CROPREDY
The ancient parish of Cropredy covered 8,716 a. in
the extreme north of the county, in a triangular area
lying between Warwickshire on the west, Northamptonshire on the east, and Hanwell and Banbury
on the south. (fn. 1) Besides Cropredy township the parish
included the lordship of Prescote, the hamlets of
Great and Little Bourton, and the chapelries
of Wardington, Claydon, and Mollington, each of
which was separately organized for poor law purposes. (fn. 2) In the later 19th century Bourton, Wardington, Claydon, and Mollington came to be considered
separate civil parishes. (fn. 3) The ancient parish contained
11 settlements—Cropredy, Prescote, Upper Prescote,
Great Bourton, Little Bourton, Wardington, Upper
Wardington, Williamscot, Coton, Claydon, and Mollington. Mollington, although included in Cropredy
parish, lay in Bloxham hundred; until 1895, moreover, about half the township lay outside the county
in Warwickshire. (fn. 4) A twelfth settlement, Clattercote,
although an extra-parochial place, was contained
geographically within Cropredy ancient parish and
its history is included below.
The boundaries of the ancient parish follow for
the most part pre-inclosure hedges, except for parts
of the western and southern boundaries which follow
the Hanwell Brook and a nameless tributary of the
Cherwell. On the east and part of the south and west
the boundaries coincide with the county boundary. (fn. 5)
Beyond Prescote there was an apparently unrecorded
change in the county and parish boundary: on the
north-east side of the Daventry road a field of 20 a.,
Ast Mead, was lost by Oxfordshire and Cropredy to
Appletree (Northants.) between 1823 and 1830. (fn. 6)
Some minor changes in the boundaries of the civil
parishes effected in the late 19th and 20th centuries
have to a slight extent obscured the former internal
divisions of the ancient parish. (fn. 7)
The parish lay across the valleys of the Cherwell
and its tributary Highfurlong Brook, in 1551–2 called
Cranemeare (heron pool), (fn. 8) and much of the land lies
between the 400 ft. and 500 ft. contours. The highest
point is 547 ft. on the main Southam road north of
Mollington from which the ground falls away to
about 350 ft. in the valley of the Hanwell Brook on
the west and to about 325 ft. in the valley of the
Cherwell on the east. Of the villages, Mollington and
the Bourtons to the west of the Cherwell, Wardington and Williamscot to the east, and Claydon in the
north stand on high ground above 400 ft.; only
Cropredy and Prescote lie on the valley floor. The
fields close to the river were liable to flooding until
modern drainage methods lessened, without eliminating, the handicap: field names such as Bog meadow,
Marsh furlong, Rushford, and Bullmoor are significant in that respect. The higher ground on each side
of the Southam road lies on the marlstone of the
Middle Lias, the lower ground in the valleys on
the clays of the Lower Lias. The whole parish lies
in the 'red land' district much praised by Arthur
Young; (fn. 9) it is well watered by the Cherwell, the
Highfurlong Brook, and many springs and small
streams. Apart from orchards in Cropredy village and
plantations around Williamscot there are relatively
few trees. (fn. 10) The whole parish was inclosed in the
period 1762–98 by five parliamentary awards.
There have been only 3 finds of pre-Roman or
Romano-British objects in the ancient parish: a
bronze looped palgrave and a lump of bronze from
Wardington, gold coins of Antedrigus from Little
Bourton, and a coin of Maximus Daza from Great
Bourton. (fn. 11) No archaeological evidence for the AngloSaxon settlement of the area has yet been found, but
place-name evidence shows that Cropredy and most
of its hamlets were established before the Conquest. (fn. 12)
By the 13th century Cropredy was associated with
the Mercian martyr St. Fremund. According to his
legend, (fn. 13) Fremund was a son of Offa of Mercia (d.
796), treacherously slain after a victory over the
Danes c. 870. The connexion with the Danish invasion seems more probable than that with Offa, so
that Fremund, if he existed, should be dated to the
mid 9th century. The legend does not connect him
with Cropredy during his life-time, but says that
some years after his death his body was carried from
its original burial place at Offchurch (Offa's church)
to a plain between the Cherwell and the Brademere, almost certainly the Highfurlong Brook which
separates Cropredy from Prescote. (fn. 14) Here it was
reburied and lost for some years before being rediscovered and moved to 'Ridic' where a church was
built to receive it. Finally, probably by 1207, (fn. 15) some
of the relics were moved to the new Dunstable
Priory.
The plain between the Cherwell and the Brademere can fairly safely be identified with Prescote,
and although the etymological evidence is not
strong, (fn. 16) 'Ridic' is probably Cropredy where the
saint later had a shrine. In 1488 Richard Danvers of
Prescote left 20s. to the chapel and shrine of St.
Fremund, (fn. 17) and in 1539 his daughter-in-law, Anne
Danvers, left 10 ewes to the chapel of St. Fremund
in Cropredy. (fn. 18) No other place, apart from Dunstable,
is associated with the saint. The legend does not,
however, throw much light on the early history of
Cropredy. If Fremund's connexion with Offa and
the related story of his initial burial at Offchurch
are discounted, there remains the tradition of a
local saint, (fn. 19) probably a hermit, who was killed or
murdered during the Danish invasions and buried
at Prescote, which was then apparently uninhabited.
When miracles were reported, the body was removed, probably to Cropredy, and a shrine built
for it.
In 1086 Domesday Book enumerated 8 knightly
tenants, 147 villeins and bordars, and 23 serfs in
Cropredy and its hamlets. (fn. 20) For the poll tax of 1377
490 people were assessed for Cropredy, excluding
Clattercote and possibly Coton. (fn. 21) Although three of
Cropredy's hamlets survive only as 'shrunk' settlements (Prescote, Upper Prescote, and Coton), the
parish in the mid 17th century was considered 'very
populous'. (fn. 22) In 1642 484 males of 18 and over took
the Protestation Oath; (fn. 23) in 1738 the vicar stated that
there were 367 families, (fn. 24) which, using a multiplier
of 4–25, suggests a total population of about 1,560.
Numbers increased by 1801 to 2,234 (456 families in
1808), and after declining slightly by 1811 to 2,187,
rose sharply to 2,751 by 1841, after which they declined slowly. (fn. 25) The period 1821–30 saw the greatest
percentage increase, the result of 341 births. (fn. 26)
Two major roads cross the parish, the BanburySoutham—Coventry road, running from south to
north, and the Banbury—Daventry road, running
north-eastwards through Wardington. The first is
the via regia or via regalis, or Broadway of many
documents between 1239 and 1774; (fn. 27) it was turnpiked in 1755 and disturnpiked in 1878. (fn. 28) The second
is doubtless the Banbury Way mentioned in the 13th
century; (fn. 29) it was turnpiked in 1765 and disturnpiked
in 1871. (fn. 30)
The Coventry—Oxford canal, which was completed to Cropredy and Banbury in 1778, passes successively through Claydon in the north of the parish,
Cropredy, and the Bourtons; its descent from its
summit on the Avon—Cherwell watershed is assisted
by the five 'Claydon locks'; it then descends to the
floor of the Cherwell valley through four locks in
Cropredy and two in Bourton. The canal is fed by
'Western Brook' from Clattercote reservoir, by a
feeder from a reservoir in Byfield (Northants.), and
from Marston Brook. (fn. 31) The supply of water to the
10¾-mile 'Summit Level' was always a problem, and
in 1776 the 'great pond' (2¾ a.) at Clattercote with
adjacent land was purchased as a site for a reservoir. (fn. 32)
The original Clattercote reservoir was enlarged in
1787 and its level raised in the following year. Even
so it never held the amount of water then estimated
(3,222 locks), and its present estimated capacity is
2,200 locks. In 1790 the Summit was described as
'nearly in the state of a dry ditch', but that was
probably an exceptional situation. (fn. 33) A canal wharf
was set up at Cropredy from the outset, and by
1784 a company wharfinger was established there
(to offset the private monopoly which the canal contractor Simcock had acquired). (fn. 34) In 1830 the gross
tolls taken at Cropredy were £1,175—over onequarter of the sum taken at Banbury; but by 1869
they were nil. (fn. 35)

CROPREDY c. 1830
Compiled from Davis, Oxon. Map (1797), inclosure and tithe maps, and other documentary evidence
The parish is crossed from north to south by the
Banbury—Leamington railway line, originally part of
the Oxford and Rugby railway, opened in 1852. The
construction of the line was begun in Cropredy
parish, and there was a station at Cropredy which
was closed in 1956. The East and West Junction
Railway from Blisworth (Northants.) to Worcester
crossed the parish north of Claydon. The line was
closed to passenger traffic in 1952 and to freight in
1965. A branch of the Great Central Railway from
Woodford Halse (Northants.) to Banbury touched
the parish briefly near Coton Farm, and there
Chacombe Halt was located until its closure in 1956.
The line was closed to all traffic in 1966. (fn. 36)
CROPREDY
Cropredy township formed a rough triangle bounded
on the east by Highfurlong Brook and the River
Cherwell, and on parts of the west, north, and south
by small tributary streams; otherwise its boundaries
seem to have followed few natural features. (fn. 37) In 1882
Cropredy civil parish contained 1,926 a. of which
98 a. were detached parts east of the Cherwell added
in 1888 to Wardington; (fn. 38) the township boundaries
were probably those of the civil parish except that the
inclusion in Cropredy of a part of Williamscot (chiefly
Williamscot House and the school), which protrudes
irregularly to the south-east of the civil parish,
clearly happened after the Middle Ages. (fn. 39) Mollington ditch and Clattercote hedge, mentioned in 1332,
were the boundaries of Cropredy township on the
west and north, (fn. 40) and 'the old boundary fence' and
accompanying ditch between Cropredy and Bourton
were mentioned as late as 1887; (fn. 41) the ford where the
stream in this ditch was crossed at the south entrance
to Cropredy (presumably in front of the present
Cropredy school) was known as 'Sutbreche' (later
corrupted to Southbridge). In 1552 the Cropredy
boundary ran from 'Clatercotehey' along a hedge to
Bootham bridge (now lost), down the Cranemeare
brook to 'Le Southbridge', by way of Arbwell lake
(north of Great Bourton village) to 'Haghorne', then
by a ridgeway to 'le fexhole', then along 'Burtonhylle' hedge to Shotteswell Brook, along Westmead
hedge to Mollington field and the 'Brodewaye', along
another ridgeway to 'Landymere' and so back to
Clattercote hedge. (fn. 42)
Cropredy village stands compactly on slightly
rising ground in the south-east corner of the ancient
township immediately west of the Cherwell. (fn. 43) The
second element in the place-name is 'ridig', meaning
'small stream'; the first element is probably Old
English 'crop', perhaps meaning a sprout or top of a
plant and referring to water plants, or more probably
meaning something swollen, hence 'hump' or 'hill'. (fn. 44)
From the village radiate four lanes, of which only
that to Bourton was described as 'ancient' in the
inclosure award (1775), (fn. 45) leading respectively north
to Claydon, with a branch through Prescote to
Appletree (Northants.), south-east over Cropredy
Bridge and through Williamscot to the BanburyDaventry road, south to the Bourtons, and west
over the Oxhey (originally an enclosure for oxen) to
Mollington; the point of divergence of the Mollington and Claydon lanes has long been known as Kite's
Corner. (fn. 46) The Bourton and Mollington lanes join
the Southam—Banbury road.
