of Epwell in
Swalcliffe and later of Colthorpe in Banbury, with
Waterstock manor. (fn. 78) Danvers, who represented the
county in three parliaments, and built up a large
landed estate, was returned as lord in 1428 (fn. 79) and
appears to have died shortly after 1448. (fn. 80) His widow
Joan married as her second husband Sir Walter
Mauntell of Nether Heyford (Northants.) and they
presented to Waterstock church in 1467 and 1469. (fn. 81)
Much of John Danvers's property went to his sons
by his first wife, but Thomas, his eldest son by Joan
Bruley, succeeded to his mother's lands. (fn. 82) He married
twice, first a daughter of James Fiennes, Lord Saye
and Sele, and secondly Sybil Fowler, member of a
family with whom the Danvers family was already
connected by marriage. (fn. 83) Danvers died in 1502, (fn. 84)
leaving the manor for life to his widow, who lived
until 1511 (fn. 85) and outlived both the next heir, her
brother-in-law Sir William Danvers (d. 1504) of
Thatcham (Berks.) (fn. 86) and the latter's son John (d.
1508). (fn. 87) The infant son of John Danvers, also called
John, was his father's heir, but he died in 1517 and
his heirs were his four sisters. (fn. 88) One of these died,
and by an arrangement presumably made between
the three survivors, Waterstock passed to Elizabeth,
the second eldest, and her husband Thomas Cave of
Stanford (Northants.). (fn. 89) He obtained licence to take
possession of his wife's lands in 1522. (fn. 90) By a fine of
1528 the manor and advowson were settled on
Thomas and Elizabeth with remainder to the heirs
of Elizabeth should Thomas and Elizabeth have no
issue. (fn. 91) The Cave family, who acquired in the same
way the neighbouring manor of Tiddington, (fn. 92) became by this marriage lords of Waterstock for almost
a hundred years. Sir Thomas was knighted in 1553
and died in 1558. (fn. 93) One of his younger sons,
Edward, (fn. 94) appears also temporarily to have held
Waterstock. He was living in the manor-house in
1574 (fn. 95) and was probably the Edward Cave of Bampton who presented to Waterstock church between
1576 and 1580. (fn. 96) However, Roger Cave, Sir
Thomas's son and heir, who married Margaret Cecil,
sister of Lord Burghley, held the manor at his death
in 1586 and settled it in tail male on his four sons. (fn. 97)
The eldest, Sir Thomas Cave, succeeded, and in
1610 he and his brother Sir William sold Waterstock
to George Croke, the grandson of John Croke of
Chilton (Bucks.), the purchaser of Studley Priory. (fn. 98)
Sir George, who became a noted judge, was buried
at Waterstock in 1642, leaving his wife Mary a life
interest in the manor. (fn. 99) Since their son died young,
Croke's heir was his nephew George Croke, son of
Henry Croke (d. 1642), Rector of Waterstock. (fn. 100) He
married Jane, daughter of the parliamentary leader
Sir Richard Onslow, (fn. 101) and was knighted in 1660.
According to Wood, he 'ran out his estate' and got
into debt. (fn. 102) On his death in 1680 Waterstock, by then
encumbered by mortgages, (fn. 103) was divided between his
two daughters, Elizabeth, wife of Sir Thomas
Wyndham, Bt., of Trent (Som.), (fn. 104) and Sarah, who
later married Henry Wigmore. (fn. 105)
In 1691 they sold the manor for nearly £16,000 to
Sir Henry Ashhurst, Bt., (fn. 106) who already owned the
neighbouring Emmington manor. His descendants
lived in Waterstock until the mid-20th century and
were prominent in the life of the county. Sir Henry,
who served in Parliament for many years, was, like
his father Henry Ashhurst, a London merchant and
a friend of Richard Baxter, (fn. 107) but he settled at Waterstock and died there in 1711. He was succeeded by his
son Henry, who died childless in 1732, when the title
lapsed. (fn. 108) The estate was inherited by the latter's niece
Diana, the wife of Thomas Henry Ashhurst (d.
1744), a distant cousin and a member of the Lancashire branch of the family. (fn. 109) Their son Sir William
Henry Ashhurst (d. 1807), a well-known judge, (fn. 110) was
succeeded by his son William Henry Ashhurst, M.P.
(d. 1846), (fn. 111) and his grandson John Henry Ashhurst
(d. 1885). The son of the last, William Henry, died
in 1929 (fn. 112) and his daughter, Gladys Mary Ashhurst,
J.P., was the last member of the family. (fn. 113) On her
death in 1949 Waterstock passed to her nephew,
Major Henry W. A. Ruck-Keene who now (1959)
lives at Waterstock.
Economic and Social History.
