WHEATFIELD
Wheatfield is a small elongated parish lying at
the foot of the Chilterns between Watlington and
Thame. The modern acreage is 740 acres, but until
1886 when Lower Rofford (48½ a.), a detached part
of Wheatfield, was transferred to Chalgrove, (fn. 1) the
parish comprised 789 acres. (fn. 2) The only natural boundary is the Haseley Brook which separates Wheatfield
from Tetsworth and Adwell in the north and east. (fn. 3)
The parish lies mostly between 350 and 240 feet and
is characterized by its rich meadows and fine trees.
A road from Tetsworth to Stoke Talmage, running
from north-east to south-west, bisects the parish and
a branch road runs southwards past the church of
Wheatfield and then eastwards to Adwell. A further
road that runs southwards from the Adwell road to
South Weston and Lewknor was made in 1860. The
alternate limes and sycamores along it were planted
by the lord of the manor, the Revd. Charles Vere Spencer. (fn. 4)
Today the church, Park Farm, the old Rectory or
Wheatfield House, as it is now called, and a few
cottages are all that is left of the former village. It can
never have been large and by the early 18th century
it was no more than a hamlet— 'a pleasantly situated
one' as Rawlinson noted. (fn. 5) William Burgess's estate
map, drawn in 1700 for Sir Thomas Tipping, then
lord of the manor, shows that there were eight houses
in the village besides the manor-house. (fn. 6) Two farm
houses of which one is now (1960) Lower Farm, lay
in the fields to the north of the village and four lay in
the south-east on the Adwell boundary. One of these
last is at present Upper Farm and another lay close
beside it. The old village lay along the road that runs
past Wheatfield House and along a branch road to
the manor-house, through the park where mounds
still denote the sites of a few former buildings. In
1778 there were said to be two farmhouses and eight cottages. (fn. 7)
There is now no ancient manor-house, but something is known both of the 17th-century house and
its late-18th-century successor. Since 1594 the Tippings had lived at Wheatfield and when Lady Dorothy
Tipping died in 1637 the house is described in her
inventory. It consisted of a great parlour, hall, great
chamber, drawing-chamber, and five other principal
chambers. These seem to have formed the front part
of the house. In addition there was a beer cellar,
buttery and wine cellar, and nine other chambers, and
various offices such as the bakehouse and brewing
kitchen. The principal living-rooms, judging from
the valuation of the furniture in them—£40 in each
case—were the great parlour, the drawing-chamber,
and the second chamber. (fn. 8) In 1662 the Tippings returned fifteen hearths for this house; Burghers's map
of the county depicts it and the arms of Tipping are
given in the border. (fn. 9) William Burgess's map of
Wheatfield manor in 1700 shows the house and flower
garden lying directly to the west of the church. (fn. 10) The
west front of the house, which was T-shaped, faced
on to a 'new pond'; a square flower garden lay to the
north and to the south were a bowling green, wilderness, warren, walks, &c. The whole covered 29 acres. (fn. 11)
In the middle of this garden was the 'new fountain';
there was a new dovehouse to the south-west of the
house, and beyond the garden to the north was a hop
garden surrounded by a canal. On the map an avenue
of trees runs north from the manor-house to Scholar's
Bridge meadow on the Tetsworth boundary, but this
seems to have been a project which was never carried
out. There is no trace of any such avenue now, and
the fact that on Burgess's map hedges cut across the
avenues makes it probable that it was not then in existence.
John Rudge, Member of Parliament for Evesham
and a London merchant, bought the manor in 1727,
and came to live in Wheatfield. (fn. 12) It was he who was
probably responsible for rebuilding the manor-house
and the present stables. On his death in 1740 he was
commemorated in the church by an elaborate monument. (fn. 13) When his son Edward died in 1763 the house
was described as having ten rooms on a floor, with a
dovehouse, coachhouse, and all other convenient
offices. The gardens and wood walks still covered
about 30 acres. Edward Rudge and his father were
said to have laid out at least £10,000 on the house
and gardens, and it was estimated that its grounds
and the timber and underwood, which were worth
£500, would fetch at least £3,000 even though the
house were pulled down. (fn. 14)
There is a sketch of the house by William Burgess
on his Stoke Talmage map, drawn in 1750. It depicts
a typical Georgian house of two stories with dormer
attics in the roof, five bays of building and a central doorway.
(fn. 15)
It was probably the Rudges who planted so many
of the fine trees described in an account of 1853 and
of which many still flourish. This account by Mrs.
Glanville of Wheatfield refers to the chestnut-tree
walk, a remarkable silver fir tree, 110 feet high, and
an elm-avenue leading across the fields to Shirburn
castle, which had been cut down before 1853 as the
large trees interfered too much with the cultivation
of the fields. Mrs. Glanville also states that cottages
had been pulled down and rebuilt on a new site,
some time in the second half of the 18th century,
with the object of giving Wheatfield House a more
extensive view of parkland. An embankment was
thrown up to conceal the road from the house's view. (fn. 16)
In 1769 the house was leased to Lord Charles
Spencer, the second son of the 3rd Duke of
Marlborough, and as the purchase of Wheatfield Manor was completed in 1770 (fn. 17) it may be supposed that
the old manor-house was then partly rebuilt. An architect's plan shows that a north wing with a bow front
facing eastwards continued up to the second story
was added to the Rudge's early-18th-century house
and that the older south wing was altered and adapted
internally. (fn. 18) The new wing contained the drawingroom and dining-room with billiard-room and bedchamber above. On the south side there was a library
and 'Bird Room'.

Wheatfield Park House
Lord Charles Spencer was in residence by 1771 (fn. 19)
and a view of the new house was published in 1787.
It is depicted with a lake in front of it, which must
have been constructed since 1700 for Burgess's map
shows no ornamental water. This view later appeared
in Picturesque Views of the Principal Seats of the
Nobility and Gentry and was accompanied by a brief
description that stated 'that for the beauty of the
situation and the charms of nature which owe little
to the touch of art, few places exceed this small but
elegant Seat'. (fn. 20) Fire destroyed the whole on 1 January 1814. (fn. 21) Owing to the severe frost which had frozen
all the water, the efforts of the villagers, organized by
a French officer and his men who were prisoners of
war on parole at Thame, and of the fire engines from
Shirburn and Watlington, failed to save the building.
The officer's proposal to blow up part of the building
to save half was rejected by Lord Charles as he feared
for the safety of the large crowds of people and of
the church. (fn. 22) The detached offices and stables are
now all that remain, though in dry weather traces of
the groundplan of the mansion are discernible in the
grass between the stables and the church. (fn. 23) The remaining brick buildings, now occupied by Park
Farm, form three sides of a square of which the north
range consists of a square brick coach-house with
wide doors framed with engaged Doric columns of
wood. They support an entablature and pediment
with a brick tympanum and central circular window.