By the 14th century at least Cropredy was by no
means the largest settlement in the parish; its total
tax assessment in 1327 was lower than those of
Wardington, Great Bourton, and Claydon. For the
poll-tax of 1377 92 people were assessed, half as many
as in Wardington and Williamscot; (fn. 47) 158 males of
18 years or over took the Protestation Oath in 1642,
but there seems to have been some duplication of
Cropredy and Bourton names so the figure was
probably lower. (fn. 48) In 1801 the population of the
township was 470. Between 1811 and 1821 it rose to
548, and between 1811 and 1851 to a peak figure of
596. In the 1850s the population was reduced by one
sixth (99) and by 1901 was 436. In 1961 the population was 459, (fn. 49) but since that date has increased
considerably as new houses have been built for
people working in Banbury.
For its size the village is well supplied with street
names: Station Road, High Street and its continuation
Chapel Row or Neal's Row, Creampot or Crumpet
Lane which ends at the canal bank, Church Lane,
Cheapside or Lion or Red Lion Street, and
the narrow lane leading to the church from the
south called the Hello, or, inappropriately, Hellhole. In 1775 some cottages called Challarscote are
mentioned, perhaps the relic of an early settlement. (fn. 50)
Fragments of a medieval cross, known locally from
their shape as 'the Cup and Saucer', (fn. 51) survive on the
south-west edge of the village, just west of the road
to Claydon. The cross is mentioned in 1775 as 'the
cross on the west side of Cropredy'. (fn. 52) Its eccentric
location and the signs of former buildings near-by
suggest that the village once extended much further
to the west. (fn. 53)
The elongated shape of Cropredy made it inconvenient to operate all the post-inclosure farms
from the old farm-houses within the village itself,
and after inclosure in 1775 outlying farm-houses were
built to replace existing ones in the village. No less
than three of the old farm-houses in the village,
including one called 'the Manor', were bought by
John Chamberlin from Sir William Boothby one
year after inclosure. (fn. 54)
Cropredy farmers were prosperous enough in the
16th and 17th centuries to build a number of fairsized houses: in 1665 one house, Manor Farm, was
assessed for tax on 7 hearths, two were assessed on
5 hearths, two on 4 hearths, and five on 3 hearths. (fn. 55)
In the mid 19th century the more substantial houses
clustered round the church in the centre of the
village, and the thatched labourers' cottages lay
behind them. (fn. 56) Many of the houses survive, and the
village consists mainly of 17th- and 18th-century
buildings of two stories in coursed ironstone with
Welsh slate roofs, brick stacks, and casement windows. A few have thatched roofs and ashlar quoins.
A medieval building known to have disappeared was
the prebendary's tithe barn mentioned in 1552. (fn. 57)
The most notable of the surviving houses are Manor
Farm, Cropredy Lawn, (fn. 58) Poultry Farm, Constone,
Thickthorn Farm, and the 'Brazen Nose'. Poultry
Farm stands on the west side of High Street; it was
once the home of the Anker family, and is a 2-storied,
coursed ironstone rubble house, built on an Lshaped plan, and with a mixture of three-sided bay
windows, tall sash windows, and gabled dormers.
Constone, which stands on the south side of Claydon
Lane, is a reconditioned, probably 17th-century,
house, also in coursed ironstone, with ashlar quoins,
a thatched roof, three brick stacks, and some casement windows. Besides those houses Cropredy
contains several groups of ancient cottages. Almost
opposite the Methodist chapel was a row of seven,
four of one build and three of another, all under one
thatched roof; the range of four had a date panel
inscribed 'B.C.H. 1694', but in 1969 only the two
central of the four were standing. On the west side
of Chapel Row is a row of six 17th-century cottages,
and on the north side of Church Lane is a row of
three, which dates substantially from about 1700.
Cheapside has on its north side a row of eight
cottages, mainly of 17th-century origin. It includes
the Red Lion Inn, and until the 1960s the Cooperative Stores, bought by Banbury Co-operative
Society in 1895. (fn. 59) All those cottages are of two stories
and built of ironstone rubble or coursed ironstone,
mostly with thatch roofs.
Of the inns the 'Brazen Nose' dates from the 17th
century, although the back has been rebuilt in brick
and the whole was reconditioned about 1919, and the
'Red Lion' dates as an inn from the mid 18th century.
The former stands at the angle of roads forking to
east, south, and north. It was the place to which, after
a formal assembly in Cropredy church, the Cropredy
meetings of the peculiar court were traditionally
adjourned for business; that was the practice at least
from 1680. (fn. 60) The meetings were held in what was in
1968 the large club room behind the inn. In 1700
occurs the first reference to the 'diversorium vocatum le Brasennose'. (fn. 61) The 'Red Lion' has been
described in at least two books on canal travel; (fn. 62) it
can be traced to 1753, and its name first occurs in
1786. From 1753 to 1755 and from 1763 to 1777
three Cropredy inns were licensed, the 'Brazen Nose',
the 'Red Lion', and the 'Rose and Crown'; the coming of the canal added a fourth, 'at the Navigation
Wharf', in 1778. In 1787 the licensing justices suppressed the 'Rose and Crown' and continued the
'Red Lion' only for its landlord's life, but (between
1796 and 1806) it was the canal house which eventually disappeared. (fn. 63)
The chief 19th-century addition to the village was
the Wesleyan Methodist chapel, and in the 20th
century many new flats and houses have been built,
mostly since 1945 by the Prescote Estate, Brasenose
College, Oxford, and others. Outside the village, but
within the township of Cropredy, are five farmhouses, Cropredy Lawn, (fn. 64) Thickthorn Farm (called
Prene Hill Farm in 1823 and Cropredy Field in
1830) which is probably a much remodelled 17thcentury building, and three post-inclosure farmhouses, Oxhey, Oathill, and Hill Farms. (fn. 65)
The construction or repair of Cropredy Bridge
was mentioned in 1312, (fn. 66) and there are frequent
references in 14th- and 15th-century deeds to the
magna pons or le longebrugge of Cropredy. (fn. 67) There
was possibly a restoration in 1691; the bridge was
presented as being in need of repair in 1776, and
about 1780 repairs were carried out which left the
earlier, eastern arch pointed but made the rebuilt,
western arch round-headed. In 1886 the bridge was
widened on the down-stream side; at the instance of
the vicar, who originally proposed the use of stone,
the work was carried out in blue rather than red
brick. The reconstruction brought to light wooden
piles a little downstream. In 1937 a complete reconstruction revealed remains of an earlier bridge
incorporated in the structure. The new bridge is of
three spans; its deck is of reinforced concrete and its
facing of Hornton stone. An inscription on the south
side reads: 'The site of the battle of Cropredy
Bridge, June 1644. From Civil War Good Lord
deliver us.' The battle of 29 June 1644 is the bestknown historical event associated with Cropredy;
the parliamentarians under Waller were defeated
by the royalists under Charles I, the key points in
the action being Cropredy Bridge itself, Hays Bridge
(in Wardington) to the north, and Slat Mill Ford (in
Bourton) to the south.
Few of Cropredy's inhabitants, apart from some
of its manorial lords and vicars, are worthy of special
note. The parish produced one sufferer in the royalist
cause, Edward Mansell, D.D., a chaplain to Charles I
who was captured when taking a walk during the
siege of Oxford and died in parliamentary custody at
Abingdon. (fn. 68) In the 17th century an alleged sorceress
from Cropredy was presented at the peculiar court
of Banbury, (fn. 69) and in the 1830s a man who was to
acquire world fame was employed as a shepherd at
Cropredy Lawn. He was Thomas Beecham, the pill
manufacturer, (fn. 70) and the tray on which his pills were
first rolled by his wife survived within recent
memory. (fn. 71)
Manors and other Estates.
In 1086
CROPREDY was held in chief by the Bishop of
Lincoln and had probably long been held by his
predecessors. There is a slight discrepancy as to its
Domesday assessment: this is first said to be 50 hides,
of which the bishop held 25 in his farm (firma) and
his knights a further 25; but the details of the seven
holdings of the knights (Ansgered, Gilbert, Teodric,
Richard, Edward, Roger, Robert, and another
Robert) give a total of 30 hides. (fn. 72) In all probability
Cropredy was then, and had long been, a 50-hide
manor. It is impossible to assign all the holdings to
particular places within Cropredy; 3 hides held by
Richard (of Newark) lay in Claydon; (fn. 73) 2 hides lay in
Cropredy; and of the bishop's demesne lands 2½ or
3 hides lay in Clattercote (fn. 74) and a large proportion in
Cropredy, Wardington, and Bourton.
