SYDENHAM
The parish covers 1,548 acres and lies on a belt of
Gault Clay in the plain between the market-town of
Thame, about 3 miles to the north-west, and the foot
of the Chiltern hills, about 2 miles to the south. (fn. 1) By
the early Middle Ages Sydenham was a chapelry of
Thame, a connexion which probably preceded the
Conquest, but it was feudally bound to Chinnor, its
neighbour on the south-east, being a member of
Chinnor manor. (fn. 2) The chief interest, however, of the
parish's history has been the long connexion with
the abbots of Thame and their successors at Thame
Park. This can be traced from the 12th century to
1917. (fn. 3) Otherwise, no persons of national importance
have been connected with the place. Nor has it been
connected with any events of importance except
during the Civil War. Although off the main lines of
communication the village can hardly have escaped
from the foraging parties of both Parliamentary
and Royalist troops stationed in the vicinity, but no
record of their depredations has survived.
There have been no recorded boundary changes
and the parish bounds must be substantially the
same as they were in Anglo-Saxon times. The short
southern boundary follows the ancient trackway, the
Lower Icknield Way, and until 1932 when Towersey
was transferred from Buckinghamshire to Oxfordshire part of the north-eastern boundary was the
county boundary. (fn. 4) Small brooks, notably Crowell
Brook and its continuation Kingston Brook, as they
were called in the 18th century, (fn. 5) form parts of the
rest of the boundary. This brook also flowed through
the centre of the parish and drove the mill lying
to the south of the village. There its waters were
dammed up to form the mill-pond and it was
bridged on the Chalford road by a bridge long known
as Grimbaud's Bridge after its 12th- and 13th-century millers. (fn. 6) Where the brook crossed the village
street to the north of the church the bridge was
called Church Bridge in 1627. (fn. 7) Another large pond
once in the north of the parish has disappeared. It is
now just marshland and its site is marked by Sea
Pond Wood. In the north-west corner parallel with
the Cuttle stream that divides Sydenham from Thame
is a most interesting survival. This is the stream cut
by the monks of Thame in the 12th century so as
to connect the Cuttle (then called the Sydenham
stream) with their stream in Thame Park. (fn. 8) As the
fields were so well watered and the soil was largely
heavy clay, drainage must always have been a problem; and there is in fact evidence from the early
18th century that the regular scouring of watercourses needed constant enforcement by the courts. (fn. 9)
Most of the parish lies between the 250- and 350foot contour lines but the ground rises slightly
higher in the west and to over 350 feet in the south
near the Lower Icknield Way. There is little woodland
except for Sydenham Hurst (c. 45 a.) in the north, (fn. 10)
but the hedges are well timbered.
The chief road in the parish runs from Chalford
through the village to Emmington and links the main
London road with a minor road from Thame to
Chinnor. The last was probably the royal road (via
regia) mentioned in a 13th-century charter and
along which some of Thame Abbey's land lay. (fn. 11)
Sewell Lane, running south from the village towards
Crowell, used to be called the Mill Way, since it was
no doubt used by the Crowell villagers to go to
Sydenham mill. (fn. 12) Before inclosure there were two
roads crossing the open fields from Manor Farm
and converging just before entering Thame Park.
Davis shows them clearly (fn. 13) but there is no evidence
of them today above ground or any evidence that
they ever had a stone surface. They were probably
mainly used as farm roads by the tenants of the
Musgrave estate. An old stone bridge across the
brook dividing Sydenham fields from the Park might
mark the place where the old track passed.
The village is fairly centrally situated, but it is
clearly the brook by which it lies that determined its
site. It was a fairly large settlement both in the
Middle Ages and in the 17th century when 41 of its
householders paid tax on 81 hearths for the hearth
tax of 1662. (fn. 14) Not all these houses, however, were
in the village. There were two big outlying farms at
the Grange and Upcot (now Manor Farm) that probably had cottages adjoining and there were perhaps
a few cottages at West End and at Sydenham
Stert. (fn. 15) The only cottage now left at Sydenham
Stert is probably of late-16th-century date. It is
timber-framed with massive beams and partly constructed of lath and plaster, partly of brick. It seems
to have been two cottages once or perhaps one cottage
with a stable and loft attached, for there are two
blocked outside doorways in the walls of the first
story, indicating that it was once reached by outside
staircases.
Many other 16th–17th-century cottages have also
survived in the village. At the south end, Vicarage
End as it is called, there are a couple of timber-framed
cottages of this period; they have brick (sometimes
herring-boned) or lath-and-plaster infilling and are
thatched; a row of three timber-framed cottages,
now used as one house, are thatched and also mostly
built of brick, although there are traces of older construction. Some lath and plaster survives and at the
gable-end of the oldest cottage there are crutch
beams. Other ancient cottages, including the very
picturesque post office which is built of rubble stone,
lie on the Emmington road. Some cottages here,
built of mud, were demolished in 1950. (fn. 16)
In the 18th century most of the farmhouses in the
village were rebuilt and some entirely new cottages
were erected. There is, for example, a good farmhouse at Vicarage End that belonged to the Musgrave estate and was still called Musgrave Farm in
the early 20th century. It is an L-shaped house of
red brick of two stories and an attic. It has a threebay front and a half-hipped roof covered in old tiles.
Ryder's on the Emmington road, named after its
early-19th-century owner, is a superior building of
chequer brick. It has two stories and first-floor
string-course. There are two small gabled dormer
windows in the attic story. Adjoining it are four
brick cottages of contemporary date; they are brick
built and have a first-floor string-course and brick
denticulated eaves. Opposite is the Queen Anne
house of the Burrows family. It is L-shaped and the
wing at the back is constructed of brick and has casement windows, but the front has shuttered sash
windows and has been rough cast in recent times. It
is distinguished by being set back from the road
behind a lawn and by its group of ancient yews, and
must have once been a dignified house. The Burrows
family, established as wool drapers at Thame in the
17th century, owned this farm at least by 1745, when
it was left by John Burrows, a rich London wool
draper, to his son John, a fashionable London
clergyman. (fn. 17)
Another farm at the north end of the village and
the 'Sun' were also rebuilt in the 18th century. The
inn is partly constructed of flint and brick. The farm
is of red brick and still retains its sash windows
with small 18th-century window panes. Many fine
weather-boarded barns, thatched or tiled, survive
and are grouped round the farm-yards. Davis's map
of 1797 shows that the village at this time was rather
more compact than now and centred round the
church and a green. There is still a spreading elm
opposite the 'Sun' and traces of the green remain,
but most of it has since been built on and inclosed
or converted into roads.