Nothing
is known of any early settlement at Waterstock, but
the name, meaning 'water place', indicates an AngloSaxon origin. In 1086 it was assessed at 5 hides, 3 of
which were in demesne, with 2 ploughs and a mill
worth 9s. 5d. There were 5 serfs, the only inhabitants mentioned, and 36 acres of meadow. The jurors
declared that there was sufficient land for 5 ploughs,
and a marginal note states that there had been that
number in King Edward's time, 3 of them on the
demesne. The value of the estate had appreciated
from 20s. to no less than 50s. (fn. 114)
By 1279 the servile element in the population had
disappeared, and there had been considerable tenurial development. The lord of the manor had 10½
virgates in demesne, together with a fishery and a
mill. His tenants held a further 12 virgates. Among
them were 8 virgaters who each paid 5s. rent and
services to the same value, and 2 cottagers who paid
6s. and rendered services worth 2s. There were also
5 free tenants, 4 of whom held a total of 4 virgates
and paid rent amounting to 6s. 8d., while a fifth held
a ½-virgate of one of the others in socage. (fn. 115)
The 14th-century tax assessments support the impression given by the hundred rolls of a village with
few tenants, all of whom had small holdings. In 1306,
for instance, out of 17 persons taxed only 3, including Henry Bruley, lord of the manor, were assessed
at more than 2s. (fn. 116) In 1327 of 25 taxed for the 1/20th
10 paid 2s. and over. The total assessment was
£2 7s. (fn. 117) Under the new assessment of 1334, the total
rose to £3 2s. 4d. for the 1/15th. (fn. 118)
Only 51 persons over fourteen were listed in the
poll tax of 1377, (fn. 119) possibly as a consequence of the
Black Death and subsequent economic changes. The
returns for the subsidy of 1523 indicate that there
had been a concentration of wealth since the early
14th century and perhaps some decline in population. There were eleven contributors to the total tax
of £1 7s. 8d. The only gentleman in the list, presumably the tenant of the manor, was the only man of
means, with goods worth £17 compared with the
better-off yeomen with goods worth £8 and £7. (fn. 120)
Glebe terriers of 1601 and 1609 give the earliest
details of the field system. (fn. 121) These show that there
were three arable fields grouped round the village.
To the south lay Conygere Field, which was renamed
South Field in the later terrier. The old name survived in the Warren close and field of 17th- and 18thcentury indentures and the Warren of the 1848 tithe
award map. (fn. 122) To the east was Gravelly Field, said to
have been called so on account of its soil, but renamed East Field in 1609. To the north of this lay
the North East or Hamm Field, as it was anciently
called. (fn. 123) In addition there was Lincroft in the northwest, an island of some 40 acres of ley ground that
was divided into two series of 2-acre strips. South of
Lincroft lay the small 2-acre glebe meadow, Moor
meadow, and the Cowleys. (fn. 124)
The earliest recorded in closure was made in about
1530 when some pasture was inclosed to form West
Field. (fn. 125) Further inclosure apparently took place between 1601 and 1609, for the later terrier was said to
have been made 'since the inclosure'. (fn. 126) It is not clear
what had been done, for the glebe lands still lay unconsolidated in ½-acre strips in each of the common
fields. But the South Field was now in two parts—
apparently a new division of the old Conygere Field,
the parsonage having 7 ½-acres in one field and
another 7 in the other. This could be an indication of
a change from a 3- to a 4-field system of cultivation.
There were 2½ glebe acres in each of the other fields.
The later terrier also shows that all three arable
fields were hedged, and this may have been done
since 1601, when there is no mention of other than
private hedges. There is specific mention of the new
hedge in North East Field. (fn. 127)
It is clear that considerable inclosure of demesne
land took place in the 17th and 18th centuries. An
instance of this may have occurred in 1618, when
George Croke was given permission to convert 180
acres of arable to pasture. (fn. 128) In 1663 Sir George
Croke mortgaged the Windmill Ground of 105 acres
to Edward Honywood, a London citizen and ironmonger. This land was said to be inclosed and to
have been at one time converted into tillage but later
laid down for pasture. (fn. 129) The year before when it had
been leased for 21 years, together with the Mill Close
of 10 acres, the rent was £133. (fn. 130) In 1676 'further
pastures' of 92 acres adjoining Windmill Field were
in the occupation of two of Croke's tenants. (fn. 131) As late
as 1749 part of Windmill Field (adjoining Mill Close)
was said to have been 'lately' inclosed, although
perhaps this should not be taken too literally. (fn. 132) In
1680 Lincroft, which had earlier been divided up
into strips, was said to be in the occupation of Sir
George Croke himself. (fn. 133) In 1676 he had mortgaged
a number of closes and meadows, all said to be
demesne land, which formed a fairly compact block
of land in the north of the parish. The aggregate of
their rents was £202. (fn. 134) In the same year he had
mortgaged other land, mainly meadow, situated in
the southern part of the parish, which produced
£199 rent. (fn. 135) It seems likely that most if not all of
these lands were inclosed.