Cropredy is specified among the possessions of the
see of Lincoln in papal confirmations of 1126, 1139,
1149, and 1163. (fn. 75) In 1329 Bishop Henry received
a grant of free warren in his demesnes in Cropredy
and elsewhere. (fn. 76) In the fiscal year 1540–1 the bishop's
temporalities in Cropredy rendered £29. (fn. 77)
In August 1547 Cropredy (i.e. lands in Cropredy,
Wardington, Coton, and Bourton) was among the
Oxfordshire manors surrendered to the Crown by
Bishop Holbech in consideration of various grants
then made to the bishop by the Crown. (fn. 78) Protector
Somerset acquired the manor, which on his fall
passed in 1550 to the Duke of Northumberland, (fn. 79)
who in 1551 surrendered it to the Crown in exchange
for other property. (fn. 80) In 1560 Elizabeth I sold a
Cropredy manor (part of the recent acquisition) as
1/20 knight's fee to Thomas Lee, (fn. 81) who nine years
before had obtained the adjoining estate of Clattercote. (fn. 82) Lee died seised in 1572, having bequeathed
Cropredy (after his wife's death) to his deceased
sister Anne's first son, William Watson, (fn. 83) thus bringing the descent of Cropredy into line with the first
remainder for Clattercote specified in the grant by
Christ Church of Clattercote manor to Lee. (fn. 84) Watson
held the manor in 1596, (fn. 85) but in 1606 Sir Richard
Corbet of Moreton Corbet (Salop.), the second
husband of Lee's relict, Mary, died seised of the
manor. (fn. 86) He had no issue and his second wife Judith
was left in possession of Cropredy for her life. In
1616 she bought the manor from Sir Richard's
brother and heir Sir Vincent Corbet. (fn. 87) In 1618 she
settled Cropredy on Henry Boothby, her third son; (fn. 88)
the settlement was confirmed in 1631, (fn. 89) and c. 1650. (fn. 90)
Henry was created a baronet in 1644, (fn. 91) and he and
his descendants (fn. 92) held Cropredy until 1775, when
Sir William Boothby (d. 1787) settled the reversion
of a farm of 232 acres (largely identifiable with
Cropredy Lawn farm) on Samuel Smith of Alderbury
(Wilts.), who had 'constantly given great attention' to Boothby and his affairs, and had been at
great expense and trouble 'in attending the inclosing
of his estates at Cropredy'. (fn. 93) The rest of the Boothby
estate in Cropredy, which at inclosure accounted for
about three-fifths of the area of Cropredy township, (fn. 94)
was broken up in 1775 and 1788. In 1788 the manorial
rights in Cropredy were sold by Sir Brooke Boothby
(d. 1789) as an appurtenance of Hill farm, which was
then bought by Brasenose College, Oxford, (fn. 95) already
owners of a large estate in Cropredy. Among other
purchasers were the families of Anker, which acquired
a farm of 142 a., Eagles, and Elkington.
In 1791 Samuel Smith sold Cropredy Lawn, the
largest constituent of the former Boothby estate, to
the Revd. Sir Richard Cope (fn. 96) of Bramshill (Hants)
(d. 1806). Cope's family, (fn. 97) already long settled at
Hanwell, held it until 1919, when Sir Anthony
(d. 1932) sold the farm to Banbury Co-operative
Industrial Society. F. J. Wise bought the farm from
the society in 1932 and sold it to D. E. Lynes, from
whom Mr. J. Webber bought it in 1955. (fn. 98)
The tenant of Cropredy Lawn (then known as
Fields End farm) from 1775 until his death in 1816
was John Chamberlin, (fn. 99) from Kegworth (Leics.).
He was one of the most active of all inclosure commissioners, taking part in well over thirty awards;
eighteen of them, between 1774 and 1804, related to
Oxfordshire, including those of Cropredy itself,
Bourton, and Mollington. (fn. 100) His son W. H. Chamberlin (d. 1851), a land surveyor, also tenanted Cropredy
Lawn and bought the former ducal mansion, Adderbury House. (fn. 101)
Cropredy Lawn (fn. 102) stands 1¼ mile north-west of the
village. It was probably built by John Chamberlin
about 1774, and is a two-storied building of ironstone ashlar, distinguished by a massive projecting
stone stack on the west, casement windows, and
gabled dormers.
A second CROPREDY manor was long held of
the see of Lincoln by a family which took its name
from the village. In or before 1109 Geoffrey of
Cropredy gave two parts of his tithe in Cropredy to
Eynsham Abbey. (fn. 103) In 1166 Simon of Cropredy held
of the Bishop of Lincoln one knight's fee; (fn. 104) later
evidence shows that half of the fee lay in Cropredy
and Shutford and half in Kilsby (Northants.), in
which county the family also held Spratton. It was
probably the same Simon who witnessed local
charters dated c. 1150–70 and 1160–80. (fn. 105) The same
or another Simon of Cropredy held ½ fee at Cropredy
in 1208–9 (fn. 106) and held one knight's fee in Cropredy,
Shutford, and Kilsby of the Bishop of Lincoln in
1225. (fn. 107) Simon's successor was his son Philip, (fn. 108) who
occurs down to 1237. (fn. 109) In 1239, however, Eynsham
Abbey owned the tithes from the land of Hugh in
Cropredy, (fn. 110) and Hugh of Cropredy witnessed a
Claydon deed of 1240–53 (fn. 111) and a Chacombe charter
of about the same period. (fn. 112) Hugh's son Simon, who
first appears in a Bourton deed which must be earlier
than 1258, (fn. 113) held ½ fee in Cropredy and Shutford in
1279, (fn. 114) but by 1300 the Cropredy fee in Cropredy,
Shutford, and Kilsby had passed to Henry of
Cropredy. (fn. 115) In 1316 Henry's son Simon was returned
as holder of the manor; (fn. 116) he occurs frequently down
to 1344, (fn. 117) and was succeeded by his eldest son
Henry. (fn. 118) The latter is mentioned down to c. 1350 (fn. 119)
but was dead by 1351 when his son Thomas, although
apparently under age, was given custody of his
lands. (fn. 120) Thomas occurs down to 1397; (fn. 121) the same or
another Thomas Cropredy occurs in 1418–19. (fn. 122)
By 1422 William Shutford held the Cropredy
family estate. (fn. 123) In 1444 William handed his property
over to his son John, reserving accommodation in
the manor-house for himself and his wife. (fn. 124) John,
who held Cropredy down to 1493, (fn. 125) was dead by
1494. (fn. 126) John's successor was his son Richard, who in
1505 sold the reversion of Cropredy to Sir Edward
Greville of Milcote (Warws.). (fn. 127) Greville sold his
interest in 1512 to the lawyer Sir Richard Sutton, (fn. 128)
who in 1515 leased the manor from Richard Shutford and his wife Elizabeth (fn. 129) and in 1519 leased it
for 36 years to Brasenose College, Oxford, (fn. 130) which
he was then endowing. In 1524, after Elizabeth's
death he conveyed the manor to the college in perpetuity. (fn. 131)
Manor Farm at the south entrance to Cropredy
village is on the site of the former manor-house.
There are 14th- and 15th-century references to an
earlier house there, (fn. 132) and in 1461 William Shutford
put his son in possession of the manor, except for a
chamber and under-chamber at the south end of the
hall in Cropredy. (fn. 133) The house may once have been
completely moated, and a channel from the Cherwell
still extends almost to the house. The college's 'great
mease or manor place in Cropredy' with a cottage
(later demolished) opposite it across the 'high street'
and a farm (later of 150 a.) was from 1637 to 1668
leased to the Wilmer family; (fn. 134) for about a century
after 1668 the manor-house was leased to the Wyatt
family, (fn. 135) which included some notable farriers;
rhyming inscriptions on the tombstones at Cropredy
of John Wyatt (d. 1669) and of his son John (d. 1676)
testify to their skill. (fn. 136) By 1750 the Wyatts were often
'gentlemen' rather than 'yeomen'.
The house is a two-storied building of L-shaped
plan and as late as 1876 had a thatched roof. In 1593
the house was in decay, but it had been restored by
1665 when the manor-house, taxed on seven hearths,
was the largest in the village. (fn. 137) On the west side of
the house is the date 'W. 1718' and on the south side
the date 'W.T.M.' 1693 (for Thomas and Mary
Wyatt, then tenants of Brasenose College). The
tenants of the manor-house were required to provide
hospitality for two days and two nights (not more
than twice in the year and then for not more than
six men and six horses) for the college officers on
progress. (fn. 138)
An estate comprising land and tithes was granted
before 1146 by the Bishop of Lincoln to the dean and
chapter, and formed the endowment of a prebend in
Lincoln Cathedral. (fn. 139) The last lease of the prebend
of Cropredy before its temporary annexation to the
Crown was made for 30 years by Prebendary Wolman
in 1536. (fn. 140) A sale of the prebend in fee by Thomas
Robertson, the last prebendary, to Sir John Thynne
and Robert Keyleway in 1548 was confirmed by
Protector Somerset (as patron of the prebend) and
the Bishop of Lincoln, who had been licensed to
alienate the prebend and advowson to the Protector. (fn. 141)
In 1550, however, the prebend was sold by Thynne
and Keyleway to Somerset's son and is next found
surrendered by the Duke of Northumberland to the
Crown in 1551 (fn. 142) and reserved by the Crown in its
grant of Cropredy to Lee in 1560. (fn. 143) The Crown
granted leases of the prebend thereafter; in 1568 and
1576 it was described as a late possession of Northumberland and then of Cardinal Pole. (fn. 144) In 1589
Elizabeth I bestowed the prebend, said (by confusion
with the tithes of Cropredy) to have been a possession
of Eynsham Abbey, on the see of Oxford in a forced
exchange. (fn. 145) In 1650 the bishop's prebendal tithes
were worth £455. (fn. 146) In the various parliamentary
inclosures of the parish the bishop and his lessees
were allotted just over 1,000 a., (fn. 147) and £123 rent
charge when the remaining tithes in the parish were
commuted in 1844. (fn. 148) In 1851 the prebendal estate
was valued at £1,631 a year. (fn. 149) The bishops and later
the Church Commissioners retained the prebendal
estate (Thickthorn farm) until its sale in 1896 to
Brasenose College, Oxford; the various constituent
parcels of the estate were leased for lives. (fn. 150)
The Bishop of Oxford also acquired in 1589 tithes
formerly belonging to Eynsham Abbey. (fn. 151) The abbey
had received two grants, one of 1094 by Robert
Bloet, Bishop of Lincoln, who granted all the tithes
of the episcopal demesne in Cropredy, the other
before 1109 by Geoffrey of Cropredy, who granted
two-thirds of the corn tithes of his demesne. (fn. 152) In
1539 Eynsham's Cropredy tithes were worth £5
13s. 4d. (fn. 153) The Bishop of Oxford leased out these
tithes for lives, separately from the prebendal
tithes. (fn. 154)
Small pieces of land on the periphery of Cropredy
formed part of the Clattercote Priory, Prescote, and
Wroxton estates. The grant of Clattercote to Christ
Church in 1546 was made subject to the payment of
18s. to the Bishop of Lincoln's tenants in Cropredy
for certain lands in Lawn Hill (Claydon) and of 4s.
to the tenants of Brasenose College in Cropredy. (fn. 155)
Economic History.
