MINSTER LOVELL,
by Veronica Ortenberg
DRAFT TEXT (1st of 8)
INTRODUCTION. Minster
Lovell, known by the early 19th century for the picturesque riverside
ruins of its medieval manor house,1
lies in the Windrush valley,2
2¾ miles (4½ km.) west-north-west of
Witney, and 12¼
miles (19½ km.) west of Oxford. By the early 13th century the
parish formed a detached part of Chadlington hundred, presumably
reflecting early tenurial links; certainly in the 15th and 16th
centuries Minster Lovell manor included holdings in Chadlington,
Shorthampton, and Chilson, though no pre-Conquest connexions have
been traced.3
The place-name, recorded in 1086, may have derived from a late
Anglo-Saxon minster on the site of the present church, and the suffix
Lovell, from the chief landholding family, was added from the 13th
century.4
The ancient parish, 1,951 a. (789 ha.) in 1881, remained unaltered
in 1991;5
it included the small hamlet of Little Minster immediately west of
Minster Lovell village, and in the late 1840s the new settlement of
Charterville was established in the parish's southern part by the
Chartist leader Feargus O'Connor.
Minster Lovell Hall
from the south-east
Parish Boundaries and Landscape. The north-western boundary follows the river Windrush and, further north, the contours of a steep-sided valley through former woodland; a short detour from the river's main course near Lower Field Farm placed a small area of riverside meadow in neighbouring Asthall. The sinuous northern boundary, roughly along the line of Akeman Street, formerly divided woodland coppices in Asthall from those in Minster Lovell. The eastern boundary, from Akeman Street to Charterville's southern edge, was described in the 10th and 11th centuries, when it formed the perimeter of the neighbouring estate of Witney; the short southern boundary follows a track called in the 19th century Minster Freeboard, which formerly demarcated the open fields of Minster Lovell and Brize Norton.6
Minster Lovell: the parish's northern part and surrounding villages in 1797,
showing the village and Minster woods:
(Davis, Oxon. Map; the map is not wholly accurate)
The parish is bisected almost
symmetrically by the river Windrush which, particularly near the
village and former manor house, divides into numerous small channels
separating islands of meadow and pasture. The geology is complex,
the parish lying chiefly on cornbrash and Forest Marble with, in the
north, a small area of Boulder Clay within the former woodland, and
across the middle a narrow band of alluvium. The land rises from
around 85 m. in the valley bottom to nearly 140 m. in the north, and
to 105 m. in the south; in places the river valley is steeply
embanked, notably near Little Minster and Lower Field Farm, and
another steeply-incised valley runs north--south near Ringwood Farm.7
Communications. The
section of the Roman Akeman Street running through woodland roughly
along the parishs northern boundary was disused by the 18th
century and probably by the Middle Ages.8
The Burford--Witney road, an ancient ridgeway documented from the
Middle Ages, traverses the parish from west to east, running south of
the river.9
It was turnpiked in 1751 and disturnpiked in 1870;10
a turnpike gate near the White Hart inn existed by 1767, and a
two-storeyed tollhouse stood opposite the inn until demolished about
1956.11
Another tollgate stood in the late 18th and early 19th century on
the lane forming the parish's southern boundary, which connected at
each end with the Burford road, presumably to prevent travellers
making a detour to avoid the main tollhouse.12
A lost road along the parish's south-eastern boundary, part of that
lane in the 19th century, was called Wood street in the 10th and 11th
centuries, and the parallel road to Crawley and Delly End (in
Hailey), along which much of the modern village stands, connected
probably with roads in Hailey's northern part recorded in 969.13
Ridings Lane, along the eastern boundary with Crawley, led in the
10th century to Langley (in Shipton-under-Wychwood),14
and roads southwards to Brize Norton and northwards to Asthall Leigh,
Field Assarts, and Leafield, all established as roads or tracks by
the mid 18th century,15
are probably also ancient. Minster Lane, mentioned in 1687, was
possibly the road to Little Minster.16
A stone bridge at Minster Lovell, linking many of the principal
roads, was mentioned in 1197,17
presumably superseding a ford; repairs by inhabitants were noted
about 1587, and again following disputes over liability in 1843,18
and the existing structure, of three arches,
appears to be
post-medieval.19
In 1547 the vicar left money for repairing highways, and in 1588 the
manor court ordered repairs of the royal ways as required.20
Minster Lovell Bridge