Above there is a central clock-turret of wood with a
square base and octagonal cupola. These stables were
probably built early in the century by the Rudges.
There are also an 18th-century barn and other farmbuildings to the west.
The other gentleman's house in the village was the
Rectory. It was rebuilt by Adam Blandy (1709–22),
the rector who was so civil to the antiquary Rawlinson when he visited the church in about 1718. (fn. 24) The
old Rectory must also have been a good house in its
day for it was taxed on six hearths in 1662. (fn. 25) Blandy's
house was described in 1763 as an 'exceeding good
house and garden in extraordinary good repair', but
by the early 19th century it was 'shamefully dilapidated'. (fn. 26) It was 'much improved' in 1807 when C. L.
Kirby was rector, (fn. 27) and it was in this house that Lord
Charles Spencer and his family took refuge at the
time of the fire at Wheatfield Park. (fn. 28)
The house is built of brick with a central door
under a slender Doric porch. (fn. 29) It was enlarged and
partly rebuilt by the rector Frederic Charles Spencer
in 1823 in preparation for his marriage to Mary Ann
Bernard-Morland, but incorporates the south front
of Blandy's Queen Anne Rectory. When the stucco
was removed in 1960 the difference in the brickwork clearly revealed these two periods of building.
After Spencer's early death in 1831 Mrs. Spencer
married the Revd. Edward Fanshawe Glanville, the
new Rector of Wheatfield, and continued to live at
the Rectory. The iron veranda shown in a watercolour by her was probably a Victorian addition,
which has since been removed. (fn. 30) Since 1928, when
the Rectory was sold to Lt.-Col. Spencer, the lord
of the manor, (fn. 31) it has been used as the manor-house
and has been renamed Wheatfield House.
There are a few picturesque cottages nearby which
are also built of brick and date from the 17th or early 18th century.
Several notable families held the lordship of
Wheatfield and resided in the village. In the Middle
Ages the knightly family of De Whitfield, many of
whom were important in the royal service, took its
name from the place. From the 16th to the 18th
centuries the family of Tipping, originally from
Lancashire, but long established in Oxfordshire, was
settled at Wheatfield Park. Many of the children of
Sir George Tipping (d. 1627) were baptized in the
church, and he and his wife were buried there. (fn. 32)
During the Civil War the family was divided in its
loyalties. The Tippings on the whole were royalists,
but Sir George Tipping's second son, born at Wheatfield in 1598, supported the parliamentary party and
was known as 'Eternity Tipping' because of his
theological writings. At this time he was established
on the family estate at Draycott. (fn. 33) Wheatfield was in
an area that was hotly disputed between the conflicting armies and on one occasion when the royalist
forces passed through, Charles I, according to tradition, breakfasted in the park there, and Mrs. Glanville, writing in 1853, relates how a clump of beech
trees had been planted to commemorate his visit. (fn. 34)
At the end of the century Sir Thomas Tipping,
baptized at Wheatfield in 1653, was member for the
county and for Wallingford. He was said to have
supported the Prince of Orange by raising a regiment
for his service, (fn. 35) and was afterwards created a baronet.
His eldest daughter made a good match and married
Samuel Sandys, 1st Baron Sandys. (fn. 36)
Another important family also had a connexion
with the village in the 17th century. Thomas Isham
of Radclive (Bucks.) and Wheatfield, to whom there
is a memorial in the church, was the son of Sir
Euseby Isham of Pytchley (Northants.). (fn. 37) In 1649
he compounded 'in his own discovery', doubting
whether he was liable to sequestration for anything
said or done in the Civil War. (fn. 38) He married Elizabeth,
the daughter of Sir Thomas Denton of Hillesden
(Bucks.), and he and his wife are often mentioned in
the Verney letters. A letter from her to Sir Ralph
Verney in 1662 has been preserved. 'I could wish
you here,' she wrote, 'as you might drink some of
the cider as is here about us: it is so good.' She
informed Sir Ralph that his was made too soon and
that the best cider is made just before Christmas. (fn. 39)
The Ishams' son Thomas, probably born at Wheatfield, became a bencher of the Middle Temple. (fn. 40)
The Rudge lords of the manor, father and son, not
only rebuilt the house and landscaped the park, but
also remodelled the church and refitted the interior.
Their successor, Lord Charles Spencer, made his
new mansion house a centre of culture. His son John
married his cousin Elizabeth, daughter of the 4th
Duke of Marlborough. (fn. 41) She is depicted in a conversation piece by Sir Joshua Reynolds at Blenheim.
A smaller replica of the same picture, also perhaps
by Sir Joshua, is in the possession of her descendant,
Lt.-Col. Vere Spencer, at Wheatfield House. This
match, the Duchess of Bedford is reported to have
said, was the 'most charmingest match that can be,
that Mr. Spencer is a good actor, a good musician
and a good Composer'. (fn. 42) It was he probably who
played the organ at Wheatfield House—a visitor
described it in a letter as 'roaring loudly' (fn. 43) —and his
interest in musicians may be seen in a letter to the
Earl of Dartmouth in 1804, asking for Lord Dartmouth's interest on behalf of Andrew Loder, a violin
player of Bath. (fn. 44) The family's attachment to amateur
theatricals led to the disastrous fire which destroyed
their home: the house was filled with guests for a
play to be performed on New Year's Day 1814 when
fire broke out. This fire was graphically described
by Mrs. Glanville, whose first husband was Lord
Charles Spencer's grandson, Frederic Charles Spencer, Rector of Wheatfield. (fn. 45)
Apart from the eminent families living at the
manor-house, Wheatfield is of interest on account of
the learning of two of its rectors, John Ellis in the
17th century and Henry Taylor in the 18th century. (fn. 46)
Manor.
In 1086 a manor at WHEATFIELD, assessed at 2 hides, was part of Robert d'Oilly's fief. (fn. 47)
Subsequently it was lost to the D'Oillys and by 1166
was in the honor of Wallingford. (fn. 48) Until the 19th
century Wheatfield, as a member first of Wallingford
and then Ewelme honor, attended the honor courts
and paid 2s. cert money. (fn. 49)
The demesne tenant of Wheatfield in 1086 was a
certain Peter, who also held 1 hide in Lewknor of
Robert d'Oilly (fn. 50) and was perhaps the Peter who was
sheriff in the 1090s. (fn. 51) He was one of Robert d'Oilly's
knights and the ancestor of the De Whitfield family.