Under Bishop Remigius
the demesne was heavily overstocked: Domesday
Book gives its capacity as 30 ploughs, of which 10
were on non-geldable land, but states that the bishop
found 35 ploughs there and that in 1086 there were
6 ploughs in demesne, with 12 servi, and 55 villani
and 22 bordars who had a further 34 ploughs. The
lands of the bishop's knights were somewhat understocked: there was land for 34 ploughs, 13 ploughs
were in demesne, and 28 villiani, 27 bordars. 4
Frenchmen (franchigeni), and 10 servi had 18 ploughs.
The bishop's demesne included 120 a. of meadow
(probably along the valleys of the Cherwell and its
tributaries) and 132 a. of pasture; the knight's lands
included only 22 a. of meadow and 5 a. of coppice
(gravae). Manorial values had risen slightly since
1066: the demesne was worth £28 T.R.E. and £30
'when received' and in 1086; the knights' lands were
worth £27 T.R.E., £29 'when received', and £30
10s. in 1086. (fn. 156)
The services on the episcopal demesne are given
in full in a survey of c. 1225, which specified 16
holders of single yardlands and 2 holders of half-yardlands. The rent per yardland was 5s. and 4 hens.
The yardlander had to cut the bishop's firewood or
pay 2d. in lieu; he had to harvest for the bishop for
one day together with one man, to stook his corn for
one day, and to make malt from 4 qr. of the bishop's
grain, the bishop finding the fuel. He owed in
addition the same ploughing, hoeing, mowing, and
moat-repairing services as his fellow in Wardington. (fn. 157)
In 1279 the episcopal demesne in Cropredy township consisted of 5 ploughlands in demesne and 17½
yardlands in villeinage, the holder of each yardland
paying a rent of 4s. and performing works and
services worth 22d. a year; the bishop also had 4
cottars who all paid rent in lieu of services, 2 paying
2s. and the others 1s. each. Simon of Cropredy had
4 yardlands in demesne and 3½ in villeinage; each
yardlander paid a rent of 4s. and performed works
and services worth 3s. 10d. a year. Simon also had
one free tenant who held ½ yardland for which he
paid 1/4d. rent, quit of all services. (fn. 158) In 1348–9 the
bishop had 256 a. out of 305 a. in one division of the
arable and 224 a. out of 284 a. in the other, 158 a.
of meadow (36 in 'Westmedewe' and 78 in 'Estmore')
and 178 a. of pasture, of which 112 were in 'sydlyng
iuxta fyscheredyk'. (fn. 159)
For the subsidy of 1306 26 people were assessed
to pay a total of £2 15s. o½d., almost certainly lower
than the illegible total for Wardington. (fn. 160) By 1327 not
only Wardington but also Great Bourton and Claydon were assessed at a higher figure than Cropredy,
where 15 people were assessed at £1 7s. 3d. (fn. 161) In 1306
the Bishop of Lincoln was assessed at 19s. 2d., but
in 1327 there was no major payment. (fn. 162) After the reassessment of 1334 Cropredy paid £4 18s. 6d., a
higher sum than Wardington, even though the latter
clearly was much more populous. (fn. 163) For the poll-tax
of 1377 Cropredy had 92 contributors, more than
Great Bourton, but less than half as many as in
Wardington and Williamscote. (fn. 164) In the Tudor period
Cropredy was for taxation purposes the principal
settlement, and in 1523 39 people contributed £5
0s. 6d. to the first payment, and £5 3s. 10d. to the
second. (fn. 165)
In 1239 the north and west fields of Cropredy are
mentioned; (fn. 166) but north, west, and south fields all
occur in one deed of 1332. (fn. 167) A terrier of the former
episcopal demesne in Cropredy of 1551–2 is arranged
under the headings of south side and north side of
Cropredy field, the details suggesting that the
boundary followed the line of the CropredyMollington lane and that the part of Cropredy to the
west of the Southam road lay in the south side of
the field. (fn. 168) Pre-inclosure 18th-century terriers reveal
the same arrangement, though the two sides are
sometimes described as lying 'towards Clattercote'
and 'towards Bourton'. (fn. 169)
When Cropredy was inclosed in 1775, however,
there were four quarters in Cropredy field. The large
extent of the Boothby allotment makes it difficult
to ascertain the limits of each quarter: Hayway
quarter (probably identical with the High field
mentioned in 1566) (fn. 170) and, to its north, Hackthorn
quarter both stretched across the Southam road;
Hackthorn quarter and the Oxhey lay in the centre
of the parish; and Howland quarter comprised the
north-east section of Cropredy. Thickthorn Farm
(once apparently called Hackthorn Farm) lay in what
had been Hackthorn quarter. (fn. 171)
About 1600 it was deposed that the old 'manner of
commoning' in Cropredy field had been to keep 5
beasts and 42 sheep for every yardland, and one
beast and a breeder for every ancient cottage and no
more, tied or untied; no substitutes were allowed on
the common for animals tied or depastured within
the fields. Fourteen years before the inquisition the
inhabitants had agreed to abate one cow per yardland and the breeder for every cottage. (fn. 172)
Little is known of pre-inclosure cropping, though
probate inventories suggest that in the 17th century
the usual cereals were sown. Pulse, peas, and
vetches appear regularly, and maslin was rare. The
keeping of sheep was general, but few large flocks
appear in the records. Though some of the wealthier
farmers had valuable livestock there seems to have
been little specialization. (fn. 173)
The internal history of the episcopal demesne
under the bishops and then under the Boothby
family is not known in detail, for few deeds earlier
than 1719 survive. In 1441 there were 28 tenants,
most of whom held one yardland; 19 of them owed
works valued at 5s. 7½d. a year. (fn. 174) A survey of the
demesne manor in 1552 distinguished 27 copyholds,
3 of ½ yardland, 8 of 1 yardland, 2 of 1½ yardland,
and 4 of 2 yardlands, besides 11 smaller ones, the
usual rent being 10s. a yardland, with worksilver at
3d. a yardland; and a further 27 varied tenancies-atwill on the episcopal demesne. The tenants-at-will,
of whom some were also copyholders, paid rents
varying from 3s. to 28s. (fn. 175) The royal grant of the
estate to Thomas Lee in 1560 named 40 tenancies,
without distinction of type, held by 27 occupiers.
Eight tenancies paid rents of 4s., and a further 14
paid rents of multiples of 4s. up to 24s.; 18 other
holdings paid rents in irregular sums varying from
1d. to 16s. 10d. (fn. 176) In 1607 37 tenants (holding 39
tenancies) were named, in 1719 31 tenants, and in
1742 37. (fn. 177) In 1685 the 11 main tenancies on the
Boothby estate were 2 of 3 yardlands, 1 of 2½, 4 of
2, 1 of 1½ yardland, and 3 of 1 yardland. (fn. 178)
On its much smaller estate, Brasenose College
from about 1680 onwards almost always renewed its
leases (issued for 21 years under the Act of 1571)
every seventh year, and the heriots came to be paid
every fourteenth year. Until 1788 the college leaseholds in Cropredy, equivalent until inclosure to 5½
yardlands, had been five in number. Besides the
manor there was an estate of a house, cottage, and
2½ yardlands which was from 1706 held by the
yeoman family of Griswold; (fn. 179) another, of 2 yardlands, was held from 1607 by the Gostelows who
also tenanted Prescote, (fn. 180) and from 1652 to 1757 by
the yeoman family of Mansell from Great Bourton. (fn. 181)
From 1680 until 1803 the Mansells and their successors, and from 1803 until at least 1870 the tenants
of Manor Farm, (fn. 182) were responsible for collecting
the college's rents in Cropredy. (fn. 183) A tenement of I
yardland was from 1595 to 1675 held by the Dyer
family, (fn. 184) and the remaining leasehold tenement in
Cropredy was held in the 18th century by the
Elkington family. (fn. 185) The college also possessed six
copyholds in Cropredy, (fn. 186) consisting at one time of
nine cottages with various appurtenances; all were
enfranchised by 1873. The largest tenement was held
from 1699 by the Anker family and contained the
Brazen Nose Inn.
The wealth of the Cropredy farmers varied widely,
from members of such families as the Wyatts, who
inhabited large farm-houses and were consistently
prosperous throughout the 17th century, to others
who left personalty at their deaths valued at as little
as £20 and less. (fn. 187) For the hearth tax of 1665 11
people were assessed on 42 hearths, while 11 others
were discharged 'by poverty' from payment on 18
hearths. (fn. 188) Among those discharged, however, were
men who later left personalty valued at c. £150,
while one man assessed on 3 hearths left only £32. (fn. 189)
An Act for the inclosure of Cropredy field and Ast
Mead was obtained in 1774, (fn. 190) and the award was
dated 1775. John Chamberlin, soon to be tenant of
Cropredy Lawn, was one of the commissioners.
Forty-three yardlands (1,546 a.) were inclosed; old
inclosures amounted to 115 a. in all. They consisted
of 60 a. in and around Cropredy village, 31 a. already
tithe-free, and West Meadow (24 a.) along the
Warwickshire boundary. The three largest allotments, without taking account of exchanges, were
982 a., including 20 a. in Ast Mead, to Sir William
Boothby, 253 a. to the Bishop of Oxford as Rector of
Cropredy, and 190 a. to Brasenose College. The
vicar received 43 a., and seventeen other individuals
received small allotments varying from 18 a. to 2 p.,
which accounted for the few score remaining acres. (fn. 191)
The total estimated cost of inclosure was £1,309 or
17s. per acre. (fn. 192)
Inclosure was followed by increased rents. The
commissioners fixed the rental of the whole village
in 1775 at £1, 522; £477 was accounted for by six
Boothby leaseholds whose rental in 1787 was £617,
the average rental per acre being £1 5s. 6d., whereas
the average rental per acre of five Brasenose leaseholds before inclosure had been only 9s. 6d. (fn. 193)
Inclosure had little effect on land tenure, however,
compared with the financial crisis within the
Boothby family which led to the diminution and
then to the disappearance of their estate by various
sales. (fn. 194) No such single large estate has ever been
reconstituted in the parish. The shape of the individual farms was largely determined not by the
award but by individual landowners: thus the
Boothby allotment of nearly 1,000 a. was at once
subdivided into fields ranging in size from 48 a.
downwards, with one of 99 a., and at least seven
different farms were quickly established. (fn. 195) Cropredy
Lawn and Thickthorn Farm both existed by 1794, (fn. 196)
Oathill Farm may have been in being by 1788, Hill
Farm was built between 1788 and 1801. (fn. 197) In 1851
Cropredy contained 11 'farmers', farming from 4 a.
to 418 a. each, six of them with farms of 100 a. or
more. (fn. 198)
One of the effects of inclosure on Cropredy farming was to decrease the amount of land under wheat.