Increasing population and prosperity in the first
half of the 19th century led to rebuilding and expansion. By 1841 there were 86 dwellings in the parish
compared with 60 in 1811. (fn. 18) Some of these were outside the village: six new houses, for instance, were
built at Cassilty Row on the Emmington road and
at some distance away. (fn. 19) But a well-built row of
brick cottages was also added to the village street.
The chief additions, however, were the 'neat and
commodious' Vicarage and the school. The former
was built in 1846 in Elizabethan style at the south
end of the village some way away from the church.
The site may have been a new one as there had been
no Vicarage for many years. It was 'surrounded by a
well-planned and beautifully laid out garden'. (fn. 20) The
construction of the school and schoolhouse followed
soon after. It is a picturesque 'Elizabethan' building
of flint and red brick facings. Today (1958) it is used
as a village hall. (fn. 21) Two nonconformist chapels were
erected in the first half of the 19th century; one was
rebuilt of cheap red brick in 1881. (fn. 22) The 20th century has contributed eight Council houses of cement
at Sydenham Grove: they are built in pairs and lie
off the Emmington road. There is a row of council
houses, called Park View, outside the village along
the road to Emmington.
Of the outlying houses the oldest is Manor Farm. (fn. 23)
It is a rectangular building with some later additions.
Its whitewashed plaster conceals what was once a
timber-framed house. This can more easily be seen
from inside where much of the timber has been
recently exposed, but timber-framing with brick
infilling can also be seen in the right-hand gable-end.
The house has an iron porch of Regency or early
Victorian date. The Mill House, now a private residence, was restored in 1945 by Miss G. D. Newberry,
and although there are modern additions it is still
substantially an 18th-century house of three bays
with a weather-boarded and brick granary attached.
The Grange Farm, which lies on the site of the
medieval grange of Thame Abbey, retains no features
of interest apart from its 18th-century barns.
Manor and Lesser Estates.
Before the
Conquest SYDENHAM, (fn. 24) which was rated at 15
hides, was held freely by a certain Almar. (fn. 25) After the
Conquest it was given to William FitzOsbern, Earl
of Hereford (d. 1071), who was succeeded in England by his second son Roger. He forfeited his lands
for rebellion in 1075. (fn. 26) In 1086 Gilbert de Breteuil
was holding Sydenham at rent of the king 'of the fee
of Earl William'. He took his name from Breteuil, the
head of the earl's Norman fief, and was an important
tenant-in-chief. (fn. 27) Sydenham was probably given
with Chinnor to Hugh de Vernon and by 1146 it was
held by his son Richard de Vernon. (fn. 28) Until the mid13th century Sydenham followed the descent of
Chinnor (fn. 29) and together they formed 1 knight's fee. (fn. 30)
It was in fact a member of the manor and the men of
Sydenham did suit every three weeks at the court of
Chinnor. (fn. 31)
After being forfeited by Walter de Vernon Sydenham was granted in 1203 to Saer de Quincy and it
was his son Roger who granted the manor to Thame
Abbey. The abbey had long been a considerable
landholder in the parish and by 1237 had received
grants of at least 2½ hides. (fn. 32) In 1248 Roger de Quincy
gave in free alms 1½ carucate, said to be all his Sydenham land, for an annual rent of £20 and 2 capons.
The abbot and his Sydenham tenants were freed
from doing suit at the earl's Chinnor court; the view
of frankpledge, which the earl had held, was transferred to the abbot; (fn. 33) and the earl retained only free
warren and the homage and service of the Sydenham
freeholders. (fn. 34) In 1255 Roger de Quincy, Earl of
Winchester, was still said to hold Sydenham which
was then assessed at 13 hides, (fn. 35) but before his death
in 1264 he must have completed the transference of
Sydenham to the abbey, for in 1279 the jurors stated
that the abbot held the manor as a ½-fee by the enfeoffment of Roger de Quincy. The rent was 6s. 8d.
and two capons at this time, although in 1270 it had
been £21 a year. (fn. 36)
In 1285 the king brought a writ of quo warranto
against the abbot, asking by what right he held half
of Chinnor manor. The abbot successfully defended
himself by saying that he did not hold half the manor,
but the hamlet of Sydenham, which was in the
manor and which Roger de Quincy had given him
in free alms. (fn. 37) The connexion with Chinnor lasted
until the 16th century, the rent of 6s. 8d. being paid,
after Chinnor had been divided, to the holders of
the Ferrers manor. (fn. 38)
Thame Abbey held its SYDENHAM GRANGE
and manor, known also as ABBOT'S FEE, (fn. 39) until
its dissolution in 1539. (fn. 40) In 1542 Sydenham was included in the grant of the abbey's Thame estate to
Sir John Williams. (fn. 41) He held the grange and manor
at his death in 1559, (fn. 42) but while most of the abbey's
Thame property went to his daughter Isabella and
her husband Sir Richard Wenman, he left Sydenham to his other daughter Margaret and her husband
Sir Henry Norreys. (fn. 43) They also inherited the Bishop
of Lincoln's Thame manor and Sydenham followed
its descent (fn. 44) until 1608, when it was conveyed by
Francis, Lord Norreys, to Sir Richard Wenman. (fn. 45)
Sydenham then followed the descent of Thame
Park, (fn. 46) and the Wenmans and their heirs the
Wykeham-Musgraves remained lords of the manor
and chief landowners in the parish until 1917, when
much of their Sydenham land was sold. (fn. 47) By 1925
they had sold almost all of it, (fn. 48) and manorial rights
had ceased to exist.
