Economic history
Cassington and Worton appear to have had separate sets of fields
throughout their history, but nothing is known
of the medieval fields of Worton. By the 13th
century Cassington was divided into two fields,
part of whose boundary was a green way, possibly the green way leading to 'Burwell' recorded c. 1285. In 1244 one division seems to
have been a north field. (fn. 31) The name Old field,
recorded in the later 13th century for a furlong
near Burleigh wood, (fn. 32) may preserve the memory
of an earlier arrangement, perhaps a separate
field for the settlement at Purwell. The arable
was extended in the early Middle Ages by
assarting, presumably from Burleigh wood, and
by ploughing the land along the Thames and
Evenlode. (fn. 33) The organization of the fields was
presumably affected by the consolidation of the
Clinton, later Montagu, demesne, which had
begun before 1152, when Geoffrey de Clinton
granted land in his demesne furlong of Batemoor (Battmoor) north-east of the village. A
furlong north of the village was called Inland c.
1285, and William Montagu's demesne land lay
in the same area in the late 13th century. (fn. 34) The
18th-century field names Long Berry and Short
All or Hall furlongs, both in the west, (fn. 35) probably
also represent former demesne. Godstow abbey,
too, consolidated part of its holding, often buying or exchanging land to create a solid block in
the fields; by the late 13th century the abbey
held as many as 10 a. 'lying together' in one
furlong, and blocks of 5 or 6 a. in others. (fn. 36)
The alluvial land along the Thames and the
Evenlode provided plentiful meadow, and there
was pasture in the Slade and Battmoor between
Cassington and Worton and on the heaths in the
north-east of the parish. In 1086 there were 53 a.
of meadow in Cassington, fairly evenly divided
among the manors, and 48 a. in Worton, and
several furlongs of pasture in each township. (fn. 37)
In the 13th century meadow was sold separately
from the arable, a process which may account
for the fact that only 7 a. of meadow were
recorded on the Montagu demesne in 1320 and
only 12 a. in 1354, whereas in 1350 Godstow
abbey held 13 a. of meadow in Farnhulle (Varnell) and unspecified amounts in West Mead,
Rowenhay, and three small islands. Most of the
Cassington meadow was lot meadow, and all, or
nearly all, of it lay along the Evenlode. (fn. 38) Worton
meadow lay along the Thames. (fn. 39) Cassington
men had the right to common in some of the
Eynsham meadows along the Evenlode, and the
customs were regulated by an agreement of
1328, after a dispute. (fn. 40)
Before 1600, probably in the later Middle
Ages, much of the land south of Cassington
village was converted to meadow and pasture,
and the fields were reorganized for a three
course rotation. There is evidence for a six-fold
division of the arable in the 17th century, and it
seems likely that each of the earlier fields had
been divided into three. In the northern part of
the township the divisions corresponded to the
northern part of the later Purwell field (called
Allslad field or West field), the later Burleigh
field, and the later Ninelands field (called Slade
field). The arrangements in the south are less
clear and may have changed from time to time,
perhaps as more land in the southern part of the
later Mill field was brought into cultivation. One
division, probably corresponding to the
southern part of Purwell field, was called Allslad
field; another, which included the south-east
part of Godshill field, was called Feather field. (fn. 41)
The six fields thus created were cultivated on a
three-course rotation, two being left fallow each
year, and they were sometimes described as the
first, second, and third fields. (fn. 42) It appears that
the two Allslad fields were later united to form
the single, large Purwell field, creating the five
open fields recorded in 1797, but the divisions in
the south continued to be flexible, and a different arrangement, including a Feather Bush field,
was recorded in 1794. Worton was in 1797
divided into three open fields, Brimsgrove field,
Slade field, and Heath field, and an area called
West Croft which was cropped every year. (fn. 43)
In 1086 each of Wadard's two Cassington
manors, with land for 3 ploughteams, was
worked by 3 teams, 2 in demesne and 1 on the
tenants' land held by 4 villeins and 1 bordar. (fn. 44)
On Ilbert de Lacy's manor, with land for 6
ploughteams, there were 2 teams in demesne
and 4 worked by the 14 villeins and 6 bordars.
In Worton there was land for 5 ploughteams,
and there were 2 teams in demesne and 3 on the
tenants' land held by 8 villeins and 5 bordars.