Moreover, a considerable amount of waste was inclosed at Cropredy, (fn. 199) probably further increasing the
emphasis on pasture farming. Consequently the agricultural depression of the 1870s was not disastrous
there, although it had some effects: in 1872 it was
alleged that emigration of agricultural labourers to
manufacturing districts was decreasing the demand
for cottages. (fn. 200) There was a considerable drop in rents:
the vicar's glebe at the Oxhey was let for 65s. an acre
in 1872, but the rent had to be reduced by 5s. in 1882
and again in 1888. (fn. 201) By 1897 the low price of beef
had caused the substitution of dairying for bullock
fattening on some land, with a consequent decrease
in rent. (fn. 202) In 1914 dairy farming was still predominant
in Cropredy; only 22 per cent of the total cultivated
area was arable, of which roughly 30 per cent was
under wheat, 15 under oats, 14 under barley.
Swedes, turnips, mangolds, and potatoes were also
grown. It was estimated that in 1914 there were 53
sheep and 29 cattle to every 100 acres. (fn. 203) Although
some grassland in Cropredy was probably ploughed
up at the beginning of the Second World War, the
Land Utilization Survey map of 1943 shows a
largely pastoral interest, with arable only on higher
ground away from the village. (fn. 204) Owing to the
proximity of the canal a number of farmers were
also coal dealers in the early part of the century. The
size of farms on the whole has remained small: in
1939 only one farm contained more than 150 acres. (fn. 205)
Cropredy was not solely dependent on agriculture
and the usual village trades: a woman grocer occurs
in 1664; (fn. 206) of a number of Wyatt farriers John (d.
1669) was evidently a veterinary surgeon as well. He
left to his son John his anvil, all his tools, instruments, drugs, oils, powders, medicines, and all other
materials of his trade, together with a whole study
of books. (fn. 207) The following occupations on the Boothby
estate are recorded in 1681: 5 husbandmen, 2
yeomen, 2 labourers, 2 butchers, 1 molecatcher, 1
carpenter, 1 weaver, and 1 collar-maker. (fn. 208) Collarmaking was carried on in the next century by
successive members of the Gardner family. (fn. 209) . In 1851
besides 47 farm labourers and 10 farm servants there
were 4 saddlers, a miller, a nail-maker, whose trade
then flourished at Bourton, 3 blacksmiths, 3 masons,
2 lace-makers, 2 cordwainers, and the usual shopkeepers. (fn. 210) By 1961 agriculture had ceased to be the
main employment: out of 118 workers there were
29 in the aluminium factory at Banbury, 25 landworkers including 9 farmers, 21 builders, and 13
men in the distributive trades, 6 in other industries,
10 railway-, road-, and canal-workers, 4 blackcoated workers, and 2 professional men. (fn. 211)
In 1086 there were five mills in Cropredy parish,
two in the Bishop of Lincoln's demesne and three
in the hands of his tenants. (fn. 212) In 1968 there were still
five mill cuts along the Cherwell within the bounds
of the ancient parish, though that which supplied
Cropredy Upper Mill had recently been filled in.
They may represent the sites of the five Domesday
mills. The two demesne mills may be assigned to
Cropredy township, where the bishop had two mills
in 1279 and 1441. (fn. 213) Walter the miller held a yardland
of the bishop in Cropredy c. 1225; (fn. 214) William at the
mill of Cropredy was hanged in 1315. (fn. 215) Two mills
formerly belonging to the episcopal demesne in
Cropredy are mentioned in 1552, 1589, 1596, and
1606, (fn. 216) and the Upper Mill at Cropredy was leased
to Richard Gostelow of Prescote in 1621. (fn. 217) The two
mills of 1552–1606 are probably those mentioned in
1664. (fn. 218) Upper Mill, north of Cropredy Bridge, was
sold by Sir William Boothby in 1673, (fn. 219) but seems
to have gone out of use fairly soon thereafter, for in
1719 and 1774 only one mill is mentioned; (fn. 220) in 1803
the site passed to the Prescote estate. (fn. 221) The lower
mill in Cropredy, south of Cropredy Bridge, was
held of the Boothby estate by the Shirley family;
in 1696 the Shirleys' tenancy passed (probably by
marriage) to John Allen of Cropredy, miller (d.
1743), whose son was William Shirley Allen. (fn. 222) In
1774 the mill was worked by Michael Pratt. (fn. 223)
The lower mill was acquired by William Hadland
of Clattercote, who made 'great additions' to it in or
before 1824. (fn. 224) Hadland left the old site, however,
and built a new Cropredy mill, and also Bourton
House nearby, in 1831. In 1851 a Pratt still worked
the new mill, (fn. 225) which is said to have been built on the
site to profit from the presence of the canal. The
former lower mill had stood almost on the same site,
in Mill Meadow. (fn. 226) About 1892 Cropredy mill was
reduced by fire and in 1905 was sold to the Oxford
Canal Navigation Co., whose successors still owned
the ruined mill in 1963. (fn. 227) A windmill in Cropredy
was mentioned in 1719, (fn. 228) but not in a survey of
1742. (fn. 229)
Local Government. (fn. 230)
In 1776 Cropredy
spent £167 on poor relief and in 1783–5 an average
of £249, the rise being higher than in most of
Banbury hundred. (fn. 231) Ten years later Cropredy spent
only £278, (fn. 232) but there was a steady and sharper rise
in the next decade to over £500 in 1799–1800 and
£868 in 1800–1, a particularly bad year. Expenditure
per head and the rate (5s. 3d. in the pound) were
about average for agricultural parishes in the
hundred. Although in 1802 expenditure was only
£396, unexpectedly low, the general rise continued.
There was a bad year (1809–10) when £710 was
spent, and the years 1817–19 saw even higher totals.
In 1821, when there had been some improvement,
the cost to the village was about 23s. per head of the
population. Although there was no great expenditure
in 1826, which was generally a bad year, Cropredy did
not escape the crisis of the early 1830s; expenditure
then rose from £498 in 1829 to £548 in 1831 but the
cost per head was slightly lower than it had been 10
years earlier. Total expenditure was falling even
before the implementation of the new Poor Law. (fn. 233)
By far the largest part of the overseers' income
was spent in money payments to the poor, 'weekly
pay' and 'round pay', both of which varied from year
to year and according to the season: in one week in
the spring of 1786 £2 10s. 6d. was spent on weekly
pay for 24 people, while in the spring of 1801, a bad
season in a bad year, an average of £11 a week was
spent on the relief of about 50 persons out of a
population of 470. (fn. 234) In 1802–3 a total of 22 adults
and 17 children were receiving regular relief and 35
occasional relief. (fn. 235) In the spring of 1811, when the
population was more or less the same, about 30 were
getting weekly pay, (fn. 236) and although the population
increased in the next decade the number receiving
weekly relief did not rise. (fn. 237)
The roundsman system was being used by 1785
and in May 1786 28s. was spent in subsidising the
wages of 10 persons. Weekly totals fell to under 10s.
in the late summer of 1802, whereas in the previous
January the figure was £3 18s.; the highest monthly
total was £29 in January 1822. At first the parish
contribution to wages seems to have been paid
through the farmers but in 1822, when W. H.
Chamberlin was overseer, the overseers began to
collect the farmers' share and themselves pay the
whole wage; in June 1822 seven farmers employed
eight men in that way and in July ten. On average
the parish was then paying rather over two-thirds
of the wages. In 1828 the justices intervened to stop
payments for labour and temporarily relief seems to
have been given to some of the men wanting employment by paying them for work on the roads. In 1833
payments for 'labourers' continued to be made out
of the poor rates, although in April of that year the
justices had made another ruling against it. (fn. 238)
Although it has left no certainly identifiable trace
in the overseers' accounts the 'Cropredy Plan' of
a labour rate (fn. 239) probably came into operation in
Cropredy during the 1820s: (fn. 240) W. H. Chamberlin
was said to have devised a scheme, commonly used
on the Warwickshire-Oxfordshire border, by which
every occupier paid labourers' wages in proportion
to the rateable value of his land, and was free to pay
it either to the labourer himself or to the overseer.
In Cropredy the wages paid were 1s. 6d. a day for
each man and 6d. for each boy. Chamberlin admitted
that his plan required some modification to make it
equitable where there was an excess of labour available or where the rate-payers, for example tradesmen, had not equal means of furnishing employment.
The plan was still in operation in 1834. (fn. 241)
The overseers regularly paid the rents of a number
of the poor and for repairs to their houses, but there
was no workhouse. At the beginning of the 19th
century the doctor was getting £10 a year for attendance on the poor with an extra £50 in 1811 for
treating cowpox. Over £27 was entered on the
accounts that spring as expenses on smallpox
(including 2 funerals and the cost of airing houses
with frankincense). Regular subscriptions were paid
to Southam Infirmary and Oxford Lunatic Asylum.
The overseers paid for making the census and
regularly discharged the constable's account, a very
varying sum (c. £14 in 1805–6 and £66 in 1815–16).
After 1834 Cropredy was included in the Banbury
Poor Law Union. (fn. 242)
At inclosure in 1775 land (c. 2 a.) was set aside to
provide material for the repair of Cropredy's roads
and footpaths. In 1836, the material having long been
exhausted, the land was sold for £100, which was
invested. In 1926 the accumulated income of c. £53
was placed in the hands of trustees appointed by the
Parish Council, and in 1958 the Parish Council
obtained direct control. (fn. 243)
Church.
The earliest evidence of the existence of
Cropredy church is Geoffrey of Cropredy's grant,
some time before 1109, of two-thirds of his demesne
tithes to Eynsham Abbey. (fn. 244) Other Cropredy tithes
were granted by Bishop Bloet to Eynsham Abbey
in 1094. (fn. 245) Before 1146 the church had been granted
to the Prebend of Cropredy in the Chapter of
Lincoln Cathedral, (fn. 246) and a vicarage was probably
ordained soon afterwards although the first reference
to a vicar does not occur until 1291. (fn. 247) In the Middle
Ages the parish contained four dependent chapels,
at Bourton, Claydon, Mollington, and Wardington, (fn. 248)
and there may also have been a chapel at Prescote. (fn. 249)
Bourton chapel fell out of use in the 16th century,
and the others remained dependent on the motherchurch until the 19th century.