There was a smaller estate in Sydenham which
did suit at Wallingford honor's courts and which was
known in the 15th century as Poly's Fee and in the
late 18th century as Pool's Fee. (fn. 49) It had its origin in
the medieval freehold of the De la Pole family. John
de St. Pol appears as witness in the late 12th century
and a Ralph de Pol some 30 years later. (fn. 50) In about
1250 Peter de la Pole appears, probably the Peter
who held 4 virgates in 1279. (fn. 51) By about 1300 he had
been succeeded by John de la Pole. (fn. 52) who in 1316 was
one of the richest men in the parish. (fn. 53) By 1356 the
family house had been sold, (fn. 54) and no further mention
of the family has been found. Its fee continued
separate from the manor and was represented in the
late 18th century by the farm belonging to Sir John
Skynner of Great Milton (d. 1805), Chief Baron of
the Exchequer. (fn. 55) The farm was later known as
Ryder's farm after his daughter and heiress Frederica
and her husband the Rt. Hon. Richard Ryder, a
judge and politician. (fn. 56) In about 1824 they sold it to
Miss Wykeham and it thus became merged with the
manor lands. (fn. 57)
In the early 13th century Saer de Quincy, Earl
of Winchester, granted 18 acres in Sydenham to
Littlemore Priory, and later his son Roger freed the
nuns from suit at his Chinnor court. (fn. 58) The priory
also acquired for 60 marks 2 messuages and a ½-hide
from Peter de Harwell when two of his daughters
became nuns at Littlemore, (fn. 59) and towards the end of
the century Roger de la Mare granted 1½ virgate. (fn. 60)
Littlemore kept its Sydenham estate, undoubtedly
the 6½ virgates entered under Chinnor in 1279 for
which the prioress paid 2s. and a pound of pepper, (fn. 61)
until its dissolution in 1525. It then became part of
the endowment of Cardinal College, and in 1532 of
Henry VIII's College. (fn. 62) The estate was in 1547 lost
to the college and acquired by Sir John Williams of
Thame, who left it in his will to the Thame almshouses. (fn. 63)
Lord Williams's executors in 1575 granted Littlemore's Sydenham estate, which in the late 17th
century consisted mainly of a farm of 6½ yardlands, (fn. 64)
with much of the other almshouse property, to New
College in trust for the almshouses. (fn. 65) The college
held it until the 19th century, but from the late 17th
century rented it to the lords of the manor. (fn. 66) When
the alms houses were sold under a Scheme of 1874 of
the Endowed Schools Commission and the charity
was placed under the new board of governors,
established for Lord Williams's school at Thame, the
land was handed over to it. (fn. 67)
Another small estate was held in 1237 by Saer de
Wahull, a Bedfordshire landholder. It consisted of
1 carucate, valued at £7, granted him by Saer de
Quincy. (fn. 68) This is probably the land acquired by
Paulinus Peyvre of Toddington (Beds.), 'an insatiable buyer of land', who in 1243 was allowed free
warren in his Sydenham land. (fn. 69) In 1244 Thame
Abbey acquired this carucate, to be held of Paulinus
and his heirs for £16 a year to be delivered at Toddington church, but in 1248 Paulinus exchanged the
rent with Dunstable Priory for Herne manor in
Toddington. (fn. 70) Until the 16th century Thame, therefore, paid this large sum to Dunstable. (fn. 71) By a bond
of 1276 the abbot undertook to pay the money to
Dunstable. (fn. 72)
Agrarian and Social History.
Sydeham was settled by the time of the Anglo-Saxons, if
not earlier. (fn. 73) Its name means 'at the wide rivermeadow', and the fertile meadow-land, watered by
the Crowell Brook, has remained throughout its history an important element in the parish's economy.
By 1086 there was a fair-sized community with a
recorded population of twenty-six. On the demesne
there were 5 serfs and outside it 16 villani and 5
bordars. There was land for 14 ploughs, but in fact
only 9 were in use, 3 on the demesne and 6 outside.
In spite of this apparent under-cultivation the value
of the estate had risen sharply since the Conquest
from £10 to £16. The large amount of recorded
meadow (60 a.) and consequent emphasis on cattlerearing probably accounted for this. (fn. 74)
An important development in the history of the
parish occurred in the mid-12th century when
Richard de Vernon gave Thame Abbey 2 hides of
land and his son Walter later gave another 12 acres. (fn. 75)
Even after these grants Sydenham manor remained a
comparatively valuable one, worth about the same as
the main manor of Chinnor. In the 1190s, when it
was in the sheriff's hands, it produced an income of
between £12 and £14 a year. (fn. 76) From the 1199 Pipe
Roll it appears that about half of this came from
rents. (fn. 77) Following royal policy at this time, a large
proportion of the income was spent on restocking
the land: in 1195 £4 was spent on buying 20 oxen
and 2s. on 2 sows, and in 1196 60 sheep, 5 cows, 4
oxen, a sow, and a boar cost £3 8s. (fn. 78) It is significant
that the income from pasture and hay is especially
mentioned. (fn. 79) In 1219 the manor was valued at £11
and in 1237 and 1255 at £30. (fn. 80)
When Richard de Vernon gave Thame Abbey
2 hides of arable land in Sydenham (about 160 a. or
more), the land was described as that arable and
pasture which was 'more near' its Park meadow. (fn. 81)
The evidence of his son's charter (i.e. Walter de
Vernon's), granted later, makes it clear that Richard
gave the abbey Cotmanmore Mead in the northeast corner of the parish and bordering on Thame
Park, and possibly other neighbouring meadow
round Hurst Hill. (fn. 82) The arable (83 a.) lay divided
among the furlongs of the open fields—6½ acres in
Langelande, 19 in the furlong stretching towards
the East Mead, 8 in Redeland, 23 in Eswar
furlong, 13½ in the furlong reaching to the Park,
4 near the reed-bed, and 5½ in Old Field. (fn. 83)
The abbey was given also 48 acres under Sydenham
Wood, which appears to have been somewhere near
the Chalford boundary to the west of Sydenham
Grange. Woodland (½ league X 3 furlongs), it may be
noted, had been recorded in 1086. (fn. 84) In addition to
the land, Richard de Vernon gave the monks the
right to cut a channel through his land so as to connect the 'Sydenham stream' with their water supply
(ductum aque ipsorum), but he retained the right of
irrigating his own meadow in a dry summer, two or
three times or as often as was necessary. It must have
been the abbey's wish to consolidate its estate that
led to an exchange of land with Walter de Vernon
later in the century. The wording of Walter's grant
is at first sight obscure, but if read in conjunction
with the map there is no doubt that by this grant
the monks acquired, in exchange for their original
scattered strips, a compact estate in the north-west
of the parish contiguous with their Thame land.
Walter gave them 54 acres near their two woods
and the reed-bed to the east which were part of the
land originally granted by Richard. Walter also gave
them 9 acres in a furlong next to the reed-bed and 10
acres in the same furlong. Below these 19 acres
(i.e. to the north, for the land slopes downhill here)
he gave another 10 acres bordering on the Park.