Members of his family are often found as witnesses
to D'Oilly charters. (fn. 52) Peter was succeeded by his son
Robert (fl. 1130–5), (fn. 53) and by his grandson Geoffrey,
probably by 1154. (fn. 54) In 1166 Geoffrey was returned
as holding 2 hides, i.e. Wheatfield manor, of the
honor. (fn. 55) His son Robert de Whitfield was a royal
justice and Sheriff of Oxfordshire from 1182 to
1185. (fn. 56) Robert may have been dead by 1193, (fn. 57) and
he certainly was by 1194 when Henry de Whitfield,
his brother and heir, owed 60 marks as relief for
Robert's lands. (fn. 58) This Henry, who was buried in
Thame Abbey, (fn. 59) probably died in 1226, when his son
Elias paid 25s. relief and did homage for his ¼-fee in
Wheatfield. (fn. 60) Elias, a knight, was still alive in 1243; (fn. 61)
his heir was Henry de Whitfield, who was dead by
1264, leaving a young son Elias. (fn. 62) It was this Elias
who was lord of Wheatfield in 1279. (fn. 63) He also was
a knight and lord of Bosmer manor in Fawley
(Bucks.). (fn. 64) He was still alive in 1289, (fn. 65) but by 1300
had been succeeded by his son John, (fn. 66) who was
returned as lord of Wheatfield in 1316. (fn. 67)
There were two John de Whitfields: the elder was
probably the John de Whitfield who was an adherent
of Thomas of Lancaster and was a Member of
Parliament for the shire (fn. 68) and had died by c. 1345; (fn. 69)
the other, also a leading man in the county, was dead
by 1361, when there was some dispute as to what
should be done with the manor. (fn. 70) It was eventually
granted for life to the younger John's widow Katherine, who married as her second husband
Lawrence de Lynford. (fn. 71) On her death in 1390 (fn. 72)
Wheatfield was divided between her first husband's
heirs. He had left two daughters, whose marriage the
Black Prince, who then held the honor of Wallingford, granted in 1362 to Master John Streatley, one
of his officials and Dean of Lincoln. (fn. 73) The dean was
a member of the Streatley family of Creslow
(Bucks.), (fn. 74) and he immediately married Joan de
Whitfield to Hugh Streatley, (fn. 75) evidently a younger
brother, since he did not inherit the Streatley lands.
He thus became lord of Wheatfield. Both Joan and
Hugh were dead by 1390; their son Edmund Streatley
was aged seventeen, and received his half of Wheatfield with the advowson when he came of age in
1393. (fn. 76) His share evidently included the manorhouse, for Wheatfield became the home of this branch
of the Streatleys. (fn. 77)
Edmund Streatley was followed some time
after 1428 by John Streatley, who was still alive
in 1455, (fn. 78) and by John's son Thomas (d. 1479).
Thomas Streatley's heir was his uncle, Thomas
Streatley, who was succeeded by his son John (d.
1515), (fn. 79) and by his grandson Edmund. Edmund was
obliged to mortgage Wheatfield in 1536 to William
Body, (fn. 80) which involved him in subsequent litigation, (fn. 81) and at about the same time he mortgaged and
lost Bosmer. (fn. 82) His son John later mortgaged Wheatfield to Anthony Carleton, Esq., of Brightwell Baldwin. (fn. 83) Edmund Streatley was alive in 1552, (fn. 84) but
both he and his son and heir John were dead by 1568
when John's heirs claimed the manor against Anthony
Carleton. (fn. 85) The heirs were John's two daughters:
Margaret, who married firstly Richard Lee and
secondly, by 1571, William, a younger son of Sir
Leonard Chamberlain of Shirburn, and Elizabeth,
the wife of Bartholomew Piggott the younger of
Aston Rowant. (fn. 86) In 1571 the Chamberlains and the
Piggotts each held a quarter of the manor. (fn. 87) Robert
Lee, who was living at Wheatfield in the 1570s and
was the only contributor to the subsidy of 1577, may
have been Margaret's son. (fn. 88) During these years this
part of the manor was the subject of a number of
Chancery suits, in which the Piggotts, the Lees,
George Streatley, John's brother, and Anthony
Carleton of Brightwell Baldwin all took part. (fn. 89) They
came to an end in about 1576, when Thomas Tipping,
who was also to acquire the other half of the manor,
bought the Streatleys' half. (fn. 90)
Meanwhile, in 1390, the other moiety of Wheatfield manor had been released to John de Whitfield's
second daughter Elizabeth, (fn. 91) probably the Elizabeth,
wife of Reginald de Grey, mentioned in a fine of 1377
by which half the manor was settled on the Greys. (fn. 92)
She evidently married as her second husband Baldwin de Bereford, a prominent knight, (fn. 93) and after his
death in the early 15th century she held a moiety of
the manor and advowson until her own death in
1423. (fn. 94) Her heir was her daughter Maud (presumably the daughter of her first husband, for she did
not inherit the De Bereford lands), the wife of John
Barrow, (fn. 95) and in 1428 he held 1/8-fee in Wheatfield. (fn. 96)
The Barrows, whose name is spelt in many ways (fn. 97)
and eventually became Abarrow, lived at Charford
(Hants), and their half of Wheatfield followed the
descent of that manor (fn. 98) until sold in 1571 by Edward
and Anthony Abarrow. (fn. 99) In 1576 or 1577 it was
bought by Thomas Tipping, (fn. 100) and the two halves of Wheatfield were united.
The Tippings were originally a Lancashire family.
Thomas, a younger son of William Tipping of Merton, (fn. 101) bought a number of manors in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire. On his death in 1601 (fn. 102)
they were divided among his two sons, George the
elder inheriting Wheatfield and several other manors. (fn. 103)
Since 1594 Sir George had been living at Wheatfield, (fn. 104) and on his death in 1626, (fn. 105) Wheatfield was
inherited by a young grandson Thomas, whose
father John was already dead. Thomas, who was
knighted in 1660, lived until 1694. (fn. 106) After the death
of his widow Elizabeth in 1698, (fn. 107) their son Thomas,
a Member of Parliament and the first baronet to be
created by William III, (fn. 108) came into possession of
Wheatfield. He lived at Pyrgo in Havering (Essex),
his wife's inheritance, and died in 1718. (fn. 109) His Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire properties, heavily mortgaged, were settled on his widow, (fn. 110) and in 1727, after
the death of her son Sir Thomas, with whom the
male line of the family came to an end, Wheatfield,
Thomley, and Worminghall were sold to John Rudge. (fn. 111)
Rudge was a member of a London merchant family
and Member of Parliament for Evesham, who was in
the fortunate position of having £26,000 left by his
mother-in-law, Susannah Letten, for the purchase of
landed property. (fn. 112)
John Rudge (d. 1740) was succeeded by his son
Edward, also member for Evesham and a member of
the Royal Society. (fn. 113) On Edward Rudge's death without children in 1763 the estate reverted to Mrs.