Stage-coaches to South Wales passed through the village until 1879, and there was a daily omnibus service between Burford and Witney in the late 19th and early 20th century. Carriers to Milton-under-Wychwood were noted until about 1924, and a carrier to Oxford was recorded in the 1890s and 1910s.21 A post office was run from Locks Cottage at the north-east end of the village street between 1853 and 1938, the nearest money order and telegraph office being at Witney. Letters arrived at first through Witney and, after 1931, through Oxford. The post office moved to Wenrisc Drive, in the new part of the village, in 1938, and in 2000 was part of a general store.22
Settlement, Topography, and Population. Settlement to 1086. Collections of Mesolithic, Neolithic and Bronze-Age implements and pottery suggest prehistoric settlement, notably near Minster Riding, where over 4,000 Neolithic domestic artefacts were found.23 Roman activity is suggested by pottery found north-west of the Curbridge boundary, and in the churchyard;24 other finds include a brooch and fibula, and individual coins or hoards, dating from the 1st and 3rd centuries A.D. and from the time of an otherwise unknown local leader named Andocomius.25 Of particular significance is a hoard of 24 sestertii of Claudius (c. A.D. 43) found on a site north of the medieval manor house; a smaller hoard was found at Charterville in the mid 19th century.26
Anglo-Saxon settlement along the Thames and Windrush valleys, with Minster as one of the peripheral sites, is well-attested from the 5th century.27 Skeletons, goods and a circular dwelling, of possibly 7th-century date, were found in the 1870s near Starveall Farm in the south-west,28 and later excavations near the churchyard uncovered 5 postholes and 9 graves, undated but probably late Saxon.29 By the 9th century, Minster may have been the site not only of a pre-Conquest church with jurisdiction over the area between Shipton-under-Wychwood, Bampton, and Eynsham, with which such burials may have been associated, but also of a Mercian royal vill. Circumstantial evidence, besides the place-name, includes the church's unusual dedication to the Mercian royal saint Cynehelm (St. Kenelm), and the discovery before 1718 of a sumptuous gold and enamel mounted artefact of c. 900 known as the Minster Lovell Jewel, though firmer documentary or archaeological evidence is lacking.30 Separate settlement around Little Minster existed possibly by the mid 11th century, when it already formed a distinct estate;31 the name Little Minster was recorded from the mid 13th century.32
Population from 1086. In 1086 a total of 29 tenant households was recorded, most of them on the chief manor, together with 4 slaves.33 By the late 13th century the population had risen sharply: there were then up to 50 households on Minster Lovell manor and at least 7 at Little Minster, a total population of 230 or more.34 Around 25 taxpayers were assessed in the early 14th century.35 Plague mortality in the mid 14th century seems to have been heavy: only 86 adults over 14 were mentioned in 1377, and in 1423 the number of villeins on the chief manor had fallen to 17, from 30 recorded in 1279.36 The population seems to have remained below 13th-century levels in the early 16th century, when 18--20 landholders were taxed; up to 27 houses were noted in 1602, but only 18 were taxed in 1662, and in the 1640s and 1670s the adult population was around 100, roughly evenly divided between men and women.37 Throughout the 18th century baptisms consistently outnumbered burials,38 the number of houses being estimated in 1738 at 25, in 1759 at 30--40, and in 1771 at 37; in 1801 the population was 283, a total of 57 families accommodated in 49 houses.39 In 1821 it was 300, remaining fairly stable until Charterville's foundation in the 1840s: in 1851 it was 450 accommodated in 142 houses, and in 1861 it was 586.40 Numbers gradually diminished between the 1870s and 1930s, returning to an average of 440--60, but by the 1950s the population was rising again, reaching over 700 by 1961. In 1991 it was 1,340, a total of 513 households.41
Village Topography and
Development. Early medieval settlement may have been
concentrated around the church and adjacent manor house, on the edge
of gravel and Forest Marble close to the river. Both the church and
Manor Farm to its north, incorporating remains of the medieval chapel
of St. Cecilia, stand probably on the site of the pre-Conquest
minster, and the manor house, though rebuilt in the 15th century,
almost certainly occupies the site of an earlier house mentioned in
1197, which may itself have succeeded an 11th-century predecessor.42
Pottery of the 13th century or earlier was found near the barns at
Manor Farm.43
The existing village lies further west along the Crawley road,
though traces of medieval settlement, including crofts and house
platforms, have been identified between the two sites by the river
bank.44
A suggestion that the modern village
resulted from 17th- or
18th-century replanning, perhaps by the Cokes as lords of the manor,
is without supporting evidence; the village lacks the uniformity
characteristic of planned estate-villages, while several existing
buildings are of possibly earlier date,45