Thus the monks obtained by this exchange 83 acres
which, except for 2 acres, were separated from the
open-field land. Of these 2 acres a ½-acre belonged
to the church of Sydenham. In addition Walter gave
them back 12½ acres of their original grant, because
they lay intermixed in the furlongs given by him
near their reed-bed. (fn. 85)
The abbey's estate in Sydenham was further
increased in 1248 when the Earl of Winchester gave
the abbey 1½ carucate, all that was left of his Sydenham land. (fn. 86) He gave at the same time special permission to assart, plough (frussire), and inclose the
spinney, and 'make advantage thereon as the abbot
chose'. Although the earl reserved his warren there,
it is evident that this agreement marked an important
stage in the cultivation and administration of the
land. A document, a terrier of the abbey's tithe-free
land, which is probably of late-13th-century or early14th-century date, indicates that land had in fact
been brought into cultivation at a comparatively
recent period. It refers to 'La Breche' and also to a
close called Stokkyng (the later Stockend Close and
the present Stocken Corner Covert) as being tithe
free, and specifically states that the latter was free
as it was a new assart. (fn. 87) The same document makes
it clear that the abbey's grange extended down
the parish's western boundary towards Sydenham
village, and was in fact identical with the area of the
19th-century Grange farm: it mentions the 'Green
path' to Chalford, and Grimbaud's mill and bridge,
which must have been the water-mill just west of the
village. (fn. 88) It is possible that the clearance of the woodland led to a shortage of fuel in the parish: some free
tenants, at all events, enjoyed rights of housebote,
haybote, and furbote in the wood 'of Fernore
called Poleswood' in Chinnor. (fn. 89)
There is no evidence about how the village was
affected by the change in manorial lords, but it may
be supposed that Thame Abbey was a more exacting
lord than the non-resident Earl of Winchester. By the
agreement of 1248 the abbot's villeins were freed
from doing suit at the earl's court at Chinnor. From
later evidence it appears that in addition to ordinary
manorial rights the abbot also had the assize of bread
and ale. (fn. 90)

SKETCH MAP OF SYDENHAM C. 1800
The above map is based on Davis's map (1797) and the inclosure award and map (1826).
The survey of 1279 records that the abbot's
demesne consisted of 3 carucates (i.e. 12 virgates) of
arable land and 20 acres of meadow and pasture, or
about 260 or more field acres. Twenty-nine virgates
were held in villeinage, and perhaps about 20 by
free tenants, making a total of over 60 virgates of
cultivated land or about 1,200 field acres. (fn. 91) There
were 27 villein virgaters and 4 half-virgaters: they
held their land for a high rent ranging from 10s. 6d.
to 16s. for a virgate. No services are recorded except
those of mowing the abbey's meadow and of paying
20s. scutage. It is likely that labour for the grange,
unlike the ordinary demesne, was supplied by lay
brothers. (fn. 92)
As Sydenham was from early times a member of
Chinnor manor and the suit of the free tenants, even
after the concord of 1248, was reserved by the lord of
Chinnor, the free tenants of Sydenham are listed in
the hundred rolls amongst those of Chinnor. (fn. 93) The
largest free holding was the 6½ virgates of Littlemore
Priory; (fn. 94) one of 4 virgates was held by the De la
Poles; another holding of 3 virgates and 4 acres
belonged to the Grimbauds; (fn. 95) 2 virgates were held
by the Savages, and 2½ virgates with 4½ acres of
meadow by the Bussards. Most of these free tenants
also held land in Chinnor or in the neighbouring
villages, and it is not possible to be sure how many of
them resided in Sydenham or how much of their
holding recorded in the hundred rolls was in Sydenham or how much in Chinnor. It is reasonably certain, however, that the Grimbauds were the resident
millers and that the De la Poles, Savages, and the
Sydenham family (not recorded in the hundred rolls)
were also resident at some time.
The De la Poles had held land in the parish since
the end of the 12th century and continued to do so and
in Chinnor until 1372. (fn. 96) In 1316 John de la Pole was
the second largest contributor to the 16th and had a
house which is described in the mid-14th century as
consisting of a hall, two chambers, and a kitchen. (fn. 97)
One of the highest contributors listed among the
taxpayers of 1316 and 1327 (fn. 98) was Henry Savage, (fn. 99)
and Walter de Sydenham, member of a family that
figures prominently in the early Sydenham charters,
was another. (fn. 100)
The poll tax of 1377 which lists 115 adults (fn. 101)
provides the first evidence of value for the number
of inhabitants, as both the hundred rolls and the
earlier tax lists are more than ordinarily difficult to
interpret in the case of Sydenham, where so many
families were holding land both in and outside the
parish. The poll-tax list provides at least a minimum
figure and indicates that Sydenham was a village
of about the size of Aston Rowant or Tetsworth,
always assuming that tax evasion in each case was on
the same scale.
Of the state of the parish in the late Middle Ages
there is barely any record. From at least 1474 the
abbey was leasing its grange for £13 13s. 4d. a year.
In addition it received the profits of courts, and the
rents of customary tenants brought in £21, about £2
more than the abbey had received in 1279. (fn. 102) This was
almost the same amount as the receipts recorded in
1535, but because of the large payment of £16 due to
Dunstable Priory, Sydenham's net value was only
£19 3s. 9d. (fn. 103)
Beside the inclosed part of the grange there were
other early inclosures: the mention of ditches and
'splynt' hedges on a holding in 1489 may indicate
inclosed land; (fn. 104) by the 1550s Littlemore's estate had
several closes belonging to it; (fn. 105) and land in West End
and Stockend was almost certainly inclosed by about
1630. (fn. 106) At the time of the inclosure award of 1826
'old inclosures' amounted to nearly half the acreage
of the parish, there being about 835 acres of openfield land out of a total of about 1,550 acres. (fn. 107)
Economic changes in the 16th and 17th centuries
led to the rise of a prosperous class of yeoman
farmers. Twenty-four persons were assessed for the
subsidy of 1523–4, of whom seven were substantial
men and seven of moderate means. (fn. 108) From an
Elizabethan subsidy list of 1577, when the comparatively high number for this subsidy of thirteen was
assessed, it may be seen how greatly the Hester and
Stevens families had prospered and how many of the
leading farmers were new-comers to the parish. (fn. 109) The
returns for the hearth tax of 1662 and 1665 and for
the Compton Census of 1679 provide additional
evidence for the growth of a village upper-class as
well as of the continuance of Sydenham as a fairly
well-populated place. (fn. 110) Forty-one householders were
listed in 1662, 33 in 1665, of which five were discharged by poverty, and 84 adults were recorded in
1679. William White had a house of six hearths;
nine, including a North, had houses with three or
four; and eight had houses with two hearths. The
Whites, who were the tenants of Sydenham Grange
in the mid-17th century, the Mundays, and the Norths
also are known from other sources to have been substantial families. (fn. 111) Four of the Norths were assessed
for the hearth tax in 1665. (fn. 112) These families had
replaced the Hesters, who in Elizabeth's reign were by
far the richest yeoman family in the village and had
been in the parish since the 15th century. (fn. 113) They had
all ceased to be men of property by the end of the
18th century. (fn. 114) These families were mainly tenants,
for in the post-Reformation period about two-thirds
of the parish had been absorbed into the manor. (fn. 115)
Sir John Williams had acquired Sydenham Grange
and manor after the dissolution of the abbey, with
other abbey property. In 1551–2 'the fee of Sydenham',
which included the abbey's lands in Moreton, Attington, and Thame, was valued at £84 6s. 8d. (fn. 116) There is
also some record in the 17th century of the former
Littlemore holding which Lord Williams had given
for the support of the Thame alms-house. As New
College administered the property Warden Woodward made inquiries in March 1667 into the value of
the land. A Thame grazier told him that the arable
was worth nearly 10s. an acre or 8s. at the least. Some
of the pasture ground was worth 30s. and the average
value was at least 26s. 8d. (fn. 117)
In the absence of court rolls nothing can be said
about the details of open-field management or of the
conditions of tenure during this period. Early-18thcentury documents provide a little information.