All the manors had risen in value since 1066,
Wadard's from £3 to £5 each, Ilbert's from £4
to £6, and Worton from £4 to £6. (fn. 45)
Before 1279 much of the demesne in Cassington and almost all that in Worton had been
granted to tenants, and several freeholds had
been created in Cassington. On the Montagu
manor in Cassington, composed of one of Wadard's manors and a quarter of Ilbert de Lacy's,
Ela countess of Warwick held only 1 ploughland
in demesne; 8 servi held 1 yardland each, and 7
free tenants held a total of 7 yardlands, their
individual holdings ranging from ½ yardland to 2
yardlands; in addition 8 cottars, 7 of them in
Somerford, held 1 cotland each. Godstow abbey, whose manor included half of Wadard's
other manor and half of Ilbert de Lacy's, had
kept 9 yardlands in demesne; one serf held ½
hide, presumably 2 yardlands, and 5 men who
seem to have been free tenants held a total of 5½
yardlands. No demesne land was recorded on
Edmund Pady's manor, equivalent to half of
Wadard's second manor, and the only tenants
were 6 villein yardlanders and 7 cottars. The
remaining quarter of Ilbert de Lacy's Domesday
manor, which was presumably held by William
son of Peter, seems to have comprised the
holdings of 5 free tenants, amounting to 2½
yardlands and c. 17 a., but the description may
be incomplete. In Worton 9 of the abbot of
Oseney's 10 yardlands and all of John de Eu's 10
yardlands were held by villein yardlanders; the
tenure of the abbot's tenth yardland was not
recorded. (fn. 46)
In 1320 there were 96 a. of arable in demesne
on the Montagu manor in Cassington, probably
equivalent to the ploughland recorded in 1279.
There were 15 customary or bond tenants, presumably including cottars, who paid money
rents slightly higher than those recorded in
1279; they all performed mowing, haymaking,
and hoeing services, and 7 of them also
ploughed, reaped, gathered stubble, and carted
hay, corn, and wood. An unspecified number of
free tenants paid c. £1 12 s., 2 lb. of pepper, and
100 pickerell. (fn. 47) In 1354 there were 100 a. of
arable, apparently in demesne; no services were
recorded, but rents were worth 20s. and perquisites of court 12d. (fn. 48)
Michael Meldon's Cassington manor in 1324
comprised 8 messuages, 2 tofts, 1 yardland and
7 a. of arable, all freehold, and rents worth 37s.,
1 lb. of pepper, and ½ lb. of cummin, equivalent
to the quarter of Ilbert de Lacy's Domesday
manor which William son of Peter had held in
1279, and 17 messuages, 1 toft, 1 ploughland, 6
yardlands, 24 a. of arable, 20 a. of meadow, and
4 a. of pasture, equivalent to the half of one of
Wadard's manors which Philip Pady had held in
1279; the ploughland, which was not recorded in
1279, may have been demesne, while the 6
yardlands were presumably still held in villeinage. (fn. 49) Bondmen on the Godstow manor still
owed works, including 9 days' mowing a year, in
1350. (fn. 50) but there is no later record of such
services.
By 1312 there was freehold land in Worton,
presumably on the Meldon manor, which had
been held by John de Eu in 1279, and by 1324
almost half the manor seems to have been alienated, for Michael Meldon's holding comprised
only 6 messuages, 5 yardlands, 38 a. of arable,
and 10 a. of pasture. (fn. 51)
From the 16th century or earlier the yardland
was considered to be 20 a., actual yardlands
varying from 20 a. to 23 a. (fn. 52) Earlier medieval
yardlands may have been slightly larger; the
96-a. or 100-a. demesne ploughland on the
Montagu manor suggests a yardland of c. 25 a. (fn. 53)
A decrease in the size of the yardland, at least in
Cassington township, might explain the increase
in the number of yardlands at a time when the
amount of arable land decreased. In 1279 only c.
50 yardlands were recorded in Cassington, a
total which accords with the number of Domesday ploughteams, but in the later 18th century
there were said to be 60 yardlands in the township. In Worton there were 20 yardlands from
1279 onwards. (fn. 54)
The medieval field names peselond (peas
land), banlond (bean land), bereland (barley
land), and flexey (flax island or inclosure) and
linton (flax inclosure) indicate some of the crops
grown, and lambcupe (lamb shelter) suggests
that sheep were also kept. An estate leased in
1350 included an ox house, a cow house, and a
sheep house. (fn. 55)
William Montagu, his widow Elizabeth, and
Michael Meldon had the highest assessments for
the earlier 14th-century subsidies, three or four
times the average assessment for the parish. In
1306 and 1327 Michael Meldon's assessment
was notably lower than William or Elizabeth
Montagu's, and in 1327 it was only 6d. more
than the highest of the tenants' assessments. In
1306 the sums assessed in Worton were similar
to those in Cassington, but in 1316 and 1327
average assessments in Worton were considerably higher than those in Cassington, 4s. 3d.
compared to 2s. 2d., and 3s. 6d. compared to 2s.