Letten's heirs at law, (fn. 114) who in 1769 sold
Wheatfield for £21,000 (fn. 115) to Lord Charles Spencer, the second son of the 3rd Duke of Marlborough, and for 40 years member for the county. (fn. 116)
His son John, who had married his cousin, Lady
Elizabeth Spencer, succeeded him in 1820 and died
in 1831 a few weeks after his eldest surviving
son, Frederick Charles, Rector of Wheatfield. John
Spencer's young grandson, Charles Vere Spencer,
was heir to a heavily mortgaged estate; he was made
a ward of Chancery and much of the family's land
was sold to preserve Wheatfield intact. (fn. 117) He later
became Rector of Wheatfield and was followed in
1898 as lord of the manor by his son Aubrey John
Spencer (d. 1935), barrister-at-law and an examiner
of the High Court of Justice, and then by his grandson, Lt.-Col. Aubrey Vere Spencer, D.S.O. (fn. 118)
The manor was never co-terminous with the parish
and 6½ virgates of Wheatfield formed a quarter of the
South Weston fee held by the Fitzwyth family. (fn. 119)
From at least 1279, and very possibly from a much
earlier date, the lords of Wheatfield, the De Whitfield
family, were the demesne tenants of this fee. (fn. 120)
Agrarian and Social History:
A good
mixed soil on a subsoil of Upper Greensand and
Gault Clay, the proximity of an ancient trackway,
the Icknield Way, the presence of streams and sheltering hills all made Wheatfield a favourable spot for
early settlement. (fn. 121) The Anglo-Saxons gave it its
name of 'white' field, doubtless on account of the
productive crops for which it is still noted. (fn. 122)
The Domesday survey gives precise details of only
one estate in Wheatfield. The rest of the township's
land, the 'Weston fee', (fn. 123) was almost certainly surveyed with South Weston and its plough-lands and
peasants were included in the total figures for Weston. Thus no clear picture of Domesday Wheatfield
emerges. It is recorded that the lord of Wheatfield
manor had a plough with 1 serf in demesne, and that
2 villani and 2 bordars had half a plough-team. (fn. 124) It
is probable that these peasants shared a plough-team
with those attached to the Weston fee, and that the
rest of their team is included in the 6½ plough-teams
assigned in the survey to Weston. The number of
teams is in any case very high for the small fields of
Weston, which never covered more than 400 acres. (fn. 125)
The consequences of this early connexion between
Wheatfield and South Weston can be traced throughout their histories. In 1841 South Weston landowners
still had the right to the first crop on Weston Red
Veal, a meadow in the middle of Wheatfield parish,
and each parish had small detached pieces of land
lying in the other parish. (fn. 126)
The hundredal survey of 1279 makes the position
clearer by surveying the 'Weston fee' in Wheatfield
in detail, as well as Wheatfield manor's land, and
entering them both under Wheatfield. (fn. 127) The lord of
Wheatfield manor, Elias de Whitfield, was in fact by
this time the immediate lord of the 'Weston fee'.
This ¼-fee consisted of 6½ virgates of which 5½ were
held of the lord in villeinage and 1 virgate by a free
tenant. (fn. 128) The remaining 18 virgates recorded made
up Wheatfield manor and of these Elias had 12
virgates in demesne with meadow and pasture in
addition. As the arable land of the parish is known
from later sources to have amounted to about 27
virgates, including the glebe which is not mentioned
in the survey, nearly half in 1279 was manorial demesne.
The average villein holding was a virgate: there
were five virgaters attached to the 'Weston fee' and
one half-virgater. The virgater paid a rent of 10s.
and in addition owed moderately heavy services:
between Michaelmas and Christmas he was to do
three ploughing services at his own cost and after
Christmas one harrowing service. He was to harrow
an acre of pasture land; mow in the meadow until he
had done 7 'sweyes' (swathes) in the day at his own
cost; find a man to hoe all the lord's grain; find two
men to lift hay; and himself carry the hay and make
a rick. After Lammas when the lord was ready to
reap, he was to find two men to reap for five days a
week and was to come to the great boon with his
whole household, except for his wife and shepherd.
He was to be in charge of the reapers and see that
they worked and was to have a feast with the lord.
With a horse and cart he was to carry the grain for
a half-day. After all the grain had been harvested he
was to find a man to collect the stubble or straw.
Other obligations were to find two men to collect
apples, and to carry timber from the wood to the
manor-house. On Christmas day he ate with the lord,
but the day after he had to make a present to the lady
of the manor of 3 hens, 1 cock, 2 loaves of bread, and
2 flagons of beer; on the day after Easter he gave her
a present of 40 eggs and 2 loaves. In addition to these
obligations he was bound by the usual restrictions
of villeinage: he must get the lord's licence to marry
off his daughter and to sell a horse or an ox born on the manor.
In the manor itself there were also six villeins,
each holding a virgate, and a free virgater. (fn. 129) The
freeman held with his wife for life on condition that
if they had an heir the heir should pay a heriot on
succession, and that if there was no heir the virgate
should revert to the lord. Each villein had the choice
of paying a high rent of 22s. a year in lieu of all service
except reasonable aids, when the lord knighted his
eldest son or married his eldest daughter, or of paying
10s. rent and doing services. The services on the
manor were much the same as those on the fee.
Different obligations were that the villein was to find
a man to help in making cider and when he himself
brewed ale for sale (chepale) he was to give the lord
2 gallons of ale as tolcestre. He was also to pay cornbote at Michaelmas, i.e. 2 sheaves of wheat and 2 of
oats. If he damaged the lord's corn he was to make
amends in accordance with the judgement of his neighbours. (fn. 130)
Wheatfield at this period with its resident lord,
rector, and at least twelve villeins and two freeholders
with their households formed a small and prosperous
village. The tax assessment of 1316, for example,
shows that considering the size of the parish the comparatively large number of eighteen villagers was
taxed. Of these, eight paid a relatively high tax of 6s.
or more and four paid over 3s. (fn. 131) A class structure
was more pronounced here than, for example, in the
neighbouring parish of Stoke Talmage. The parish's
later assessment of £2 18s. 6d. was also a large one, (fn. 132)
and the 60 adults returned for the poll tax of 1377 (fn. 133)
indicate that the community, if it had suffered from
the Black Death, had largely recovered from its adverse affects.