The prebendaries held the advowson of the
vicarage until the surrender of the prebend to the
Crown in 1543, the last of their presentations being
made in that year. (fn. 250) In 1547 the Bishop of Lincoln
conveyed the advowson to Protector Somerset, (fn. 251) but
a presentation in 1550 was made by the nominee of
the last prebendary. (fn. 252) The Crown, which acquired
the advowson in 1551, then presented until both
advowson and prebendal estate were granted to the
Bishop of Oxford in 1589. (fn. 253) The advowson has
belonged to the see ever since. (fn. 254)
As a prebend Cropredy constituted a peculiar
jurisdiction of the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln,
and as such was outside the jurisdiction of the Archdeacon of Oxford. In the Middle Ages visitations
were held by the prebendaries, and vicars were
instituted and inducted by them. Even after the
prebendal estate and advowson were granted in 1589
to the see of Oxford the bishop had only the patronage of the living (fn. 255) and the Dean and Chapter of
Lincoln inducted. The archdeacon had no authority
in Cropredy, and the Peculiar Court, held in the
Brazen Nose Inn by the official or commissary of the
dean and chapter, dealt with matters which elsewhere
fell within the scope of the archdeacon's court. (fn. 256) By
about 1700 the court's business had become increasingly formal, and after 1735 its activities seem
to have been limited to grants of probate. (fn. 257)
The Bishop of Oxford's rights of visitation were
doubted in the 18th century. In 1738–9 the vicar
received the visitation enquiries indirectly through
the Vicar of Banbury, and although he replied direct
to the bishop he did not answer according to the proforma for fear of giving offence to those who had
'the power over him'. (fn. 258) The next five visitations
(1759–93) evoked no response from the vicars, but
in and from 1808 visitation enquiries were answered
without demur. (fn. 259) Even in 1815, however, the archdeacon, Phineas Pett, who had been vicar 1789–95
diplomatically asked 'to be considered not as intruding upon the privileges of your peculiar' when
requiring information about schools. (fn. 260)
In 1254 the estimated annual income of the prebend was £40, (fn. 261) and in 1291 its value was £66 13s.
4d., half that of the prebend of Thame. (fn. 262) In 1526 the
prebendary was taxed on an income of £46, less
outgoings; (fn. 263) in 1525 the net value of the prebend was
£46; and in 1560 £ 50. (fn. 264) Some of the medieval
prebendaries (e.g. John Sandale, John Catryk) (fn. 265) were
men of great position; but there is no trace of any
prebendal house in the village, although Henry
Wilcocks was probably at or near Cropredy when he
made his will and desired to be buried in the chancel
of Cropredy church should he die near the prebend. (fn. 266)
In the years 1304–5 and 1305–6 the prebendaries
paid a seventh of their income as a fine for nonresidence. (fn. 267) The prebendaries were responsible for
the upkeep of the chancel. In 1810 the prebendal
lessees agreed to bear the cost of maintaining the
chancels of the four churches then in use (Cropredy,
Claydon, Mollington, and Wardington), and the obligations of the holders of former prebendal lands were
extinguished only in 1923 when the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners assumed sole liability for the repair
of the chancels of the four churches. (fn. 268)
The vicarage was valued at £18 in 1291. (fn. 269) In 1526
the vicar was taxed on £40, less £20 13s. 4d. paid to
four curates. (fn. 270) In 1535 the net value was £26 10s. 8d. (fn. 271)
The gross value in 1650 was only £100, (fn. 272) and the
Protectorate approved an augmentation of £15 to the
vicar in 1657. (fn. 273) During the 18th century the value
more than doubled, rising from an estimated £160
gross (£120 net) in 1739 to £345 (£319 net) in 1787. (fn. 274)
In 1814–15 the gross income of the benefice was
£556, and in 1841–2 £654. (fn. 275) The creation of new
parishes in Cropredy in the mid 19th century at first
reduced the vicar's income to below £300 a year,
though by 1876 it had risen again to £340 as a result
of rent increases in Cropredy and Bourton. In 1877
the Church Commissioners granted an augmentation
of £15 in lieu of local claim and in 1928 a further £57
on the basis of population. (fn. 276)
Nothing is known of the medieval glebe except
that in 1279 the vicar held 2 yardlands in Claydon,
and that the prebendary and vicar held 2 ploughlands between them in 1342. (fn. 277) When the parish was
inclosed in the period 1761–98 the vicar was allotted
c. 64 a. for his former glebe in the open fields: at
Cropredy 5 a., at Claydon 32 a., at Wardington 25 a.,
and at Mollington 2 a., one of which was in Warwickshire; at Bourton there was no vicarial glebe. (fn. 278) For
tithes the vicar was at inclosure allotted about 171 a.
in all, together with an annuity of £59 16s. to be paid
in 79 portions by estates in Wardington. (fn. 279) John
Gibbons, vicar 1785–9, thought that Wardington
should have been made to produce £150 yearly, and
that his forerunner, John Hopkins, had been 'very
negligent', though 'not willingly so'. (fn. 280) Hopkins had
only recently arrived when Wardington was inclosed, and he made a better bargain at the inclosure
of Cropredy, getting a tithe allotment of 33 a., to
which were added 5 a. in lieu of exonerated tithes of
old inclosures; at Claydon, it was 45 a. for vicarial
tithes; and at Bourton 6 a. for all tithes. (fn. 281) Before the
inclosure of Mollington the total glebe in Cropredy
was valued at £185 a year. (fn. 282) In his first year (1785-6)
John Gibbons insisted on receiving those sources of
revenue that his predecessor, Hopkins, had failed to
collect (Easter offerings, churchyard fees, Cropredy
moduses and unexonerated tithes), with a marked
effect on the value of the living. (fn. 283) The inclosure of
Mollington, as anticipated, (fn. 284) further improved the
living and the vicar received 50 a. for tithes. (fn. 285) In
1844 the remaining vicarial tithes were commuted
for a rent-charge of £123. (fn. 286) Small pieces of glebe
were sold off in 1849–50, 1883, and 1914, and Glebe
farm was finally sold in 1922.
Before commutation, the chief of many tithedisputes related to Clattercote and Prescote. In 1538
Clattercote had been granted, with its tithes, to
William Petre, (fn. 287) but in 1622 the vicar claimed tithes
there; he was successfully resisted by the owner,
who established that Clattercote was extraparochial. (fn. 288)
In Prescote, where a modus of £22 for the vicarial
tithes was paid in 1694, reduced in 1714 to £14, and
raised to £22 10s. in 1772 and £36 in 1805, the vicar
sued the tenants in 1811, and in 1824 was awarded
judgement and arrears of £949. (fn. 289) A modus of £3 14s.
a year was paid for Williamscot, and the last William
Taylor of Williamscot House (d. 1772) used to settle
on the tithe account his payment for the Oxford
newspaper which he shared with the vicar. (fn. 290)
Of the twenty vicars between the late 13th century
and 1523 (fn. 291) whose names are known two, Roger de
Theydon (? inst. 1333) and Thomas Barton (inst.
1407), appear to have been graduates of Oxford
University. (fn. 292) The two most notable were Barton
and Roger Lupton (inst. 1487), the founder of
Sedbergh School (Yorks. W.R.). (fn. 293)
In 1526 the vicar had the assistance of five suboredinate priests, one each for Wardington, Mollington, and Claydon, and two attached to Cropredy
itself. (fn. 294) One of them presumably served Bourton
chaperl, the other may have been possibly a chaplain
serving St. Fremund's chantry; a chaplain of St.
Fremund is mentioned in 1489. (fn. 295)
Ralph Rudde, instituted to Cropredy in 1550 and
later to St. Ebbe's, Oxford, conformed until his
death in 1557. (fn. 296) His successor Richard Baldwin was
probably the same as the Richard Baldwin deprived
of Henley rectory in 1554. (fn. 297) One at least of his curates
is known to have subscribed. (fn. 298) A Puritan survey of
about 1590 alleged that the three curates of Thomas
Holloway (1572–1619) were 'non-preachers', but
found that Holloway himself preached his quarterly
sermons at the parish church and chapels and sometimes elsewhere. (fn. 299) In 1620 it was reported that a clerk
read the service though not in orders. (fn. 300) In 1641
Cropredy's inhabitants, with those of Claydon and
Wardington, petitioned against their vicar, Edward
Brouncker, accusing him of paying his curates inadequately, and castigating him as an absentee pluralist
and 'a man of scandalous life' who had turned away
a preaching minister paid by the parishioners. (fn. 301)
Brouncker's successor Edward Bathurst (1642–56),
was a distinguished royalist academic, (fn. 302) but his successor seems to have been a Puritan for the Protectorate
approved an augmentation to his salary. (fn. 303) At the same
time the parish was considered too large for effective
care by one minister, and Wardington was given a
separate incumbent. (fn. 304)
In 1678 there were no curates for Claydon,
Mollington, or Wardington, and the vicar was
ordered to provide them at a cost of £50 yearly; at
the time the profits of his vicarage in the three
chapelries were estimated at £80 yearly. (fn. 305) In 1739 a
curate receiving £30 yearly and surplice fees served
Mollington and Claydon and the vicar himself
served Cropredy, where he resided, and Wardington,
but found the burden too great. (fn. 306) That division of
duties between the hamlets, though unequal in terms
of population, was the usual one. There was one
service, with a sermon, at each church on Sundays;
long before, in 1678, the churchwardens of Claydon
had presented the vicar for providing no more. (fn. 307) The
sacrament was administered four times a year. No
improvement in the number of services was made
until the mid 19th century, (fn. 308) communicants became
fewer, nonconformists more numerous.