There was a three-field system of husbandry: the
fields were Upper Field, Forty or Middle Field, and
Lower Field, and all holdings were divided between
the three, although sometimes in varying proportions. (fn. 118) With each holding went a certain amount
of meadow-land in the parish's two meadows, Town
Meadow and Hurst Meadow, which lay north of the
village along Crowell Brook by Sydenham Hurst and
along the Emmington boundary. The amount of
meadow allotted to each yardland seems to have
varied: in a lease of 1717 a 64-acre farm had 3 acres
of meadow in each mead; to another property something over 3 half-acres and 3 yards in each meadow
was allotted, and for a small farm of 12 acres there
were two 'parts', one in each of the lots of Hurst
Mead. (fn. 119) Common pasture was apparently scarce:
there was some in Forty Field and Upper Field, (fn. 120)
perhaps between the furlongs, but no large commons
are marked on the inclosure map, and the amount
of commons are not usually given in terriers. There
is an instance of a 12-acre farm having one cow
common. (fn. 121) Except for Park Leys, as Grange farm
was then called, which was mostly laid down to
pasture, Sydenham land according to Davis's map
of 1797 was predominantly used as arable. (fn. 122) Apart
from the open fields lying on three sides of the village,
most of the inclosed land to the west was arable.
During the 19th century Sydenham's economy
was comparable with that of other parishes lying in
the wheat-growing belt at the foot of the Chilterns.
In its crop rotation, however, it was more oldfashioned than some in the first decade of the century. Arthur Young recorded that the course was
fallow and dung, barley, beans, fallow without dung,
wheat, and beans. (fn. 123) But changes here as in the neighbouring villages were taking place. Small-holdings
were being amalgamated into larger farms. In 1786,
24 tenant-farmers and freeholders were farming
small properties, which were assessed for the land tax
at under £5. By 1820 the hard times following the
Napoleonic wars had helped to reduce this number
to twelve. (fn. 124) Land was bought up by the larger
farmers and the opportunity to amalgamate holdings
was seized. Upcourt farm, the property of the lord of
the manor, was a notable instance of expansion. (fn. 125)
Inclosure was comparatively easy to bring about
since by 1823, when the Act was passed, more than
two-thirds of the parish was owned by Miss Wykeham of Thame Park. In 1824, two years before
inclosure was finally accomplished, she purchased
Ryder's farm, a large freehold property. (fn. 126) Under the
award Miss Wykeham received 516 acres for her
open-field land, 9½ acres for manorial rights, and
140 acres in commutation of the great tithes. (fn. 127)
Smaller awards were 67 acres to the Vicar of Thame
for the small tithes, 69 acres to New College, 75
acres to the Burrows family, and three awards (22 a.,
10½ a., and ¼-a.) to three small freeholders. The
Wykeham-Musgrave estate was itself sold in and
just after 1917. (fn. 128) The sale catalogue provides some
details of interest: Vears farm, a compact farm of
121½ acres, of which only 20 acres was arable, was
a dairy or stock farm. Musgrave farm had 2/3 of its 61
acres under the plough and its land was described
as excellent corn-land and well-watered pasture;
Croton's farm was a compact mixed farm (101 a.) of
which 51 acres were used for arable; Ryder's (116 a.)
was also a mixed farm with 69 acres under the plough.
Since the estate was broken up Sydenham has
been a parish of farmer-owners. In the 1920's there
were eight farms, ranging in size from 60 to nearly
300 acres. The two largest, both over 250 acres, were
the Grange and Manor farm (the former Upcourt
farm). The six others (Vears, Musgrave, Burrows,
Ryders, Croton's and Glebe farms) were under 150
acres. All except Burrows were farmed by their
owners. (fn. 129) The demand from London retailers for
milk after the rinderpest disease of 1865 led to a
further increase in pasture land. (fn. 130) In 1914, although
Sydenham's heavy clay soil made good wheat- and
bean-land, 69 per cent. was by then in grass of good
quality. (fn. 131) A comparatively high number of cattle was
kept, 24 to the 100 acres; sheep breeding was on the
decline. (fn. 132) In 1958 although the farms had become
mechanized during the century they had not
increased much in size. Manor or Upcourt farm
(267 a.) and one other kept sheep flocks, but twothirds of Upcourt's land was arable (half in cereals
and half in temporary grass). Sydenham Grange
(288 a.) was mainly a dairy farm as were the other
smaller farms. Milk was sent to London, and Thame
was the local market. (fn. 133)
Until recent years Sydenham was always wholly
devoted to agriculture: in 1811, out of 65 families,
all but four were employed on the land. (fn. 134) But since
1851, when in addition to the farmers, some 68 men
and boys were employed on the farms, the number
of persons earning a livelihood from agriculture has
steadily declined, and in the 1950's many were
working in Oxford, at the Chinnor Cement works, in
Saunderton (Bucks.), and elsewhere. (fn. 135)
The almost total dependence on agriculture led to
great poverty when the times were bad for farmers.
The condition of the poor first became serious in the
late 18th century, (fn. 136) and was made worse in the 19th
century by the rise in population from 331 in 1801 to
438 in 1841. (fn. 137) Owing to the lack of employment
some families emigrated and numbers began to
decline, but the employment position was still so bad
in 1851 that the census returns described many
labourers and lace-makers as paupers. (fn. 138) Moreover,
the fact that over 90 of the women and girls from
eleven years old upwards were engaged in lacemaking was in itself a sign of poverty and of the
inability of the father of the family to support his
dependants. (fn. 139)
The provision of allotments helped to contribute
to the alleviation of want: by the 1860's part of the
charity lands was being used for this purpose and by
1890 there were 66 allotments of an acre or under, (fn. 140)
so that almost every labouring family in the parish
must have had one. Lace-making, nevertheless, was
carried on at Sydenham into the 20th century, a
later date than in neighbouring villages. (fn. 141)
In the 20th century Sydenham like other villages
lost its rural craftsmen and village tradesmen. In
1851 there were six bricklayers, two cordwainers, a
farrier, a baker, three beer retailers, two publicans
at 'The Sun' and the 'Four Horse Shoes', who also
carried on trades, one as a butcher and the other as
a general dealer, and the miller. (fn. 142) A horse-trainer
had been added to the list by 1887 as well as a mealman with two assistants at the mill, and a hurdlemaker by 1891, but beer-shops had decreased to one,
and the mill had become a steam-mill. (fn. 143) The 'Four
Horse Shoes' lost its licence in about 1912, but was
replaced by the 'Crown' shortly before 1939. (fn. 144)
The corn-mill, which appears in Sydenham records
as early as the 13th century, was at work part-time
until 1945. (fn. 145) In 1917 it consisted of an engine-house
and three floors, and its two pairs of stones were
driven by water-power. (fn. 146) One of the two local shops
was closed in about 1957, and in 1958 the smithy
was only working intermittently. (fn. 147) The census of
1951 recorded 214 inhabitants.