In the latter half of the 18th century there was one
landowner, the Ashhurst family, in Waterstock, and
four principal tenants. (fn. 136) In 1749 the Ashhursts had
leased lands to Stephen Radford at a rent of £200.
By the terms of his lease he was permitted to plough
Windmill Field, together with some neighbouring
land, a third at a time. Each third could be maintained as arable for five years and used for five crops
only and was then to be returned to pasture, the
whole to remain pasture for the last five years of the
term. He was also allowed to cultivate other fields
for five years, but at the end of that time he was to
sow grass and to reconvert to pasture under penalty
of £5 an acre for neglect. (fn. 137) A Radford remained as
tenant until at least 1832. (fn. 138) A second tenement was
leased for 21 years in 1760 to Humphrey Eaton. (fn. 139)
His main arable land lay in Thameswhy Ground
immediately to the north of the Oxford–Thame road
and consisted of 30 acres which he had to plough in
10-acre lots for four years and four crops of corn,
which meant that over a period each third lay fallow
one year in three. He could plough other lands for
the first five years of his term, but in the fifth they
were to be sown with grass. He was to pay £223 rent,
and £10 less in the last year of the term. Eatons held
the farm until at least 1821, after which it apparently
passed to the Parsons family. (fn. 140) of the other two
tenements assessed in 1785 much less is known. (fn. 141)
As elsewhere in the neighbourhood there may
have been an increase, though a small one, in population in the last quarter of the 18th century. The first
official census of 1801 recorded 114 inhabitants. (fn. 142)
Earlier returns of the number of houses in the parish
gave 16 in 1768 and 15 thirty years earlier. (fn. 143) If these
figures are accurate there would appear to have been
little change in population since the second half of
the 17th century. Eighteen householders were listed
for the hearth tax of 1662 and 55 adults over 16 were
returned for the Compton Census of 1676. (fn. 144)
Arthur Young gives some account of farming at
Waterstock at the beginning of the 19th century. He
describes the land as all grass, which seems to have
been an exaggeration, and as for the most part inclosed
pasture. (fn. 145) The grass lands were good and mostly let,
the meadows for 50s. and the pasture for 40s. an
acre. (fn. 146) Two tons of hay were taken from every acre
at the first crop, and one at the second, although it
was considered bad for the land to take a second
crop. (fn. 147) W. H. Ashhurst appears as a progressive
dairy farmer. He had planted cabbages (for cattle
food), when these were still uncommon in Oxfordshire, and had brought in short-horn cattle, which
were fed on hay, not straw, in the winter. The butter
was sent under contract to London. (fn. 148)
In the first half of the 19th century there were four
and, after 1821, three tenant farmers, Ashhurst
keeping the smallest acreage in his own hand. (fn. 149)
James Parsons, who farmed 158 acres at a rent of
£257, went bankrupt in 1832. He was mainly a cattle
farmer, but he also kept some sheep and raised crops
of wheat, barley, oats, and beans. He had a malt-mill
and granary which, together with other effects, were
valued at £55 8s. 6d. (fn. 150)
The 1848 tithe-award map gives the first comprehensive view of Waterstock. To the west along the
bank of the Thame lay a belt of meadow and grassland which broadened out to occupy the whole of the
north-west corner of the parish, while the arable
land was concentrated mainly in the north-east and
south. The total acreage was 653, of which 269 acres
were arable and 348 meadow and pasture. Three
tenants occupied farms of 244, 208, and 166 acres
respectively. (fn. 151)
For most of the latter half of the 19th century there
were two tenant farmers. A document of 1876 gives
details of the farming methods imposed by the landlord. The tenant was to cultivate the arable according
to a 'five-field system of husbandry', 3/5 in wheat,
barley, or oats, 1/6 left fallow for turnips and vetches
for feeding sheep and horses, and 1/6 in clover, beans,
or pulse. Not more than two white straw crops were
to be grown in succession and even then they were
not to be of the same kind. The tenant was to consume on the farm all hay, turnips, straw, fodder, and
chaff produced there, and to spread all dung on the
fields. At least twice in a summer he was to cut the
thistles on the pasture lands. (fn. 152)
In 1885, when W. H. Ashhurst took over the
Waterstock estate on the death of his father, there
were two farms of 206 and 326 acres, the tenants
paying rents of £412 and £630 respectively. (fn. 153) Ashhurst probably kept about 116 acres in his own hand,
as his father had done. (fn. 154) On the estate were 20
cottages, their rents ranging from £2 5s. to £2 12s.