4d. (fn. 56) For the subsidy of 1334 Worton, with a
smaller population, was assessed at £3 6s. com-
pared with Cassington's £4 13s. 2d. (fn. 57)
John Montagu, earl of Salisbury, had a house
in Cassington in 1400 which he presumably
occupied occasionally, but his successors do not
seem to have maintained it. (fn. 58) As none of the
Meldons' successors seems to have lived in
Cassington, there was no resident lord of the
manor until the Godstow and Montagu manors
were sold to local yeomen in the later 16th
century. In 1524-5 the wealthiest man in the
parish was Robert Marsh, farmer of the rectory,
who was assessed for subsidy at 40s. on goods,
almost half the total assessment for the township. The next highest assessment, John Townsend's, was only 7s. At the other end of the social
scale, 7 or 8 men paid at the landless labourer's
rate. In Worton the highest assessment was only
4s., and there were 4 landless labourers. (fn. 59) In
1535 John Townsend's son Michael was one of
the two richest men in the parish. Michael
bought a lease of the rectory from Oxford cathedral in 1544; he died in 1554 and was succeeded
by his son Robert, who held 5 yardlands and c.
30 a. of land and had goods worth c. £182 at his
death in 1598. (fn. 60) Robert's son and grandson,
both called Francis Townsend, held land in the
parish in the 1620s and 1630s. (fn. 61)
The later 16th century was marked by the
break-up of the former Godstow and Montagu
manors. In 1552 the only substantial freehold on
the former Montagu manor was Michael Townsend's, amounting to 2½ yardlands and c. 30 a. of
arable; there were then 9½ copyhold yardlands. (fn. 62)
In 1560 Richard Yate sold a yardland which was
thenceforth independent of the manor, and in
1574 Vincent Coventry sold 3½ yardlands to
Richard Cherry, whose descendants were prominent in Cassington throughout the 17th century. The residue of the manor, known as Moat,
later Reynolds, farm, was assessed at only 6
yardlands in 1699. (fn. 63) The former Godstow
manor of 12 yardlands, all held in demesne, was
divided into four parts of 3 yardlands each in
1591 and 1604, and two of those 3-yardland
estates were later split up. (fn. 64) The Meldon manor
in Cassington and the manors in Worton, on the
other hand, remained intact. The Christ Church
manor of Worton comprised 8 copyhold yardlands and 2 leasehold yardlands throughout the
17th century and the early 18th; the manors sold
by Henry Allnutt to the duke of Marlborough in
1711 comprised at least 11 copyhold yardlands
and a demesne farm in Cassington and at least
8½ copyhold yardlands in Worton. (fn. 65)
The chief crops recorded in the late 16th
century and the 17th were wheat, barley, peas,
and beans; oats and hemp were also grown, and
garden crops included carrots, parsnips, turnips,
cabbages, and onions. (fn. 66) Although the parish was
mainly arable, (fn. 67) most farmers kept some cattle,
sheep, and pigs. The few large flocks and herds
recorded usually formed only a small proportion
of a farmer's wealth, but Robert Townsend (d.
1598) owned 18 cattle and 2 calves worth £35
and 131 sheep worth £26 compared with corn
worth £40. Similarly Stephen Seale (d. 1658)
owned cattle worth £21, 129 sheep and lambs
worth £24, and oats, peas, and wheat worth only
£20. Richard Greenway (d. 1610) had 97 sheep
and lambs worth £14 and 8 cows worth £18
compared with corn worth only £19, but he died
in his father's lifetime, and may not be typical.