Church.
Until the 19th century Sydenham
church, a vicarage in Aston deanery, was, like Tetsworth and Towersey (Bucks.), a chapel of the prebendal church of Thame and therefore in the
peculiar jurisdiction of Thame. (fn. 148) From at least
the mid-13th century and probably before it had the
ecclesiastical privileges of an independent parish.
The church is mentioned in a charter of 1185–6, (fn. 149)
but its early history is as obscure as the early history
of Sydenham itself. The township, unlike Tetsworth,
was never as far as is known part of the Bishop of
Lincoln's Thame manor. The church was a chapel of
Thame in the mid-13th century and may have been
so from the beginning, or it may have been given at an
early date to Lincoln Cathedral and later annexed to
Thame prebend. In 1841, along with Tetsworth and
Towersey, it was separated from Thame and made
into a separate vicarage. Richard Slater of High
Wycombe (Bucks.), who had bought the advowson
of Thame, vested the advowson of Thame's three
chapels in trustees, known as the Peache Trustees. (fn. 150)
The relationship between Thame and its chapelries was first defined by the ordination of Thame
vicarage, made in or before the time of Bishop
Grosseteste (1235–53). (fn. 151) The arrangement for
Sydenham was nearly the same as that for Tetsworth,
the revenue of the parish being divided between the
prebendary of Thame, the Vicar of Thame, and the
Chaplain of Sydenham. (fn. 152) During the Middle Ages,
therefore, the prebendary collected the greater
tithes and those of wool, but not those of hay. However, since the Cistercians did not pay tithes on lands
which they cultivated, at least a part of Thame
Abbey's Sydenham grange was tithe free. (fn. 153)
After the dissolution of the prebend in 1547 the
tithes of Sydenham became separated from those of
Thame; in the second half of the 16th century and
in the early 17th century they were held by the Wenmans, who were lords of Sydenham manor. (fn. 154) In
1609 Sir Richard Wenman was called the 'parson'
(i.e. the lay rector) and in 1613 he refused to pay a
church-rate for the repair of Sydenham church, presumably on the grounds that he was already responsible for the upkeep of the chancel. (fn. 155) By the late 18th
century the Sydenham part of the prebend had again
become united with the Thame part, which in 1825
was sold to Miss Wykeham. (fn. 156) In 1826 she received
161 acres in commutation of the great tithes of
Sydenham. (fn. 157)
The Vicar of Thame, who was responsible for
nominating the Chaplain of Sydenham, or, as was
later the case, for serving the church himself,
received the rest of the tithes and a mark (13s. 4d.)
for the tithe of hay. The mark was still being paid in
the 1580's, for it is recorded that the curate had received 13s. 4d. a year from the inhabitants for eight
years, but that not knowing its purpose he had used
it towards the church services until he was sued for it
by the Vicar of Thame. (fn. 158) At the inclosure award the
vicarial tithes were commuted for 68 acres. (fn. 159) This
land, with the ½-acre of glebe, probably the equivalent of the ½-acre mentioned in the late 12th century, (fn. 160)
was the principal endowment of the new living
formed in 1841 and was known as Glebe farm. It was
sold in 1920. (fn. 161) In 1843 and 1844 the vicarage was
augmented by £400 from Queen Anne's Bounty and
£455 from James Prosser, the Vicar of Thame. (fn. 162)
The medieval chaplain of Sydenham, who received the offerings of his altar and had the house
and land belonging to his church, was supposed to
have a clerk to live with him and help him serve the
church. (fn. 163) The names of only a few of the medieval
parish priests, usually those who acted as witnesses
or as feoffees in local land transactions, have been
found. (fn. 164) One of these, William Grendon (c. 1363–74),
was outlawed for debt, (fn. 165) and another, William
Skyle (1389–95), is known to have had a chaplain
called Simon. (fn. 166)
Sydenham church for reasons unknown was in
ruins in 1293 and the people of Sydenham erected in
its place a wooden chapel, but this could not be used
before the Prebendary of Thame had inspected it
to see if it was suitable for divine service. (fn. 167)
After the Reformation it is likely that the parish
usually had a resident minister: when in the late
16th century the Wenmans were holding the tithes,
they, rather than the Vicar of Thame, named him, (fn. 168)
and he received the small tithes. (fn. 169) Not much is
known about these ministers of Sydenham, but one,
William Yorke, who was serving the church in the
late 16th century, was 'unlearned'. (fn. 170) A 17th-century
successor Robert Coney, who had a house in Sydenham, was at odds with his churchwardens, perhaps
for doctrinal reasons. They accused him in 1609,
among other things, of giving the Communion to
strangers. (fn. 171) He in his turn presented Robert Sule,
the sidesman, for his abusive language, 'which he
doth use in all times and places', and for his common
contempt; and also Sule's younger brother John,
aged about 17, who refused to attend the catechism
classes and was known to keep 'evil rule' instead,
singing bawdy songs in the village street or outside
the parsonage at 11 or 12 o'clock in the night. The
churchwardens refused to sign the presentment because one of them, being the town miller, could not
afford to make enemies, and both were accused of
taking Sule's part. (fn. 172) Coney was more than once
summoned to the peculiar court and by 1611 had been
replaced. (fn. 173) At about the same time the lay rector was
presented for failing to supply quarterly sermons. (fn. 174)
There was also trouble in 1612 over the church
lands. The revenue from a ½-acre, intended for the
upkeep of the church, had been misappropriated for
the past ten years. In 1661 the church received a
further bequest when Robert Munday, a prominent
yeoman, founded his Kingston Blount charity. (fn. 175)
During the Commonwealth period the minister
Francis Herne appears to have been an anti-Puritan.