There were three farms in 1939, Home farm and
Park farm in the village, and Lower farm on the
Thame–Oxford Road, (fn. 155) and the same number in
1959. At both dates mixed farming was practised.
The presence of gravel had long been known
and in an 18th-century lease Sir George Croke had
reserved his rights to dig for it in return for proper
compensation. (fn. 156) In 1924 Highways Construction
were permitted to dig gravel for two years at a rent
of £10 an acre plus royalties. The workings lay just
to the north of the village and the contractors were
allowed to lay a light railway to connect them with
a siding on the G.W.R. line south of the OxfordThame Road. (fn. 157)
During the first 30 years of the 19th century the
population had risen fairly steadily from 114 in 1801
to a peak of 142 in 1831. It then fluctuated until a
new peak of 147 was reached in 1861. Thereafter
there was a steady decline until in 1901—despite the
addition of Draycott to the parish—there were only
108 persons. (fn. 158) This trend was continued in the 20th
century, and by 1951 there were 96 persons in the
civil parish. (fn. 159)
Mills.
A mill at Waterstock is mentioned in both
Domesday Book and the hundred rolls. (fn. 160) In 1528
there was said to be both a water- and a horse-driven
mill. (fn. 161) In indentures and fines of the 17th and 18th
centuries two water grist mills and one windmill are
commonly mentioned. It is unlikely, however, that
there were two water-mills under separate roofs. In
1676 the water grist mill with a little meadow was
worth £30 a year. (fn. 162) In 1697 Sir Henry Ashhurst
leased to Richard Lamboll, formerly of Thame, for
21 years and at an annual rent of £50 the corn and
water-mills under one roof, a dwelling-house, and
two portions of meadow containing 6 acres, as well
as the corn and windmills under one roof on Windmill Ground, together with Mill Close containing
about 10½ acres. Sir Henry reserved to himself and
his tenants the right of pulling up the floodgates
every year from 1 May to 10 October, if floods
threatened their property. (fn. 163) In 1725 there was a
similar lease to Richard Lamborne of Lamborn
(Berks.) for a further 20 years and at the same rent. (fn. 164)
The mill was built on a small island in the Thame,
the water passing over weirs on both sides, the larger
weir on the west or Waterperry side providing the
water for the mill race—it was apparently this weir
which was rebuilt in 1846 by John Collins of Wolvercote at a cost of £150. (fn. 165) By 1957 the mill and millhouse had been converted into a modern dwelling.
No trace remains of the windmill.
Church.
The earliest evidence for the existence
of Waterstock church, a rectory in Cuddesdon
deanery, dates from about 1190, when the parish had
its own priest Elias. (fn. 166) The first recorded presentation was made in 1235 or 1236 by Bartholomew
Foliot, the lord of the manor. (fn. 167) Since then the
descent of the advowson has followed that of the
manor. In 1372, during the minority of John Bruley,
Robert Woubourne of Milton was patron, and in 1380
John Salveyn for an unexplained reason. In the 15th
century the Danvers family succeeded the Bruleys as
patrons; in 1467 and 1469 Joan, the widow of John
Danvers, and her second husband Sir Walter
Mauntell presented; in 1517, during the minority of
John Danvers, William Boughton presented, and in
1528 Danvers's three sisters and their husbands did
so. The advowson passed with the manor to one of
these, Elizabeth and her husband Thomas Cave, and
remained with the family until George Croke bought
it in 1610. The presentation of 1551 was sold, however, to a group which included John Smith, Provost
of Oriel College, (fn. 168) and in 1576 the queen presented
by lapse. (fn. 169) In 1691 manor and advowson were
bought by Sir Henry Ashhurst, who came from a
family with Puritan sympathies. (fn. 170) In 1709, in order
to preserve 'serious godliness' in the parishes of
which he was patron (Waterstock and Emmington),
he made arrangements, if his son should die without
sons, for trustees to choose two ministers 'that believe
and preach the old doctrinal articles commonly
called Calvinistical'. The trustees included several
well-known Presbyterian divines and Edmund
Calamy, the historian of nonconformity. The lord of
the manor was to present one of the two selected
ministers to the living. (fn. 171) At each vacancy each trustee
was to receive 20s. with which to buy a 'book of
divinity'. Although Sir Henry's son died without
sons, it is not clear if this method of choosing a rector
was ever used. The advowson remained with the
Ashhursts until the death of Miss Ashhurst in 1949.
The patrons in 1957 were her executors.