Thomas Seale (d. 1609), a member of a wealthy
yeoman family, owned 12 cows, a bull, and 7
bullocks, but they were worth only £39 compared with £175 for his malt, corn, and hay. (fn. 68)
Three farmers sued for tithe in 1633 were
alleged to have had flocks of 100 or more sheep
and herds of 8 or 10 cows. (fn. 69)
In Cassington township in the mid 16th cen-
tury the stint in the fields for a yardland was 8
cows and an unknown number of sheep; in the
17th and 18th centuries it was 3 cows, 1 horse,
and 20 sheep. (fn. 70) There were also Lammas commons, in 1794 1 horse or 2 cows for each
yardland. (fn. 71) Other commons were sold separately
from yardlands and seem to have been rights to
pasture in the meadows along the Evenlode. At
the end of the 18th century West mead and the
pasture south of the village were open to cows
and horses between 12 August and old Lady
Day; Mill Ditch meadow, Grove meadow, and
Varnells between Lammas and new Lady Day;
Wersey mead, Great Burham, and Little Burham were open to sheep between Lammas and
new Lady Day. Cows were allowed on the cow
common between 3 May and 24 February and
horses on the horse common between I June and
Lady Day. Sheep were allowed on most of the
meadow and pasture from 22 November; Slade
heath was commonable to sheep all year round
and to horses and cows at open times. (fn. 72) The lot
meadow was allotted by drawing straws of different lengths. (fn. 73)
The stint in Worton seems to have been the
same as in Cassington. There was additional
grazing in Battmoor lot mead and in Worton
meadow after the hay harvest, in the cow common between 3 May and new Lady Day, and in
the Slade and Worton Heath all the year
round. (fn. 74) There was a shepherd in the township
in the late 16th century. (fn. 75)
Both Cassington and Worton were cropped
on a three-course rotation until 1794 when they
changed to a four-course rotation; Briar furlong
(10 a.) in Cassington and West Croft (20 a.) in
Worton were cropped every year. The crops
were barley, beans, wheat, and fallow, not necessarily in that order. The arable, estimated at
1,194 a. in 1797 but at only 534 a. in 1801, was
good corn land, but the meadows along the
Thames were low-lying and liable to damage
from standing water. (fn. 76)
Most of the early inclosure in Cassington and
Worton was around the villages, but in the later
13th century Godstow abbey acquired a close of
arable, meadow, and pasture between Somerford and Worton meadow. (fn. 77) The site of Somer-
ford remained inclosed, and by the late 18th
century there were three small closes (c. 3 a.
each) in Ninelands field, and three larger ones (c.
10 a., c. 7 a. and c. 18 a.) in Acreys, east of
Cassington village; Great Limpton meadow,
south of the village, was also inclosed. Otherwise
the parish remained in open fields, estates being
scattered in strips of an acre or less. (fn. 78) Between
1801 and 1804 a total of c. 1,985 a., including
some old inclosures, was inclosed by Act of
parliament and divided among 21 landholders.
The largest allotment, c. 1,169 a., was made to
the duke of Marlborough for his freehold lands;
the duke also received c. 161 a. for lands and
common rights held by lease from Christ
Church. Christ Church as rector received c.
248 a. for tithe, and the college and its five
copyhold tenants in Worton received c. 131 a.
The vicar was allotted c. 128 a., of which c. 68 a.
was for tithe and 60 a. for glebe. Three freeholders, including the miller John Patrick, each
received between 30 a. and 40 a., and nine others received allotments ranging from 9 a. down
to less than 1 a. A series of exchanges involving
old as well as new inclosures resulted in the
creation of several small, compact holdings adjoining houses in Worton and Cassington while
almost the whole of the north and west parts of
the parish passed to the duke of Marlborough
and most of the east and south-east to Christ
Church. (fn. 79)
Inclosure raised the value of land; the Christ
Church estate in Worton, worth c. £177 before
inclosure, was worth c. £283 shortly after it. In
1807 the clay land throughout the parish was
valued at 10s.-12s. an acre, the warmer gravel at
30s.-35s., and the meadow at 30s.-45s. Between
1836 and 1863 the tenant of the Christ Church
rectory estate drained and manured much of the
land, but in 1858 another college estate in Wor-
ton was in need of draining and, like much of the
land in the neighbourhood, 'rather foul'. (fn. 80) The
parish was cultivated in several farms, mainly by
tenants of the duke of Marlborough and Christ
Church, although some of the freehold farms
created at inclosure survived for much of the
19th century. In 1851 there were 14 farms, 4 of
them of 200 a. or more, 5 between 100 a. and
199 a., and 5 under 100 a., the smallest being
only 15 a. (fn. 81) By 1871 their number had been
reduced to 9: Manor farm of 525 a., the rectory
farm (360 a.), Purwell farm (272 a.), Jericho
farm (230 a.), the glebe farm (130 a.), and 4
others ranging from 30 a. to 12 a. (fn. 82)
Farming remained mixed with pasture predominating. In 1914 as much as 81 per cent of