In 1656 the Council refused him permission to
preach, (fn. 176) but he seems to have been already ousted
from the living by Francis Bailey. At the Restoration
Bailey and his wife 'ran away', taking with them the
church register; Herne on his return started a new
one beginning in 1663. (fn. 177)
William Stevenson, who was curate at a stipend of
only £20 a year (fn. 178) from at least 1677, was non-resident,
living at Bledlow (Bucks.), where he was vicar. (fn. 179) He
appears to have seriously neglected the parish and
a change of minister was evidently being considered
when in January 1711 the churchwardens sent word
to the official of Thame peculiar not to license anyone to the curacy without first consulting the parishioners. (fn. 180) In May nineteen parishioners, among
whom were the names of several well-known yeoman families, signed a petition asking that Alfred
Carpenter should be made their curate on the
grounds that he would live in the parish and constantly serve the church. Some years ago, they said,
there had always been two services on Sundays, but
'of late years' only one service had been given, sometimes in the morning and sometimes in the afternoon,
either by the non-resident curate or 'by some neighbouring clergyman, when he could be absent from
his own cure'. Consequently the young people had
been given too much liberty and there was danger
of 'division and fanaticism' in the church, in a parish
'where there has been no separatist' for over 40
years. (fn. 181)
Carpenter, who in 1710 had been given permission
by the official to preach in churches throughout the
peculiar, (fn. 182) was apparently living in Sydenham and
had preached 'diverse lecture sermons' in the church
there. (fn. 183) He was, however, not liked by all the parishioners, and one Martha Taylor, the wife of a Sydenham yeoman, 'on the occasion of his standing to be
curate', charged him with immorality and he sued her
subsequently in the peculiar court for defamation.
Edward Sewell, a Sydenham victualler and one of
those who had signed the petition to have Carpenter
made curate, and his wife, in whose house the statement had been made, testified on Carpenter's behalf,
believing him to be 'a person of honest life and
conversation', and Carpenter won his case. (fn. 184) But at
about the same time William Clerke, the Vicar of
Thame, perhaps encouraged by some Sydenham
people, brought a suit against Carpenter. He accused
him of preaching without a proper licence (for to
obtain a licence the bishop had to be given a testimonial of 'sober life' for the past three years), and of
being a heavy drinker, a 'common railer and sower
of discord', especially among Thomas Smith, gent.,
and his tenants and neighbours. This was perhaps
an indication that class-feeling was involved. Carpenter was found guilty on all charges and his
permission to preach was revoked. (fn. 185)
Evidently much feeling had been aroused in
the parish, and in September 1711, probably when the
case was finished, the churchwardens presented the
non-resident Stevenson for omitting or imperfectly
performing Sunday services. They reported that
there had been no catechism for ten years and no
confirmation for seven. (fn. 186) Nevertheless, Stevenson
remained as curate for another ten years. (fn. 187)
After 1761 the parish ceased having its own
minister and was served by the Vicar of Thame or
his curate. (fn. 188) This arrangement is unlikely to have
been very satisfactory and in the first half of the 19th
century certainly the young people of Sydenham
were 'in almost a perfectly wild state'. This was
attributed to the lack of a resident minister. (fn. 189) In
1841 Sydenham was made into an independent
living and its first vicar was William D. Littlejohn
(1844–79), formerly an officer in the Indian Army. (fn. 190)
In 1846 he built a 'neat and commodious' stone
Vicarage, (fn. 191) suitable in size and dignity to his position; he helped to found the National school, (fn. 192) and
finally in 1877, with the help of Lady Wenman, who
had paid for the restoration, he restored the church.
He held frequent and regular services; had a large
Sunday school and an evening school; and saw an
increase in his congregation and the number of
communicants and a corresponding decrease in the
number of dissenters. (fn. 193) A later vicar, Conway Joyce
(1884–94), continued Littlejohn's good work by
building a reading room. (fn. 194)
In the 1950s, because the living was so poor, it was
found impossible to fill it, and the church was served
by the Rector of Chinnor and Emmington. (fn. 195) Usually
only evening services were held.
The church of ST. MARY, dedicated as the
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is a small
building of flint and stone, dating mainly from the
13th century, although considerably restored in the
19th century. It comprises a chancel, nave, north
transept, south porch, and wooden central tower
with a short, shingled spire.
The chancel and nave retain most of their 13thcentury lancet windows: two single lancets in each
of the north and south walls of the chancel and two
on each side of the nave. Before the north transept
was made there was probably a third lancet in the
north wall to correspond with that in the south wall.
Before the tower arches were rebuilt in the 19th
century they were said to be plain 13th-century
arches with masonry responds and moulded abaci. (fn. 196)
The piscina with fluted bowl and trefoil arch in the
south wall and the plain tub font also date from the
13th century. The greater part of all the 13th-century work presumably belongs to the year 1293 or
just after, for in that year the church was 'in ruins',
and work on its restoration had begun. (fn. 197)
In the 14th century the chancel was lightened by
the insertion of a three-light window at the east end,
and in the next century the church was beautified
with a rood-screen and loft that survived until 1840. (fn. 198)
There appear to have been no major alterations to
the fabric until the 19th century, but minor repairs
and improvements were no doubt carried out from
time to time. It was reported in 1607 that the floor
was out of repair (fn. 199) and in 1608 that the Communion
table was broken. (fn. 200) The table now in the vestry may
be the new one that the wardens were ordered to
provide. The steeple was said to be in need of repair
in 1620, and an inscription with the names of John
North, jnr., and Richard Web(b), churchwardens,
1662, recorded by Rawlinson, but which has since
disappeared, may have commemorated some repairs
in the latter year. (fn. 201) In 1700 the chancel needed repair,
but no records have survived of any work done to
the church in the 18th century. (fn. 202) The west gallery,
however, 'a shocking unsightly thing' according to
a 19th-century vicar, was probably erected towards
the end of it. (fn. 203) When Parker visited the church in the
early 19th century he found the rood-screen and
loft disfigured by whitewash. (fn. 204)
In 1877 a badly needed restoration was undertaken. The chief structural alterations were the
lengthening of the nave by 7 feet at the west end,
the lengthening of the chancel and the rebuilding of
the tower arches, the erection of an entirely new tower
and shingled spire of oak, and the building of a
north transept and vestry. (fn. 205) The walls of the extended
nave were buttressed on both sides. Lee's drawings
of the church before and after the restoration show
how the chancel was lengthened and how the central
tower and its supporting arches were moved some
way to the west. When the work of restoration was
being considered, it was proposed to 'raise the ceiling'
and 'remodel' the seats. The vicar said that the seats
in the chancel were useless 'by reason of the tower
ceiling and beams', and that under the new arrangement these seats would be made available. (fn. 206) The
chancel ceiling, which is now coved and plastered,
was presumably intended. The nave has a hammerbeam roof, and although much of its timberwork has
been renewed, the main beams are ancient. During
the restoration the south doorway, which retained
'good' iron work, was replaced and the south porch
was rebuilt. (fn. 207) An early window of three lights in
the south wall of the nave was replaced by double
lancets, which were later filled with painted glass by
Bell & Sons of Bristol in memory of the Revd. W. D.