There have twice been attempts in the 20th
century to unite the livings of Waterstock and
Waterperry, but though held together, they remain
separate benefices. (fn. 172)
In the Middle Ages the rectory was a rather poor
one, worth £4 in 1254 and £5 6s. 8d. in 1291. (fn. 173) By
1535 its value had risen to £10 16s. ½d. (fn. 174) In the early
17th century it was said to be worth £100, (fn. 175) but soon
after this it was impoverished by an arrangement
made sometime before 1659 between the rector and
the lord of the manor. The lord, who owned the
whole parish except the glebe, agreed to pay the
rector a modus of £40 a year instead of tithes. (fn. 176)
Accordingly, the value of the rectory, derived from
this £40 and the glebe, rose little between the mid17th and the mid-19th centuries. In 1716 it was
worth £55, in 1806 only £64 10s., (fn. 177) and in 1847,
when the question of commuting the tithes was
raised, J. H. Ashhurst claimed that on the basis of
this composition the parish was tithe free. (fn. 178) The
Tithe Commissioners, on the other hand, considered
the modus 'absolutely void' (fn. 179) and in 1848 the tithes
were commuted for £250. (fn. 180)
The small glebe was first mentioned in 1341 (fn. 181) and
its earliest terriers date from 1601 and 1609. (fn. 182) In
1806 it consisted of 12 acres, the greater part of
which lay next to the rectory. (fn. 183) In 1790 the rector
had given Sir William Henry Ashhurst, who was rebuilding the church, ¾-acre of glebe in return for a
promise that in the future the lord of the manor
would be responsible for the upkeep of the chancel. (fn. 184)
Medieval rectors, in spite of the comparative
poverty of the living, held it as a rule for many years.
They never exchanged it for a better one and most of
them died at their posts. (fn. 185) Examples are Master
John de Hadenham (c. 1235–68); Thomas Bruley
(1326–61), probably a younger brother of the lord of
the manor, who acted as feoffee for Waterperry
manor; (fn. 186) John Kent (1423–67), who acted as feoffee
for the Danvers family; (fn. 187) and Master John Brown
(1469–99), who is portrayed in one of the church
windows. (fn. 188) It seems likely that these clerks were
resident. Proof of residence in 1405 comes from an
account of a robbery. The rector's church and house
were then broken into and coverlets, sheets, jewels,
and household utensils worth 20 marks belonging to
him and the churchwardens were stolen. (fn. 189)
In the early 16th century the wills of Sir Thomas
Danvers (d. 1502), who was a generous benefactor to
the church building, (fn. 190) and of his widow Sibyl (d.
1511) show the close connexion between the church
and the family living at the manor-house. They were
both buried in the church and both left instructions for services to be said for them there. Two
Oxford scholars were to say daily mass for Sir
Thomas, and on the eight principal feasts these
masses were to be said in Waterstock; two Oxford
scholars were likewise to say services for Dame Sibyl,
but only once a year in Waterstock on the day of her
anniversary. (fn. 191) The rector at the time of their death,
Robert Wright (1501–16), to whom Sir Thomas left
a bequest of 13s. 4d., was a witness of Sibyl's will. (fn. 192)
He was probably dead by the time of the episcopal
visitation of about 1520, when the church was found
to be comparatively well cared for: the only faults
noted were that the font was kept unlocked and some
windows were broken. (fn. 193)
Later in the century the parish had some highly
educated rectors, but they only held the living for
short periods. Richard Bruern (1551–9), who may have
had to resign it as he did his Oxford professorship
because of immorality, (fn. 194) was succeeded by Thomas
Bruern (d. 1561), once a Fellow of Brasenose
College. (fn. 195) John Tatham, rector in 1576, was Rector
of Lincoln College; (fn. 196) and John Rider, who was
perhaps rector in 1580, was a well-known lexicographer who became a bishop. (fn. 197)
In the early 17th century, when George Croke
was patron, he gave the living to two of his nephews:
Charles Croke (rector in 1616), who was later chaplain to Charles I; (fn. 198) and Henry Croke (1618–42), also
Canon of Lincoln and Wells, who may, like other
members of the Croke family, have been more sympathetic to Puritanism. The inventory of his goods at
his death indicates that he was of a scholarly character: his Waterstock house had a 'study chamber',
and there were books there to the value of £40. (fn. 199)
After the Restoration the living was held for nearly
50 years by Charles Hinde (1677–1725), described by
Hearne as 'the pettifogger of Waterstock'. (fn. 200) He was
presented by Sir George Croke and was clearly on
excellent terms with Croke's successor, Sir Henry
Ashhurst. He shared the interest of his most dearly
beloved patron in the history of the church building.