the agricultural land in the parish was permanent grass, used mainly for stock raising, the
number of sheep having declined markedly
since 1901. Wheat (24 per cent), barley (19 per
cent), and oats (16 per cent) were the chief crops
on the arable; the swedes, turnips, and mangolds
were presumably grown as fodder. (fn. 83) Between
1920 and 1941 Christ Church, which had taken
its Worton estate in hand, kept a herd of dairy
short horns, 95 cows and heifers and 35 bulls in
1941, as well as some sheep. During the Second
World War the arable was slightly increased,
and by the late 1940s there were 636 a. of arable
to 1,111 a. of pasture, the arable presumably in
the centre of the parish around Cassington vil-
lage and between it and Purwell, as it had been
in 1936. Cattle were kept on all the farms, but
only two farms still kept sheep. (fn. 84)
There was some clothworking in the parish in
the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. The mill was
occupied by fullers in 1581 and 1588; the miller
who died 1639 was also a clothworker, and the
name Rack furlong, recorded in 1699 and 1797
for the furlong next to the mill, presumably took
its name from the racks for drying fulled cloth. (fn. 85)
A North Leigh man who died in 1676 had a
broadloom at Cassington. (fn. 86) A fuller and cloth-
worker who died in 1682 had had his own
workshop; weavers were recorded in 1704, 1711,
and 1728 and a narrow weaver in 1726. (fn. 87) Other
men followed the usual village occupations; carpenters died in 1641 and 1723, a blacksmith in
1721, and tailors in 1621 and 1639. A shoemaker
died in 1727, and a Cassington cordwainer sold
shoes in Oxford in 1750. (fn. 88)
The building of the canal and wharf between
1800 and 1802 brought river and canal trade to
Cassington. (fn. 89) Barges with coal and salt from
Warwickshire reached the wharf from the Oxford canal via the Duke's Cut at Wolvercote, and
in the 1830s others came from the south-west
via the Thames and Severn canal. Several boatmen lived in the parish between 1813 and
1840, (fn. 90) and the wharfinger in 1825 had his own
barge, but the wharf itself was usually let to coal
merchants. In 1834 the wharf was let to the
Oxford Canal Co. for 10 years, but the arrangement was not sufficiently profitable for the company to renew the lease. A few barges used the
canal as late as 1865, but no coal merchant was
recorded after 1862, and the canal had probably
gone out of use by 1870. (fn. 91) In the later 19th
century there were usually 6 or 7 railway labour-
ers or plate-layers in the parish. Otherwise the
parish remained predominantly agricultural,
most men being employed as labourers, with a
few carpenters, masons, and other service
trades. (fn. 92)
Exploitation of the gravel along the Thames
began in the 1930s and continued for c. 30
years, (fn. 93) but had ceased by 1982. The presence of
the main A 40 road, built through the parish in
1931 and 1932, has attracted some light industry
to the south-west corner of the parish, notably at
the junction with the Eynsham road; firms
established there include the Evenlode Truck
Centre (1951) and Smith's Ready Mix Concrete
Ltd. In Cassington village is the headquarters of
the building firm Cassington Builders and of
Trinity Plant Hire.
In 1086 there were two mills on Wadard's
manors. One, probably in Somerford, descended with one of the manors to the Clintons
and the Montagus. It was repaired in 1198, and
valued at 20s. in 1320 and at 13s. 4d. in 1354, (fn. 94)
but it was not recorded thereafter.
The other mill descended with Wadard's
other manor to Richard de Vernon, to William
de Brai, and to William Bagot and so, c. 1245, to
Peter Ashridge, but was excluded from Peter's
sale to Godstow abbey, (fn. 95) having already been
sold to the overlord, Edmund, earl of Cornwall.
In the later 13th century the mill was maintained and the profits taken by the steward of the
St. Valery manor in Yarnton, (fn. 96) but before 1291
Edmund gave the mill, a double one, to Rewley
abbey. (fn. 97) At the Dissolution the mills passed to
the Crown, which granted a 21-year lease of
them in 1555. (fn. 98) Before 1611 the mills were
acquired by Thomas Yate who sold them in that
year to William Wise. In 1637 Hugh Wise died
seised of the mills and was apparently succeeded
by his son Stephen. (fn. 99) A miller, William Johnson, who died in 1675 seems to have been a
tenant. (fn. 1) The miller, and presumably owner, in
1778 was John Patrick, and he or another man of
the same name held the mill at inclosure in
1801. (fn. 2) The mill remained in the Patrick family
until c. 1862 when it passed to George Homan,
whose brother and heir William sold it in 1873
to Andrew Hedges, in whose family it remained
until it ceased working in 1943. (fn. 3) The mill was
rebuilt in the earlier 19th century and greatly
enlarged by the Hedges family, the last extension being dated 1888. It was equipped with
steam machinery to augment the water power.
In 1962 the site was converted into a caravan
park. (fn. 4)