In the early 16th century Wheatfield's economy
was drastically disturbed by the inclosure in 1505 of
160 acres of arable by John Streatley, lord of one
part of the manor and tenant of the other part. (fn. 134) It
was alleged that 7 messuages had each had 20 acres
of arable sown with corn since before the memory of
man, that these tenements had been inclosed with
hedges and ditches and converted into pasture land,
and that 9 ploughs were rendered useless and 54
peasants were made idle and homeless. It may have
been in connexion with these inclosures that 'a riot'
took place and 'divers murders and felonies' were
done in Wheatfield of which Richard Grey, a tenant
of John Streatley was suspected. Grey and others
fled, but Grey's wife was arrested. (fn. 135) A number of
closes are also mentioned in a Chancery case in which
George Streatley was involved in the 1570s. (fn. 136) There
is insufficient evidence to say whether these inclosures
in the 16th century marked the end of a considerable
movement or the beginning. Wheatfield was not
among the villages with under ten households in
1428, (fn. 137) but the returns for the subsidy of 1523
indicate a reduction in the number of taxable inhabitants since the 14th century. (fn. 138) In 1577 only
Robert Lee, lord of the manor, was assessed for the
Elizabethan subsidy and there were no yeoman
farmers of sufficient wealth to qualify. (fn. 139) The smallness of the parish had facilitated concentration of the
ownership of the land and encouraged radical changes
in husbandry. It is significant that in a list of the
yardlands on which Wheatfield was rated in about
1607, out of 9 yardlands 4 were said to be 'in pasture'. (fn. 140)
However, although inclosure was extensive and much
of it was for pasture, many inclosed fields were used
for arable during the 17th century and some openfield land survived until the 19th century.
One consequence of inclosure and the consequent
decrease in population may have been the closing of
the medieval mill. It belonged to the lord of the
manor in the early 13th century. He gave it to Thame
Abbey with the promise that those using it should
have right of way over his lands, but the abbey
returned it in 1212 in exchange for land. (fn. 141) The last
mention found of the mill is in 1574: (fn. 142) it clearly lay
on the pool near Upper Farm, and its memory survived in the field names of Great and Little Mill
closes. (fn. 143)
From 1594 and throughout the next century the
Tippings were resident and the life of the parish was
entirely centred round the Great House. Part of the
land was leased to tenants and part was kept in
hand. (fn. 144) Some deductions on the influence of the
family and on the husbandry of the time may be
made from the inventory of goods valued at over
£1,490 made on the death of Lady Dorothy Tipping
in 1637. The size of the manor-house with its brewing kitchen, bake-house, mill-house, stables for 11
horses, maids' chamber, and servingmen's chamber
gives an indication of the amount of employment it
provided. As for husbandry the most highly valued
part of the demesne farm was its flock of over 543
sheep worth £355. Wheat in the barns and wheat and
'fatches' (vetches) in the ground were valued at £320.
Summer corn was valued at £36. (fn. 145) The tenant
farmers were husbandmen of comparatively modest
means. One, for example, left goods worth £107 in
1615 and another goods worth £156 in 1624. (fn. 146) In
the second half of the century the returns for the
hearth tax of 1662 show that in spite of partial inclosure and the losses which must have been incurred
during the Civil War from the requisitions made by
both sides, (fn. 147) there was still a small farming community. Sir Thomas Tipping's losses in the war very
probably account for the mortgaging of some of his
valuable Wheatfield meadows in 1663. (fn. 148) Besides the
manor-house and Rectory seven other houses were
rated, and three householders were discharged from
payment 'because not in the liberty'. (fn. 149) That these
seven represented the substantial part of the community is supported by the evidence of the glebe
terrier of 1685 which was signed by eight inhabitants
besides the rector and Sir Thomas Tipping. (fn. 150) Of
these, Richard White, the churchwarden, and Thomas
Minchin were probably the leading tenants: closes
about the village are named after them and two others
and White's house can be identified on an estate map
of 1700. (fn. 151) It was again eight heads of families, it may
be noted here, who attended the honor court of
Ewelme in 1714. (fn. 152) The map of 1700 shows the whole
parish divided into hedged fields and apparently
fully inclosed, but the accompanying terrier and the
evidence of an earlier glebe terrier seem to prove
that this was probably not so. According to the glebe
terrier of 1685 two-thirds of the glebe (10 a.) still
lay in fifteen parcels in the common fields—in 'the
field next the town', in 'Eighteen Acre Field' and
in the Upper Field. Other farmers, including Sir
Thomas Tipping, also had land in these fields although their holdings were more consolidated than
that of the rector. The lord held blocks of 5 and 6
acres together, the others blocks of 2 and 3 acres.
There was lot meadow by the Haseley Brook and
common pasture. (fn. 153) These and the three fields can be
located on the map of 1700.
The traditional husbandry used on clay lands and
land called 'maumy', both of which were to be found
at Wheatfield, has been described by Plot, who also
noted that a special kind of triangular harrow was
used there, which was considered especially suitable
for ground infested with squitch-grass. (fn. 154) Plot also
wrote in 1681 of a kind of wheat 'plentifully sown in
the vale between Thame and Watlington called
'mix'd lammas', which yielded considerably better
than most other wheats and yet was unknown to the
farmers in the north and west of the county. (fn. 155) Early
in the 18th century Rawlinson was another witness
to the good husbandry that had been practised on
the 'very rich' soil at Wheatfield. (fn. 156)
Until the death of Edward Rudge in 1763, the
Rudge family, who were the successors to the Tippings, remained sole lords of all the land in the parish
with the exception of the glebe, and farmed the
demesne lands themselves. (fn. 157) In 1763, however, the
demesne, except for the manor-house with 30 acres
of woods and gardens, was divided between the two
tenant farmers on the estate. John Webb, tenant at
will of Lower farm at £200 a year, farmed its 236
acres, which were all pasture and meadow land.