The increase in the value of the living during the
18th century, made possible the construction of
a new parsonage-house in 1786–7. financed by
mortgage of the glebe, which was more valuable after
inclosure. (fn. 309) The old vicarage-house stood at the west
end of the churchyard, and was assessed on three
hearths in 1665. (fn. 310) Later additions were made but by
1726 it was in disrepair, and in 1738 the vicar stated
that he had spent £150 making it 'much more commodious for a family than it was', and that he was
still spending money annually on its improvement. (fn. 311)
In 1786, after a report from John Taylor, a Banbury
builder, it was decided to build a new vicaragehouse, south-west of the church; the house was built
largely of Fenny Compton stone and Stonesfield
slate, and was originally a rectangular structure of
two stories, with cellars and garrets and a one-story
projection on the north; the main front was originally on the west. Within six years the roof needed
to be rebuilt, and at the same time the attics were
converted into a third story, with three-light sash
windows similar to those in the lower floors. The
work was carried out by the Oxford builder, Pears. (fn. 312)
Subsequent alterations included the removal of the
main entrance to the south front. (fn. 313) A new vicarage
was built to the west of the church in 1962, and its
predecessor was demolished in 1965; numerous flats
and houses were built in the grounds.
The improved value of the living was perhaps
responsible for a change in the quality of the incumbents. Though some in the past had been wellconnected, like Edward Brouncker, who was the
brother of a peer, (fn. 314) and Francis Stanier (d. 1725),
who married a Taylor of Williamscot, Cropredy's
incumbents had usually belonged to a humbler
class, and had resided in the 17th century in an unpretentions house. The four daughters of Thomas
Holloway (d. 1619) had married into local families. (fn. 315)
John Rosse (inst. 1726) had in 1731 married
the widow of a Bourton yeoman, and their daughter
had married into the Eagles family. After 1789,
however, the living was held by four well-connected absentees. Three came from Christ Church,
Oxford: Phineas Pett (inst. 1789) and William
Wood (inst. 1804) were both 'theologi' and censors
of that college when presented to Cropredy. (fn. 316)
The parish was therefore left to curates. There
was one curate for Cropredy and Wardington and a
second for Mollington and Claydon. The Cropredy
curate lived in the new parsonage-house, and when
Samuel Goodenough was vicar (1797–1804) the
curate was his son. In the early 19th century the
stipends of the curates were considerably improved. (fn. 317)
John Ballard (vicar 1811–51), though he also held
Wood Eaton, was resident and zealous. His manner, however, appears to have been overbearing,
particularly towards nonconformists. (fn. 318) Besides
activities as an agriculturalist and as a Conservative,
a Savings Bank Trustee, and a Poor Law Guardian,
he ran a clothing club, asserted his right to tithes,
and reseated his church. (fn. 319) At first he himself served
Claydon as well as Cropredy and Wardington, with
a curate serving Mollington. (fn. 320) Later he and his
curate divided duty at the four churches equally. (fn. 321)
In spite of their efforts attendance at church remained low: the curate refused to make a return in
1851 and the diocesan registrar estimated the attendance at the parish church as 200 in the morning and
300 in the evening of the day of the census. (fn. 322)
William Noel (1851–60) held two services on
Sunday and daily prayers at Cropredy, a full service
with a sermon at Bourton on Sunday evenings, and
preached additional sermons in Lent. He held
monthly communion services at which communicants averaged 32. He catechized at the National
school on Sundays and weekdays and held an evening
school during the winter months. (fn. 323) J. R. P. Hoste
(1860–70), who had charge only of Cropredy and
Bourton, vigorously fought dissent in Bourton and
was energetic in promoting Bourton as a separate
parish. (fn. 324) William Wood (1870–98), in charge of
Cropredy only, and something of an antiquary,
restored the church. In his time there was communion twice monthly and at festivals, and communicants numbered about 75. In addition to the
usual services he held a children's service and
catechism once a month; he catechized in school on
week-days and on Sundays at the Sunday school,
where there were eight voluntary teachers. Instruction was also given by the vicar to the pupil
teachers of the National school. (fn. 325)

The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Cropredy
The parish church of ST. MARY THE
VIRGIN, (fn. 326) a large and imposing building in the
local ironstone, (fn. 327) consists of a nave of four lofty
arches, a chancel with vestry at its north-east corner,
north and south aisles which contain chapels at their
eastern ends, a battlemented west tower, and a south
porch. The south aisle is the Prescote and Williamscot aisle; the north aisle was called the Bourton aisle
during the period of its use by the inhabitants of
Bourton. The vestry contains a priest's chamber in
its upper story.
The oldest parts of the present building are the
east portion of the south wall of the south aisle which
contains a three-light window of c. 1300. From the
early 14th century onwards the chancel, south aisle,
nave, and, in the 15th century, the north aisle were
successively rebuilt, and the chancel arch was enlarged to match the nave arcade; the two aisles were
in the 15th century extended to form chapels, which
over-lap the chancel. Mouldings on the nave arcade
and on the tower and chancel arches are continuous
to the ground without capitals. The porch dates from
the 14th century and replaced an earlier porch; the
tower was added in the late 14th century.
In the Middle Ages there was a chapel or chantry
of St. Fremund, perhaps in the parish church, (fn. 328) to
which money was bequeathed in the 15th and 16th
centuries. (fn. 329) In 1549 the chapel, described as the late
chantry chapel of St. Fruenna (sic) was sold by the
Crown to George Owen and William Martin,
together with its ground, lead, glass, iron, and
stones. (fn. 330) Probably the chantry was pulled down and
the materials re-used. All memory of it had been lost
by the end of the 19th century. (fn. 331) The identification
of the south or Prescote aisle of Cropredy church
with St. Fremund's chapel was made by W. Wood
in 1893, (fn. 332) presumably on the grounds of its association with Prescote.
In 1825–6 Cropredy church was repewed: the
middle of the church was left as open sittings for
the poor and surrounded by 'sleeping-boxes' and
partitions were put up between the nave and the
chancel and between the north chapel and the
chancel. New inner and outer doors were installed
in the porch, and the musicians' gallery (fn. 333) was enlarged; the font was recased. The work was done
mainly by a local contractor, Charles Cook. Some
old materials were used in the work, the fine 14thcentury rood-screen being cut into pieces and used
for railings. The blocked doorway which gave
access to the rood-loft can be seen above the
pulpit. (fn. 334) A west porch, of which the upper part
was timber-framed, was removed in the period
1825–50. (fn. 335)
Though Bishop Wilberforce thought the church
'very handsome' in 1855, by 1875 the vicar said that
it was only in a 'tolerable' state of repair and much
required reseating. (fn. 336) In 1877 an extensive restoration was carried out under the direction of E. W.
Christian. The lead of the roofs was relaid; the
internal walls were restuccoed; the dilapidated
south-east turret over the tower staircase was rebuilt; the gallery at the west end was removed and
the tower arch opened; the level of the chancel floor,
then mostly of lias, was raised and encaustic tiles
laid down; the church was completely reseated and
a mixed array of benches and chairs removed, extra
seats having been installed in 1855 for the children
of the new National school. A blocked double piscina
in the south wall of the sanctuary was opened, as
was an aumbry opposite. (fn. 337)
The church was again reseated in 1914, when
the oak pews were designed by the architect Guy
Dawber; the chancel was repaired in 1922; a hotwater heating system was installed in 1925 in place
of slow-combustion stoves. The chancel and south
aisle roofs were releaded in 1934. (fn. 338)
The church possesses an ancient oak chest,
probably of the 13th century, with three iron clasps
and locks; the carved wooden pulpit is late-medieval
in character, but is said to have had the date 1619
carved on it. (fn. 339) The pre-Reformation brass lectern
is in the form of an eagle, and is the only one of its
kind in the county outside Oxford. (fn. 340) According to
village tradition the eagle was hidden in the Cherwell
to preserve it from the parliamentary troops on the
eve of the battle of 1644, remaining there some 50
years; it had certainly emerged by 1695. (fn. 341) In 1841
the eagle was 'sadly mutilated and the feet used as
ornaments to a wooden desk'. (fn. 342) One of the three
lions which form the eagle's feet is of bronze and
replaces a lost brass one. Some weapons and armour
from the battlefield of 1644 hang in the north aisle.
A brass chandelier for the chancel and a litany
desk were among gifts given at the restoration of
1877.
The medieval octagonal font was returned to the
church in the mid 19th century after a long sojourn
in the vicarage garden. There is also an octagonal
font presented by Mrs. Tonge in 1853. (fn. 343)
Mural paintings discovered during the restoration
of 1877 'perished from exposure to the weather and
the workmen', (fn. 344) except for the remains of a Doom
over the chancel arch and one figure on the north
wall of the north aisle. The north aisle had representations on one side of the north door of the Seven
Deadly Sins and on the other of the Seven Works
of Mercy, each in a medallion with a text, and there
were portions of leaf and interlacing patterns in the
chancel.
The medieval rood-screen was reconstituted in
1877, furnished with new panels and a moulded
crest, and re-erected on the south side of the chancel.
A medieval screen is still in place at the east end of
the south aisle; it contains many times over the
initials A.D., probably for Anne Danvers (d. 1539),
wife of John. (fn. 345)
The church has in the north aisle one fragment of
15th-century glass showing the head of a crowned
female saint. The east window by Lavers, Barrand,
and Westlake was given by the vicar and wardens in
1877. There are further memorial windows painted
by Messrs. Heaton, Butler, and Bayne. (fn. 346)
In the south aisle and chapel are monuments to
members of the families of Danvers and Gostelow
of Prescote, and Calcott, Taylor, and Loveday of
Williamscot. An inscription no longer existing but
recorded in the early 18th century (fn. 347) was to Elizabeth,
wife of Richard Danvers (1482). Sir John Danvers
(d. 1721) is commemorated by a brass plate in the
floor of the south chapel and by a large marble monument, which formerly blocked a window in the south
aisle but was moved to the north wall of the church.
On the south chapel wall is a freestone monument to
Walter Calcott (d. 1582) and his wife Alice, the
inscription being largely defaced. (fn. 348) In the south wall
of the south aisle are two sepulchral arches, in one of
which are the remains of a stone figure of a knight in
chain armour. In the nave is a brass to Priscilla Plant
of Great Bourton (d. 1637). (fn. 349) In the chancel are
memorials to a vicar, Francis Stanier (d. 1725), and
his wife Mary; and to William Taylor of Williamscot
(d. 1733) and his wife Abigail.
The peal of six bells with a sanctus was cast in
1686 and 1689–90, by the Bagleys of Chacombe
(Northants.). (fn. 350) The tenor was evidently recast, for
its inscription says that it was given by Calcott
Chambre; the two brothers of that name were lords
of Williamscot in the late 16th and early 17th
century. In 1706 three bells and the sanctus bell
were broken, and were ordered to be new cast with
their own metal. (fn. 351) The bells were rehung and their
fittings renewed by Messrs. Warner in 1913.