Hearne also relates that he was regretful that the old
village custom of holding 'prones (homilies) and
wakes' had ceased. (fn. 201) Hinde was succeeded by Edward
Lewis (1726–84), an author and a strong opponent of
Roman Catholicism, who also held the other Ashhurst living of Emmington. (fn. 202) He lived at Waterstock,
but on Sundays he went to Emmington while a
curate from Oxford, who received £20 or £25 a year,
took the services at Waterstock. (fn. 203) Throughout the
century two services and one sermon were given on
Sundays, and the sacrament was administered four
times a year. (fn. 204) In the second half of the century the
rector said prayers, which anyone could attend, on
Wednesdays, Fridays, and saints' days at the Ashhursts' house. (fn. 205)
On Lewis's death a characteristic 18th-century
arrangement was made. The antiquary John Gutch
served the church with a curate from 1785 to 1789
and kept the living warm for the son of the Rector of
Albury, who was at that time a student at Oxford. (fn. 206)
The young R. B. B. Robinson (rector 1790–1826) (fn. 207)
duly succeeded, and lived at Waterstock in the
Rectory which the Ashhursts had rebuilt for him.
They also presented him to Emmington. (fn. 208) From this
time the parish almost always had a resident rector.
To this fact and to the piety of the Ashhursts may
perhaps be attributed the fact that no papists and no
protestant nonconformists were recorded in the 18th
or 19th centuries.
During the century the number of communicants
increased steadily. In 1738 there had been less than
20; in the early 19th century there were between 30
and 40; in 1854 over 50 and over 60 in 1878. (fn. 209)
James H. Ashhurst (1856–96), a younger son of
W. H. Ashhurst and Rural Dean of Cuddesdon,
brought a new fervour into the religious life of the
parish. He increased the number of communion
services from the four of 1854 to over twelve a year;
continued the Sunday school, gave religious instruction in the day schools; and held a well-attended
night school in winter. In his time nearly everyone
in Waterstock went to church. (fn. 210)
The church of St. Leonard is a stone building
of various dates comprising a chancel, nave, north
aisle, western tower, and north and south porches.
The early medieval church was rebuilt at the end of
the 15th century by Thomas Danvers and his first
wife, a daughter of James Fiennes, Lord Saye and
Sele (fn. 211) . An inscription below the arms of Danvers
which was in a window in the north aisle and which
was recorded by Anthony Wood indicates that they
began the work by rebuilding the nave. The inscription ran: 'Orate pro animabus … filiae Jacobi
Finys, qui istam ecclesiam fecerunt anno gratiae
MCCCCLXXX.' (fn. 212) A north aisle dedicated to St.
Ann was being built in 1501, for Thomas Danvers
directed in his will, dated November 1501, that the
'aisle' be finished 'in as goodly hast as it may be and
covered with lead'. (fn. 213) A new chancel, which he had
begun, was also to be finished under the supervision
of his second wife Sybyl Brecknoke (neé Fowler). (fn. 214)
He directed that he should be buried in the chancel
'before St. Leonard'. His monument, described by
Wood, no longer exists. (fn. 215)
The windows of the new building were filled with
painted glass mostly of 15th and early 16th-century
date. Nothing further is known of the history of the
fabric until 1692, when Sir Henry Ashhurst was given
permission to take over part of the north aisle (28 ft.
by 12 ft.) as a 'dormitory' or burial place for his
family on condition that he kept it in repair and
beautified it. (fn. 216) The fabric was apparently neglected
in the first half of the 18th century, for in 1758 the
archdeacon ordered that elder bushes and banks of
rubbish should be moved from 'the foundation of the
walls of the church'; that part of the walls and tower
should be repointed, the pavement of church and
chancel should be laid and made even, and a new
door should be made on the north side. (fn. 217) In 1789 the
church was again reported out of repair and in 1790
nave and chancel were rebuilt by Sir W. H. Ashhurst. (fn. 218) Early 19th-century drawings of the church
and an account of the same period record that the
chancel had an east window of three lights without
tracery and no side windows; that there were two
windows in the south wall of the nave, each of three
round-headed lights under a square label and that
the nave had a flat ceiling with a cornice; that the
north aisle with its perpendicular windows and the
west tower of three stories with a parapet and small
bellcote had been left in their original state except
for the addition of the clock on the east face of the
tower. (fn. 219)
![[Waterstock church]](image-thumb.aspx?compid=63779&pubid=541&filename=fig18.gif)
[Waterstock church]
In 1845 chancel, nave, and tower all needed repair. The estimated cost was about £30. (fn. 220) No major
repairs were executed until a thorough restoration
was carried out during 1857–8 under the direction of
the architect G. E. Street. The builder was George
Wyatt of Oxford. The church was under-pinned, a
brick gutter put round it and the earth removed from
the foundation; the south wall of the nave was repaired, two new windows and a door being inserted
in place of the old ones; the plaster ceiling was removed so as to open up the nave roof, and a battlemented cornice was added. The gallery erected at
the west end at some unknown date was abolished. A
new chancel arch was built; a new east window,
copied from one at Great Milton church, was inserted and the chancel ceiling was raised so as to
show the point of the window. The chancel and
north aisle were reroofed, the north wall of the aisle
having been made 3 feet higher. A new vestry and a
south and a north porch were built. The church was
repaved, Minton tiles being used for the chancel, and
it was reseated and refurnished. Parishioners gave a
new pulpit, lectern, prayer desk, altar rails, and font.