Littlejohn (d. 1891). (fn. 208) A window in the 'Decorated
style' was inserted in the west wall of the nave and
the new north transept was given 'lancet' windows.
The gallery and the screen were taken down. The
architect was John Billing of Reading and the
builder Giles Holland of Thame. The estimated cost
of restoration was £647. (fn. 209)
In the 20th century a clock was set in the tower in
memory of William Morris, vicar 1904–19. Electric
light replaced in 1936 an earlier system of lighting
that was installed in 1913 in memory of Margaret
Mary Morris, wife of the vicar. (fn. 210) In 1958 the north
transept was used as a vestry and had been cut off
from the church by a wooden partition.
A 17th-century memorial to Mary Day (d. 1698)
has disappeared. (fn. 211) There are two 18th-century
memorials, one to Abigail (d. 1705), wife of Robert
Seywell, jnr. and daughter of Edward Phillips of
Thame, draper, and the other to John Quartermain
(d. 1780). The first is now in the north transept. A
tablet on the north wall of the nave commemorates
the parishioners who died in the First World War.
At the time of the Edwardian inventory there was
one silver chalice. In 1958 the church possessed one
dating from between 1660 and 1684, (fn. 212) which was
probably presented about that period. There were
four bells in 1958 as there were in 1552. The treble
is probably a medieval casting and the tenor is dated
1625. The sanctus bell, dated 1650, now hangs in the
ringing chamber. (fn. 213)
The register of baptisms and burials dates from
1705, that of marriages from 1754, but there are some
earlier transcripts. (fn. 214)
Nonconformity.
No record of Roman
Catholicism has been found.
At the beginning of the 19th century, if not
earlier, encouraged by the absence of a resident vicar,
Protestant nonconformists established themselves in
the village. Private houses were licensed for worship
for unknown denominations in 1804 and 1821. (fn. 215) In
1825 one was licensed for Baptists, who in the same
year built a chapel. (fn. 216) Dissensions evidently arose
among them, as in 1844 another Baptist chapel was
built. These two chapels, known as the Old Baptist
and the New Baptist chapels, (fn. 217) continued in use until
about 1855. Congregations fluctuated in size, and
one of the chapels closed about 1855, partly because
the number of dissenters had declined owing to
the efforts of the energetic vicar, William Littlejohn. (fn. 218)
The chapel which remained open belonged to the
Particular Baptists in 1864. In that year its eleven
trustees included two Sydenham labourers and a
shepherd, all members of one family, a schoolmaster,
and two chair-turners from Chinnor, and two persons from Thame. (fn. 219) It evidently prospered, for it
was rebuilt in 1881 and named Ebenezer chapel, and
a Sunday school was added in 1883. (fn. 220) This chapel
was registered for marriages and it was still in use in
1920, (fn. 221) but had closed by 1932. In 1936 it was sold to
a private owner, who in 1949 leased it and in 1957
sold it to the Methodist trustees. In 1958 it was one
of the chapels on the Methodist Thame and Watlington circuit. (fn. 222)
A Primitive Methodist chapel (fn. 223) had also come into
existence by 1866 which was still in use in 1910, but
no later record of it has been found. (fn. 224)
Schools.
Early in 1815 a school for about 40
children, half of them girls, was established. (fn. 225) It was
supported by the lady of the manor, Miss Sophia
Wykeham (later Baroness Wenman), but apparently
no longer existed in 1818 when the poor were said
'to be anxious to have the means of education'. (fn. 226) Until
1849 Sunday schools provided the sole education. In
1815 parish children could attend the Sunday school
at Towersey (Bucks.), and by 1833 Miss Wykeham
had given her support to a Sunday school at Sydenham. Sixty-five children (about 75 by 1854) (fn. 227)
attended, and there was also a Baptist Sunday
school which gave free instruction to 39 children. (fn. 228)
In 1849 a National school was finally built; the
Wykeham-Musgraves gave the land and private subscribers and Baroness Wenman provided the money:
it consequently became known as the Wenman
School. (fn. 229) School attendance was said in 1854 to vary
from 20 to 40, and instruction was paid for by pence
and subscription. (fn. 230) In 1867 the average attendance
was 48 in the day and 10 at night. (fn. 231) Some years later,
in 1884–5, the inspector complained that standards
had gone down because of overcrowding, but in
1886 the school was enlarged to take 100 children.
The average attendance was 79; in 1890 it was 82.
Some of the children came from Emmington. By
1890 almost half the income came from a parliamentary grant. (fn. 232) The school was described as a 'good
country school'. Teachers complained of irregular
attendance, particularly because of agricultural work:
children were kept away, for example, to pickacorns. (fn. 233)
Nevertheless, the inspector in 1898 and later said
that the school was 'zealously taught' and the children
were 'in capital order'. (fn. 234) In 1906 the attendance had
dropped to fifty-eight. (fn. 235) The Wenman school became
a junior mixed and infants' school in 1929 with 14
children; seniors of 11 years and over walked or cycled
to Chinnor. There were 18 children at the school in
1939, but in 1948 the school was closed and all the
children have since gone to Chinnor. (fn. 236)
Charities.
In 1612 it was reported that a ½
acre of land in Sydenham, which had been given for
charitable uses, was in the tenure of Robert Fox who
had held it for the past ten years and was taking the
revenue for himself. (fn. 237)
By will dated 1661 Robert Munday of Sydenham,
yeoman, left a house and 23 acres in Kingston Blount
open fields in Aston Rowant parish. The income was
to be used for the poor of Sydenham, except for £1
a year which was to go to church repairs. (fn. 238) Accounts
of payment dated from 1703, when 10s. was given to
the church, and other smaller sums, ranging from
£2 down to 6d., to different poor persons, the whole
amounting to £5 10s. By 1820, when there was a
house and 30 acres, the annual value of the charity
had risen to £22 of which £1 was always given to the
church and the rest distributed to the poor, about
Christmas, whether or not they received relief, (fn. 239)
although formerly the charity had been limited to
those not receiving relief. (fn. 240) In 1835 under the Aston
Rowant inclosure award the lands were exchanged
for 16 acres in Sydenham. (fn. 241) These lands were let in
1852 for about £20, all of which was given to the
poor at Christmas. (fn. 242) In 1873 the lands were being
let to parishioners of good conduct at 25s. an acre. (fn. 243)
The charity was regulated by a Scheme of 1925 which
authorized the trustees to distribute it for the benefit
of the poor of the parish. In that year 149 persons
received 2s. 11d. each. (fn. 244)