The church already had a clock in 1512 which was
perhaps the clock repaired in 1694–5 and sold for 5s.
in 1719–20; a new clock had been made for £6 in
1713–14 by an unnamed Daventry clockmaker. (fn. 352)
The clock surviving in 1966 was made by John
Moore & Sons, Clerkenwell, in 1831; it was bought
partly by subscription from Cropredy and Bourton
and partly by subventions (1831–6) from the rent of
the bell charity. (fn. 353)
The bell charity (fn. 354) dates from at least 1512, when
Roger Lupton, Vicar of Cropredy, gave £6 13s. 4d.
to find a person to keep Cropredy parish clock going
hourly, and to ring bells at specified times. In 1614
the charity was stated to be also for the repair of the
church. Two separate quarter yardlands in Wardington bought with the endowment in 1513 and 1517
were confiscated under the Chantries Act and sold
to William Harrison, but were restored to the
trustees in 1557. (fn. 355) At the inclosure of Wardington
in 1762 the trustees were awarded 14 a., subsequently
known as Bell Land, which in 1823 brought in an
income of £32. The money was divided equally
between the churchwardens of Cropredy and
Bourton and the excess of the income over the sum
paid to the parish clerk for ringing and winding the
clock (£4 10s.) saved Cropredy from raising its full
church rate for many years. (fn. 356) In 1966 the curfew
was rung twice weekly at 6 p.m., and it was stated
that a bell had been rung until recent times at 6 a.m. (fn. 357)
The church plate, besides a silver chalice of 1570
and a pewter paten, alms-dish, and flagon (the two
last given by Mr. Holloway in 1666), (fn. 358) includes what
may be a small oval tin pyx, claimed to be the only
medieval pyx still in existence in England, (fn. 359) but is
more probably a seal-skippet. (fn. 360)
A churchyard cross was demolished in the Civil
War. (fn. 361) There is a sundial on the south wall of the
church. Probably the most imposing tomb in the
churchyard is that of John Chamberlin (1817), and
the oldest are two of 1631. In 1923 Mrs. George Barr,
wife of Cropredy's vicar, gave £100 of which the
income was to be used for mowing the churchyard;
to this her husband added £50 in 1926. In 1966 the
income was £6 10s. (fn. 362) The churchyard may once have
extended further east, in which direction many
human bones were dug up in the 19th century. (fn. 363) A
burial ground adjoining the Mollington lane was
consecrated in 1950. (fn. 364) A mission hall, designed by
W. E. Mills, was built near the church in 1887–9. (fn. 365) .
The parish registers begin in 1538; there are no
baptism entries between 1754 and 1801 and no
burial entries between 1754 and 1813. (fn. 366)
Nonconformity.
In 1739, out of 267 families
in Cropredy parish only eleven (3 per cent.) were
dissenters, possibly all in Wardington except for a
family of Quakers in Claydon. (fn. 367)
In Cropredy township the growth of Methodism
was much slower than in Bourton, where Anglican
difficulties were far greater: in 1808 there was only
one poor dissenting family, and no meeting-place for
dissenters; in 1811 Cropredy and Bourton together
were said to contain 15 dissenting families, described
by the vicar as Methodist, most of which may be
assigned to Bourton. (fn. 368) The movement made headway there in the next few years, for in 1819 George
Nobbs's dwelling-house was licensed as a meetingplace, and in 1822 a Wesleyan Methodist chapel in
Cropredy, standing on land owned by the Hadland
family of Clattercote, was registered. (fn. 369) In 1851 it
contained 160 seats, with a morning Sunday school
of 45 on the day of the census, an afternoon service
attended by 73 adults and 56 children, and an
evening service attended by 90 adults and 10
children. (fn. 370) The incumbent reported in 1866 that
one-fifth of the village called themselves dissenters,
and in 1878 that they numbered 'about 70', but that
some of them occasionally went to church, and that
many families were of divided allegiance. (fn. 371)
A new chapel with Sunday school was opened in
1881. The village never had a resident minister. (fn. 372)
In 1964 arrangements for serving the chapel were in
the hands of the Methodist minister of Banbury.
Education.
The foundation of a free grammar
school in 1575 at Williamscot (fn. 373) suggests that the
Cropredy area already had some elementary teaching, and judging from the extent of literacy in the
late 17th and early 18th century elementary schooling was still widely available: of 216 grooms and
bondsmen whose names appear on the Peculiar
marriage bonds during the period 165 signed their
names and 51 made their mark. (fn. 374) From 1575 until
its closure in 1857 six places in the free school were
reserved for Cropredy children.
In 1616 Margaret Crowley was presented in the
Cropredy Peculiar court for teaching school without
licence, but the exact place is not specified. At about
the same time the parish clerk taught school in
Cropredy; in 1686 William Cleaver was presented
by the parish clerk (whose dues he had refused to
pay) for teaching school without licence. (fn. 375) No
comparable record of a school has been found for the
18th century, and in 1808 Cropredy lacked even a
Sunday school. (fn. 376) In 1814 the vicar established a
Sunday school (fn. 377) at Williamscot. (fn. 378) In 1819 there
was an additional Sunday school at Cropredy attended by 25 girls; (fn. 379) in 1833 16 children attended an
Anglican Sunday school, but 44 attended a Wesleyan
one where instruction was free. (fn. 380)
In the 1820s there was at least one dame school in
Cropredy. (fn. 381) By 1833 a day school, started in 1820,
was attended by 31 children of both sexes. Seventeen
were paid for by the vicar and the rest by their
parents. There was also a day and boarding school,
started in 1824, which educated 18 girls at their
parents' expense, (fn. 382) and another day and Sunday
school in addition to the Anglican and Wesleyan
schools already recorded was attended by 75 boys
and 11 girls on weekdays and 60 boys and 10 girls
on Sundays. (fn. 383) Nevertheless, in 1854 the vicar stressed
the want of good schools as an 'impediment to his
ministry', (fn. 384) and in that year a National school was
established for Cropredy and Bourton. (fn. 385) The site
was on land given out of the Vicar of Cropredy's
glebe. (fn. 386) The cost with the adjacent school-house was
£720, of which the government gave £270. The
school, with room for 150 boys and girls, opened in
1855, and by midsummer had over 130 pupils. In
1856 the income from all sources (£30 from Bourton
charities, £29 from Cropredy subscriptions, and £24
10s. from school pence) was enough to provide a
good master and mistress. (fn. 387) After considerable
opposition from the people of Bourton (fn. 388) the school
got under way.
In 1857 the Calcott endowment to Williamscot
Grammar school was diverted to elementary
education. (fn. 389)
Cropredy and Bourton school (known after 1867
as Cropredy school) at first suffered from overcrowding and from the fact that there was only one
room. In 1865 spelling and reading were weak,
though writing was very good and arithmetic good;
the presence of the infant class made teaching difficult. (fn. 390) In addition to reading, writing, and arithmetic
the school taught religious knowledge, history,
geography, and grammar. There were several dissenters'
children in the school. (fn. 391) A new infants' room
was built in 1867, (fn. 392) and in 1868 the school staff consisted of a certificated master, a sewing-mistress,
and three part-time teachers. (fn. 393) In 1924 Cropredy
school was attended by children of all ages from that
village and by older children from Bourton and
Mollington. (fn. 394) A reorganization in 1947 made Cropredy a junior and infant school and transferred all
the senior children to a school in Banbury. In 1970
there were 122 children on the roll of Cropredy
school. (fn. 395)
Charities for the Poor.
Walter Calcott by
will dated 1575 charged his manor at Williamscot
with the payment of 5s. to the poor of Cropredy to be
distributed after the preaching of an annual sermon.
In 1824 Mrs. Loveday was paying 10s. for a sermon
each Whit Tuesday, and distributing the money
thereafter. (fn. 396) The money was being received and
distributed in 1931. (fn. 397) The charity was still in existence in 1969; the 5s. for the poor was by that time
used to augment Tomson's Charity. (fn. 398)
Edward Bathurst, Vicar of Cropredy, 1642–56,
left money to apprentice annually one poor boy or
girl from Cropredy and three other places, but the
charity was apparently lost by 1824. (fn. 399)
By will dated 1657 Joyce Hall gave half the annual
rent of a small property (c. 2 a.) in Burton Dasset
(Warws.) to the poor of Cropredy. In 1825 the
property was let for £12 a year. Cropredy's share
was distributed after Christmas to all the poor in
sums of 1s. 6d. or 1s. (fn. 400) In 1916 the property was sold
for £390 and in the 1950s the dividend of £7 13s. 6d.
was paid annually into the Cropredy Clothing Club
and about 30 people received 5s. each. (fn. 401) In 1969 16
people received 11s. each. (fn. 402)
The trustees of the poor of Cropredy were allotted
4½ a. of land at inclosure in 1774, the rent from which
in 1786 amounted to £5 1s. 9d. (fn. 403) In the 1950s the rent
of £7 10s. was distributed to about 16 persons, each
receiving 9s. In 1960 the rent was £10; (fn. 404) in 1969 it
was £32 10s. The income was distributed among 25
people. (fn. 405)
In 1819 £40, described as the Town Stock, of
unknown origin, but supposed to have been surplus
money at the time of inclosure in 1774, was held by
William Eagles. William's father had paid 40s. a year
interest on this sum, distributed every fourth year
to the poor of Cropredy. William Eagles had increased the distributions to every other year, each
person receiving about 1s. (fn. 406) No further evidence of
the distribution of this charity has been found.
By will proved 1866 Elizabeth Walker gave £1,000
in trust, half the interest to be spent on fuel for the
poor and half in goods or money for poor widows
and widowers at Christmas. In 1969 the income of
£21 was distributed to 24 people at the rate of 17s. 6d.
each. (fn. 407)
By will proved 1871 Rebecca Tomson gave money
in trust to buy £1,000 of 3 per cent, stock, the
income to be given half-yearly to 12 aged poor of the
parish. The annual income in the period 1953–5 was
£25, and each recipient was given tickets for coal
and groceries worth 1 gn. (fn. 408) In 1969 the income was
£25 4s. which was distributed in cash to 12 people. (fn. 409)
Mary Toms by will proved 1897 gave £500, the
income from which was to be used to provide coal
for the most necessitous inhabitants. (fn. 410) In the period
1953–5 the income was £10 8s. a year out of which
20 coal tickets of 10s. each were distributed. (fn. 411) In
1969 20 people each received 10s. (fn. 412)