These lay in a compact group in the north of the
parish and undoubtedly included the Streatley inclosures of the early 16th century. The surveyor considered this farm 'as good a farm as any in the county'
although its tenant, 'a sloven', did not make the best
of it. The rent had been £200 a year for some time,
but its value had greatly increased owing to 'the
great rise in the price of butter'. Webb also had on
a three-year lease 119 acres of White's farm, which
had been in hand in Edward Rudge's time. This farm
was mainly arable and over half lay in 'lands' in
Mousells Common Field, Town Field and Weston
Windmill Field. The other farm, Hall farm (i.e. the
demesne farm and the modern Upper farm), was
about a third pasture and again had 'lands' in the
three common fields. (fn. 158) It was leased to Thomas
Cowper on a nine-year lease of £240 a year and comprised 264 acres. This farm and White's consisted
partly of 'very good' arable land lying in closes and
in the remnant of the open fields, which at this date
still covered over 140 acres. (fn. 159) There had in fact been
little, if any, change in the topography of the fields
since 1700, for the figures given in the terrier of about
1765 are based on those of the map of 1700. (fn. 160) With
one owner (except for the glebe) and only two tenants
final inclosure could not be long deferred. The Act
inclosing parts of Wheatfield, South Weston, and
Stoke Talmage was not passed until 1854, (fn. 161) but the
open fields had been abandoned earlier. The tithe
award map of 1841 shows the whole parish divided
into fields shared between three farms of roughly the
same size—Upper and Lower Wheatfield farms and
the Manor farm. (fn. 162) Some years earlier they had each
been let for over £200 a year. (fn. 163) In 1851 there were
two large farms of 280 acres and 233 acres respectively, employing twelve and eight labourers, and a
small holding of 22 acres. (fn. 164)
The utilization of the land had changed little since
1700: in 1841 there were approximately 20 acres of
wood, 238 of arable, and 456 of meadow or pasture;
in the 1760s there had also been a trifle less arable
and in 1700 perhaps rather more. (fn. 165) There were at
least 400 acres of mead and pasture in 1700 and the
tendency was probably towards an increase of grassland: eleven acres of grass, for example, are marked
on the map as 'formerly arable'. (fn. 166)
After the outbreak of cattle disease in 1865 which
led London buyers to seek for milk supplies in
Oxfordshire, Wheatfield farmers, in common with
others in the neighbourhood, probably produced
more milk and less butter and cheese than before. (fn. 167)
In the 20th century the emphasis continued to be on
milk production and Friesian herds were generally
kept. In 1960 there were three average-sized farms—Park farm (172 a.), Upper farm (212 a.), Lower farm
(241 a.), and the small Glebe farm (35 a.). Park farm
had a flock of Clun sheep. There were 188 acres
of arable, 471 acres of pasture, and some 40 acres
of woodland, water, and roads. (fn. 168)
Until the 19th and 20th centuries no great changes
in population seem to have taken place after the 16thcentury decrease. In 1676 the Compton Census
recorded 48 adults; in 1738 the rector reported that
there were about a dozen houses in the village, inhabited by farmers and labourers; in 1790 besides
the manor-house and Rectory there were two farms
and nine cottages; and in 1801 a census enumerated
89 inhabitants. (fn. 169) After reaching a peak of 105 persons
in 1831 the population fell to 72 in 1901 and to 40 in
1960. (fn. 170)
This decline in population and other social changes
have led to the disappearance of the patriarchal
village life of the early 19th century described by
Mrs. Glanville, the wife of two successive rectors.
She wrote an account of Wheatfield in 1853 for
Charles Vere Spencer, her son by her first husband,
Frederick Charles Spencer, who was about to take up
residence in Wheatfield as rector, 'a fit representative
of your father in his house, his property and his
parish'. She relates how there were yearly school
meetings under a gigantic walnut tree and other feasts
of which the most remarkable had been those on the
occasions of Mrs. Spencer's marriage to Mr. Glanville, the Coronation of Queen Victoria, and the
coming-of-age celebrations of Mrs. Glanville's sons
George and Vere. In 1838 the parishioners of Adwell
and Wheatfield met for a dinner given by the two lords
of the manor and the Revd. E. F. Glanville. There was
dancing and the old people enjoyed their 'pipes and
snuff boxes', and in 1848 on the coming-of-age celebrations of Vere Spencer tents were set up near the
church and dancing, cricket, foot sports, and fireworks followed. (fn. 171)
Church.
Wheatfield church, a rectory in Aston
deanery, was in existence and had a rector by about
1200. (fn. 172) It may have been a recent foundation, for
in 1240 or 1241, when the first presentation is recorded, it was still called a chapel. (fn. 173) The advowson
then belonged to the De Whitfield family and has
always followed the descent of the manor. (fn. 174) When
in 1390 the manor was divided, the advowson was
also divided between the Streatley and De Bereford
families. They made alternate presentations, although
in the late 15th and 16th centuries the right of
presentation was several times sold by the Streatleys. (fn. 175) John Pollard, who was rector from 1553 to
1577, acquired a grant of it from Edmund Streatley.
In his will he left this to Thomas Tipping, who had
recently bought the manor, and requested him to
present some 'honest, discreet, and quiet man' to the
living. There had been so much 'strife and conten
tion' over the divided manor that he hoped this would
produce 'quietness and peace'. (fn. 176) Tipping therefore
presented in 1577 on the rector's death, (fn. 177) and since
then the advowson has been held by the Tippings,
the Rudges, and the Spencers. In 1928 the living was
united to that of Stoke Talmage, since when the
Earl of Macclesfield and Lt.-Col. Vere Spencer have
presented alternately. (fn. 178) According to the terms of
the union, the detached part of Wheatfield became
part of the ecclesiastical parish of Chalgrove. (fn. 179)
The rectory was valued at £2 in 1254, at £6 13s. 4d.
in 1291, and at £9 10s. 8½d. in 1535. (fn. 180) By the late
17th century it was worth about £80, (fn. 181) and in 1769
Lord Charles Spencer leased the tithes (except those
of the detached part) and the glebe for nearly £105. (fn. 182)
At about this time the advowson was valued at £960,
eight times £120, the annual income from the living. (fn. 183)
In 1841, when the tithes were commuted, the rector
was awarded a rent charge of £232 12s. (fn. 184) The rector
was also entitled to tithes on 15 acres in Tetsworth,
and when in 1842 the tithes of Tetsworth were commuted the rector of Wheatfield received a rent charge
of £4 10s. 6d. (fn. 185) The rector was also entitled to the
tithes of a meadow in Stoke Talmage called Crendon
Piece, (fn. 186) and it may have been in connexion with this
that a late-13th-century rector was at law with Thame
Abbey, the owners of Stoke Grange. (fn. 187)
The glebe, when it was surveyed in 1685, consisted of 20 acres of inclosed land lying next to the
Rectory and 10 acres in the common fields, with
meadow and pasture rights. (fn. 188) In the 19th century
the glebe still consisted of 32 acres; (fn. 189) it was sold in
1942. (fn. 190) In addition to this Wheatfield glebe, the
rector had a field acre of glebe in Tetsworth, next to
the land there which paid tithes to him. (fn. 191) It was
probably this land which caused trouble in the 18th
century: in 1756 the rector asked the bishop how he
could 'perpetuate the evidence of some elderly persons in the parish' so that it could be used as legal
evidence; (fn. 192) in 1793 he was still trying to get accurate
information. It was said that it had once been exchanged for land in Wheatfield; if this was done
before 1685, he wrote, the terrier of 1685 'deserves
to be burnt'. (fn. 193) In 1842 the rector still held about an
acre of glebe in Tetsworth. (fn. 194)
What evidence there is about medieval rectors,
some of whom held the living for many years, suggests
that they usually lived in the parish. (fn. 195) Simon, for
example, the first recorded rector, witnessed a local
charter in about 1200; (fn. 196) Laurence de Belsted (fl.