The medieval font, 'plain and round', had to be replaced as it no longer held water. Thomas Willement
did three painted windows (i.e. the east and west
windows and a small one in the chancel); Castell of
London painted the Belief, the Lord's Prayer and
the Commandments, and three texts for the back of
the altar for use on festivals. The total cost, including
the gifts of furniture, windows, and the two new
porches, was about £1,500. (fn. 221)
Further alterations were made later in the century.
In 1861 the east window in the north aisle was given
by Mrs. Ashhurst and in 1872 the painted reredos of
the Last Supper and altar dado, consisting of panels
with painted figures of saints and prophets, was
given by the Revd. J. H. Ashhurst. (fn. 222) In 1888 a new
belfry floor was made and a clock was placed in the
tower. (fn. 223)
There was another restoration in 1930. The roof
was stripped and covered with slates; the church was
refloored and put in 'complete order'. (fn. 224) Electric
light has since been installed.
The chief glory of the medieval church was its
painted glass. Only that in the three top lights of the
Ashhurst window in the north aisle has survived
the various restorations, but Anthony Wood visited
Waterstock in May 1668, and has left a detailed
record. (fn. 225) In the chancel window were the arms of
France and England quartered, and the arms of the
Bruley, Quartermain, and Danvers families. In the
north window of the nave were the figures of two
men 'all in blew', each kneeling before a desk, one a
clergyman the other a layman, and the pictures of
three saints above them. (fn. 226) This window was commissioned, according to the inscription underneath,
by Master John Brown, once rector of the church, in
memory of himself, his father Thomas Brown, and
his mother. Master John Brown (rector 1469–99) and
his father may be identified with the figures in two of
the surviving fragments. (fn. 227) The other surviving fragment is 13th-century glass. The rest of the glass
described by Wood was probably commissioned by
Thomas Danvers or his two wives, either for the
windows of the nave after it was rebuilt in 1480 or
for the north aisle after 1501. The armorial glass included the arms of many families with which the
Danvers were allied by marriage, those for instance
of Brancastre, Pury, Verney, Fowler, and Brecknoke.
There were also painted figures of Thomas Danvers
and his two wives, and over them the pictures of
three female saints, identified by Wood as Barbara,
'Trinitas', and Anna; a figure of Thomas Danvers,
esquire (presumably one commissioned before his
investiture as a knight in 1501); (fn. 228) and of John Danvers, esquire.
There was formerly an inscription which ran:
'Orate pro animabus Johannis Danvers et domine
Johanne et heredis Johannis Bruly et Matildae
Quatermayne uxoris sue quondam patronorum
istius ecclesie.' There were also inscriptions to the
following: Henry Danvers and his wife Beatrice, the
daughter of Sir Ralph Verney; Richard Danvers of
Prestcote; Sir John Fray and his wife Agnes; William
Fowler and his wife Cicely; and William Danvers
and his wife Anne. Anne died in 1531 (fn. 229) and seems to
have been the last of the Danvers family to be commemorated. Wood also describes a figure of a bishop
with his crozier resting on his shoulder, wearing his
mitre and 'praying'. The last figure had an inscription beneath with the names of George Neville,
Archbishop of York (1464–76), William Waynflete,
Bishop of Winchester, a friend of Thomas Danvers,
and Thomas Danvers himself. Another figure of a
bishop surmounted the archiepiscopal arms of York
quartering Montague, Monthermer, and Neville. (fn. 230)
In the east window of the north aisle were the arms
of Croke and Bennett. As this is the only glass commemorating the Croke family recorded by Wood, all
the rest being in the windows of the manor-house, it
is possible that the available window space was filled
by 1610, when George Croke became lord of the
manor. (fn. 231) The Ashhurst window in the north aisle
seems to have been mostly inserted just before 1852.
It is mentioned in Gardner's directory for that year,
but not in the architectural guide of 1846. Fortythree shields fill three lights and illustrate the
genealogy of the Ashhurst family from Adam de
Ashhurst, 'sans date', to John Henry Ashhurst,
1848. Most of the shields in the east light have Ashhurst in the dexter and the sinister half is left blank
for the use of posterity. (fn. 232) Later in the century an
oval panel painted with an achievement of arms and
the inscription 'John Warner and Elizabeth Ashhurst married 29th April 1755', was inserted in the
middle of the east light. It is signed W. Peckitt 1769
and is contemporary with some of his glass in New
College chapel. (fn. 233) The last marriage commemorated
was in 1881: the work was inferior and the enamel
has already faded. The church also has some wallpaintings: these were noted in 1887, but are no
longer visible. (fn. 234) Between the north and south doors
are the matrices of two brasses, one an early 15thcentury half-effigy of a man, the other possibly of a
priest. (fn. 235) In the centre aisle is a marble gravestone
with the remains of an inscription in Lombardic
letters: + William: De: La: Ba …… Merci. It was
probably to William de la Beche. (fn. 236)
The principal monument, with arms, in the church
is to Sir George Croke, Justice of the King's Bench
and lord of the manor (d. 1641/2). The inscription
has been ascribed to Matthew Hale. (fn. 237) It was moved
from the chancel in 1858 to the north aisle. A black
marble gravestone to Dame Mary, his widow (d.