1291–1316), who was at law with Thame Abbey over
tithes, was living in Wheatfield in 1316, when he
paid a 6s. tax on his goods there, (fn. 197) and John le Vaal
(d. 1359), who acted as feoffee of the manor, (fn. 198) may
have been a nephew of the elder John de Whitfield. (fn. 199)
Several of the 15th-century rectors were graduates
and one, like so many Oxfordshire priests, was a
Welshman. (fn. 200) In the 16th century George Longshawe
(1505–52), who saw many of the changes of the
Reformation, also lived in Wheatfield. He was accused of not saying the services at the proper times
and of neglecting to keep his house in repair. (fn. 201)
In the post-Reformation period until the 20th
century Wheatfield has rarely had a non-resident
rector, and many of its rectors died and were buried
there. (fn. 202) John Pollard resigned or was deprived about
1554, but he was restored by 1559 and enjoyed the
living along with South Weston as well until 1577. (fn. 203)
His successor Anthony Maunde (rector 1577–1629)
held the living for the longest period. An inventory
of his goods, valued at nearly £50 and including a
cow and a pig, but few books and little furniture,
suggests that he was a country pastor with little
education. (fn. 204) John Ellis (1629–47), in contrast, was a
theological writer of some repute. (fn. 205) Two of his works
were written while he lived at Wheatfield, of which
one was dedicated to Thomas Tipping, his patron. (fn. 206)
He married Rebecca Petty of Stoke Talmage, (fn. 207) and
Anthony Wood, to whom he therefore became related, described him as 'siding with all parties and
taking all oaths'. (fn. 208) During the years of the Commonwealth the parish evidently had a rector with Puritan
sympathies, for William Bird (or Burt) (1647–60) took
the Covenant and resigned on the Restoration. (fn. 209)
Later rectors included Nathaniel Penn (1666–1709), who was buried beside his wife under the
altar; (fn. 210) his successor Adam Blandy (1709–22), who
rebuilt the Rectory; (fn. 211) and Henry Taylor (1737–46),
who was to become well known as a theological
writer. (fn. 212) He only held the living in trust for the
young nephew of the lord of the manor. (fn. 213) This
was Benjamin Rudge (1750–1807), who married a
daughter of Ralph Church, Vicar of Pyrton, and
lived for over 50 years in the parish and was buried
in the family vault. (fn. 214) He held the usual number of
services: two on Sundays with one sermon; three or
four sacraments a year, with between eight and
twelve communicants; and catechism for the children
in Lent. He had few complaints to make of his
parishioners except that, being tenant farmers and
labouring poor, his congregations were small. (fn. 215) At
this period, as had also been the case in the 16th
century, (fn. 216) there was only one churchwarden, and he
usually served for many years. (fn. 217)
In the 19th century the connexion between church
and manor was very close. After Cranley L. Kerby
had left Wheatfield for Stoke Talmage in 1820
Frederick Charles Spencer, heir to the manor, became
rector; he died in 1831, and his widow married
Edward Fanshawe Glanville, who was rector from
1836 to 1852; Charles Vere Spencer, Mrs. Glanville's
son by her first husband, was rector for nearly half
a century (i.e. 1852–98) and was at the same time
lord of the manor. (fn. 218) As Wheatfield House had been
burnt down in 1814 he lived at the Rectory. (fn. 219) As he
was also curate of Adwell he preached on alternate
Sundays at each church. At Wheatfield there was an
attendance of 30 to forty. He administered communion six or seven times a year, and catechized the
children every other Sunday. (fn. 220) In his later years he
served Wheatfield only, increased the number of
communion services to twelve and held evening
classes. (fn. 221) On his death it was arranged that his
widow should stay on in the house and so there was
no resident rector until after her death in 1907. (fn. 222)
Since 1928, when the living was united with that
of Stoke Talmage, the rector has lived at Stoke.
The ancient church of ST. ANDREW comprises a chancel, nave, west porch, and bell-cot. It
stands in Wheatfield park and formerly stood close
to the manor-house, which was burnt down in 1814. (fn. 223)
The church, small and well cared for, is a medieval
building, which was remodelled in the first half of
the 18th century, when the Rudge family were lords
of the manor. Of the medieval building there remain
the walls, the chancel arch, a 14th-century south
doorway and a later north window, both visible from
the outside only. Let into the floor beneath the south
window of the church is the medieval stone altar with crosses carved at each corner.
Externally the walls have been stuccoed and battlements added both to the gable ends and to the side
walls. (fn. 224) The east window of three lights is of the
kind known as 'Venetian'. The other 18th-century
windows are round-headed with keystones and have
original wrought-iron frames and leaded lights of
clear glass. The ceilings are plastered and have kingpost trusses exposed in the nave.
All the fittings date from the 18th century. (fn. 225) The
chancel is wainscoted and the altar rails are of turned
wood. The altar table stands on four console brackets
with winged angel heads. On either side of the altar
are boards with the Commandments, Lord's Prayer,
and the Creed. There is a two-decker pulpit and
reading-desk. In the nave are the remains of box
pews: on the north side they face the altar, but they
did not do so originally as a sepia drawing of 1852
shows. (fn. 226) On the south side they face the aisle and
those nearest the altar have open-work carving with
a leaf design and the coat of arms of the Rudges.
Above the chancel arch are the royal arms of
George II. The hatchment to the right bears the Spencer arms impaled with those of Bernard-Morland,
since Lord Charles Spencer's grandson Frederick
Charles Spencer married Mary Ann Bernard-Morland. (fn. 227)
There is a contemporary font: a small stone basin on a tall stone pedestal.
Four iron hoops suspended from the tie beams of
the roof hold the candles by which the church is lit.
There is some notable coloured glass. In the south
window of the chancel 'is one of the most beautiful
and interesting pieces of armorial glass in the diocese'.
It is probably the shield of Sir John de Whitfield
(d. c. 1361), a lord of the manor, and once fitted into
the tracery of a 14th-century window. A fragment of
medieval glass also survives in the north-west window. In the west window is a large 18th-century
piece of armorial glass (4 ft. by 2 ft. 9 in.): it depicts
the arms of Rudge, Letten, Howard of Hackney, and
others. (fn. 228) The shield is surmounted by a scallop shell and crest.