1657), and another to Charles Hinde, rector (d.
1725), were also moved from the chancel and are
also in the north aisle. There are memorial tablets to
the following: the rector's son Francis Hinde of
London (d. 1720) and his wife; Dame Frances Allin
(d. 1743), daughter of Sir Henry Ashhurst; Edward
Lewis, rector (d. 1784) and his wife; Sir William
Henry Ashhurst (d. 1807); Robert Robinson, Rector
of Waterstock and Emmington (d. 1826) and his wife;
and William Henry Ashhurst, Esq., M.P. (d. 1846).
The Edwardian inventory records one chalice. (fn. 238)
The church now possesses two Elizabethan silver
chalices, one hall-marked 1569 and the other 1570
with the maker's mark Ak; both have lost their paten
covers. There is a large silver paten with foot dated
1715 and bearing the initials C.J. for Joseph Clare,
and a silver flagon of 1863. There is a 16th-century
pewter paten, and a pewter tankard flagon. (fn. 239)
A medieval bell inscribed Sante Nicholae si was
recast by Gillett of Croydon in 1888, and so were
two bells dated 1616 and 1664 and originally made by
Henry Knight and Richard Keene respectively. (fn. 240)
In 1697 the south side of the churchyard was said
to be too narrow, so that the graves lay exposed 'to
the scandal of the Christian church'. Since part of
the Ashhursts' house stood within the north side of
the churchyard, Sir Henry Ashhurst gave some land
on the south in exchange. He also promised to build
a 'handsome' churchyard wall of stone coped with
brick and a 'handsome' pair of gates with iron bars. (fn. 241)
In 1858 the boundary wall on the north side of the
churchyard was replaced by an iron railing set in
stone and a new south gate was made at a cost of
£38. (fn. 242)
The registers date from 1580. (fn. 243)
Schools.
No information about schooling in the
village has been found before the 19th century.
There was a day school by 1805 and in 1808 ten
children were being taught to read there. (fn. 244) A Sunday school with 13 children, supported by Mrs.
Ashhurst, was set up in 1808. (fn. 245) Between 1815 and
1818 another day-school was opened and in 1818
there were 18 children attending the two day-schools
and 16 attending the Sunday school. (fn. 246) The situation
was much the same in 1833, when the schools were
described as a day school for 7 girls, supported by
the squire, an infant school with about 10 boys and
girls, who were paid for by their parents, and the
Sunday school with 16 boys and 7 girls. (fn. 247) It is
difficult to follow the fortunes of these schools, but
it is probable that there was some continuity between
them and the school of 1854, described as 'complete
for week and Sunday', and the Church of England
school that existed in 1871. (fn. 248) The Church school was
a mixed school run on National Society lines; it had
an average attendance of 25 at the end of the 19th
century. (fn. 249) The school was apparently reorganized in
1903–4, for Waterstock Church of England School
was said to have been opened in 1904. (fn. 250) Lack of
numbers led to its being closed in 1916 and the
children later went to Tiddington school. (fn. 251)
Nonconformity.
None recorded.
Charity.
By will proved in 1631 Ambrose Bennett, of London, no doubt a relative of Lady Mary
Croke, (fn. 252) charged certain lands in Rotherhithe with
a rent of £8 a year for the benefit of the poor of
Waterstock at Lady Day and Michaelmas. (fn. 253) At the
end of the century the money was not paid for several
years and the churchwardens and overseers of
Waterstock, and of two other parishes which had
received similar bequests, exhibited a bill against
John Bennett in Chancery. In 1704 he promised
to make regular payments. (fn. 254) These were regularly
made throughout the 18th century and accounts were
kept from 1707 of the distribution of the money. In
1823 20 poor people benefited, the sums granted
varying between 5s. and 12s. according to the
size of individual families. (fn. 255) In 1877 the rentcharge was redeemed for £267 stock. (fn. 256) The income
in 1923 and again in 1937 was £6 13s. 4d. (fn. 257) but the
method of its distribution at that time cannot be
ascertained.
The parishioners of Waterstock have the right
to send almspeople to Croke's almshouses in Studley. (fn. 258)