The glass in the east window is by William Morris
& Co. of London, and is a memorial to the rector
Charles Vere Spencer (d. 1898) and his wife Emma Frederica (d. 1907).
This small church is rich in monuments. Those to
the Tippings, lords of the manor, include ledger
stones on the chancel and nave floors to Sir Thomas
Tipping (d. 1693/4); Dame Elizabeth Tipping (d.
1698), wife of Sir Thomas; Mary (d. 1714/15), one
of Sir Thomas's sixteen children and wife of John,
Lord Brereton; and George Tipping (d. 1714/15).
On the chancel wall there is a cartouche to Sir
Thomas Tipping (d. 1718), of which the inscription
states that the bodies of his father Sir Thomas and
of his grandfather Sir George Tipping lie in the same
grave. There is also a cartouche to Sir Thomas
Tipping, Bt. (d. 1725/6), eldest son of Sir Thomas
and Dame Anne. It is surmounted by a coat of arms
and crest. A coat of arms also surmounts the memorial
to Elizabeth (d. 1725), wife of William Tipping, Esq.
(d. 1729), of West Court, Ewelme, and second son of
Sir Thomas and Dame Elizabeth. There is an elaborate monument by P. Scheemakers to John Rudge,
M.P. (d. 1739/40), merchant of London, and his son
Edward Rudge, M.P.(d. 1763). (fn. 229) There are memorials
to Thomas Rudge, gent. (d. 1754), Benjamin Rudge
(d. 1807), rector for 58 years, and Samuel Rudge (d.
1817), by Clark of Watlington. There are several
memorials of the Spencer family: Rt. Hon. Lady
Elizabeth Spencer (d. 1812), daughter of George,
Duke of Marlborough and wife of the Hon. John
Spencer (by Knowles of Oxford); the Rt. Hon. Lord
Charles Spencer (d. 1820), George John Spencer
Esq. (d. 1820); Frederick Charles Spencer, rector
(d. 1831); John Spencer, Esq. (d. 1831), eldest son
of Lord Charles Spencer; Charles Vere Spencer,
rector (d. 1898); Aubrey John Spencer (d. 1935). (fn. 230)
Memorials to families other than those of lords of
the manor include cartouches to Thomas Isham (d.
1670/1) (fn. 231) and Adam Blandy (d. 1722), twelve years
rector; and a ledger stone to Thomas Cornish (d.
1737), Rector of Wheatfield and Vicar of Great Milton. (fn. 232)
In 1552 the church's goods consisted of a tin
chalice, two candlesticks, three vestments, a cope,
and a surplice. Edmund Streteley, the lord of the
manor, was reported to have for his own use a silver
chalice, a copper cross, and other goods, the names
of which are now illegible. (fn. 233)
The turret contains one bell, hung for chiming. It
is inscribed 1636 and was cast by Ellis Knight (I) and
is similar to bells at Balliol College and elsewhere. (fn. 234)
In 1729 John Rudge, Esq., 'out of his pious zeal
for the honour of God and His most holy religion'
gave a flagon, chalice, cup and cover, and a salver,
all of silver gilt. This silver was destroyed in the fire
of 1814 as it was kept in Lord Charles Spencer's
house for greater security. (fn. 235) Lord Charles Spencer
gave in 1814 a chalice and silver paten to replace
those lost. The chalice is of the baluster step type
(probably 1649) and is engraved 'Wheatfield Church
The Right Honble Lord Charles Spencer 1814'. (fn. 236)
The registers date from 1721 for marriages and
1722 for baptisms. The bishop's transcripts date
from 1639. (fn. 237)
Nonconformity.
The influence of the Tipping family probably accounts for the absence of
Roman Catholicism in this small parish. (fn. 238) Wood
records that Nathaniel Greenfield of St. Edmund
Hall, author of The Great Day or a Sermon setting
forth the desperate Estate and Condition of the Wicked
at the Day of Judgment, was afterwards preacher at
Wheatfield (c. 1615), (fn. 239) and that William Tipping,
second son of Sir George Tipping of Draycott and
Wheatfield, was 'puritanically affected'; he was made
a Visitor of the University in 1647 and became known
as 'Eternity Tipping' after publishing A Discourse of
Eternitie (1633). (fn. 240) They left no followers, and, except
for one Methodist reported in 1808, (fn. 241) there is no
record of any further nonconformity in the parish.
Schools.
There is no mention of a school in
Wheatfield before 1784 when the poor children were
said to be 'schooled by a weekly donation'. (fn. 242) A
Sunday school was started in 1790 where boys and
girls were still being taught to read in 1808. (fn. 243) There
were, however, only eight children of an age to
attend the school and by 1815 it was no longer held. (fn. 244)
The population at this date was very small and the
few children capable of receiving instruction attended a school at Tetsworth kept by a dissenter. (fn. 245)
In 1818 it was reported that there was still no school
at Wheatfield, but that the poor who were desirous
of education for their children might send them to
the neighbouring parish. (fn. 246) A Sunday school supported by Mrs. Spencer, the wife of the rector, was
restarted with 20 children in 1824, and a day school
was opened in the same year, where in 1833 four
boys and seven girls were being educated at their
parents' expense. (fn. 247) This day school is presumably
the dame school reported in 1833, where the children
paid, although much support was given by individuals
both in and out of the parish. There was also a
Sunday school which was attended by all the children:
it was held in a cottage, there being no school-room.
The curate was working to get a proper school-room,
and was also active along with the S.P.C.K. in supplying books and tracts. The village had a lending
library. (fn. 248) In 1854 a dame's school with six scholars
was reported and also a Sunday school for twelve or
thirteen children under a schoolmaster paid by the
rector. (fn. 249) In 1878 two of the incumbent's household
helped him in the Sunday school and evening classes
were held on Sundays and on two week-days. (fn. 250) There
is no further mention of any school in Wheatfield
after this date and the children have attended schools
at Tetsworth, Lewknor, or Stoke Talmage. (fn. 251) In 1956
all were going to Tetsworth, but in 1960 they were
transferred to Watlington. (fn. 252)
Charity.
In 1679 Sir Thomas Tipping gave a
rent of £4 to the poor, (fn. 253) charged apparently upon the
estate of Edward Rudge. (fn. 254) Distribution ceased during
the incumbency of Thomas Cornish (1722–37) (fn. 255) and
in 1768 the charity was considered to be lost. (fn. 256) In
1771 the rector said that he distributed the money
to poor cottagers, (fn. 257) but there is no later reference.