and it seems more likely that the existing topography is the result
of late medieval depopulation. A mill stood by the bridge at the
modern village's west end by 1197,46
and the base of a probably 15th-century stone cross survives to the
north near the Swan hotel;47
a house belonging in the Middle Ages to the so-called priory of
Minster Lovell may have stood across the river.48
Little Minster, with its irregular and scattered lay-out, similarly
shows signs of shrinkage, the earliest surviving buildings being the
17th-century Cot Farm and Old Manor House, the latter possibly on or
near the site of a medieval manor house.49
Minster Lovell: the village street
looking south-west
No outlying medieval sites are known, though Windrush Farm, south of the river by the lane to the Burford road, existed by the 17th century,50 and Whitehall (formerly Starveall) Farm, in former open fields in the south-west, existed by 1767, having presumably been built after inclosure during the 17th or the early 18th century.51 Lower Field Farm, by the river near the western boundary, was established by the mid 19th century, and Ringwood Farm in the north was built after clearance around 1857 of the woodland which until then covered much of the parish's northern part.52 Other new building in the parish during the 19th century was chiefly confined to the new settlement of Charterville, south of Minster Lovell village by the Brize Norton road, which is described below; the vicarage house on Church Lane was largely rebuilt in the 1850s, however, other new institutional buildings being the Wesleyan chapel (c. 1870) and National school (1872), both outside the main village, and a Primitive Methodist chapel (1893) in Charterville.53
There was little other new building in Minster Lovell before the 1950s, when infilling began in the south first on the lane to Bushy Ground Farm, then on the Brize Norton road between the Charterville cottages. Larger council estates followed in the angle between the Brize Norton and Burford roads.54 By 1977 Lower Crescent had been established, and the west side of the Brize Norton road south of the former A40 trunk-road was heavily built up, including several closes of council housing built between the 1960s and the 1980s.55 Such expansion resulted in the effective creation of a new and separate community in the parish, distinct from the historic village, and with its own institutional and commercial premises: St. Kenelm's village hall opened in 1927, the post office on Wenrisc Drive in 1938, and St. Kenelm's primary school after 1968, around which developed a small shopping area.56 By contrast the old village saw relatively little change, though from the 1970s its social tone was altered by an influx of commuters working as far away as London, and of well-to-do retired people attracted by its proximity to the Cotswolds.
Until well into the 20th century the village was often muddy and sometimes flooded, especially around the church and churchyard, and in the early 20th century women still wore pattens to cross the village street. Several new drains were built after 1955.57 The Wessex Electrical Co. was laying cables in 1938, and water and electricity were generally available by 1951; main drainage was provided in 1967--8.58 In 1937 Witney urban district council constructed a new reservoir for the area, called Worsham, although it lay just within Minster Lovell parish.59
Charterville. Charterville60
originated soon after 1842, when Feargus O'Connor's National Land
Company bought 244 a. adjoining the Brize Norton road from the
executors of John Walker, a wealthy Minster Lovell farmer. O'Connor,
prominent in the Chartist movement from which the colony was named,
hoped to take families away from factory-living or unemployment in
towns and to set them up to be self-supporting on land in the
country, thereby also giving them sufficient property to enable them
to vote.
Charterville in 1848
soon after its foundation
The Minster Lovell estate was built by national
subscription, land on both sides of the road and elsewhere, including
Walker's homestead, being divided before 1847 into around 80 regular
plots each comprising between 2 a. and 4 a. of arable and a small
cottage. By 1848 some 73 of the plots had been filled, settlers
coming from as far afield as Canterbury, London, and the northern
manufacturing towns, though the experiment was at first unsuccessful
because the allotments were too small to support a family, and the
new tenants were not used to working on the land. By 1851--2 many of
the original tenants had left, and the National Land Company itself
was bankrupt and was later dissolved. Local farmers bought or rented
the plots, often cultivating them in addition to other land, and
Charterville became more prosperous towards the end of the 19th
century. A visitor in 1861 described it as 'a large collection of
cottages ... all inhabited by labourers and little farmers ... mostly
exhibiting comfort, cleanliness and good order', and noted with
evident approval both the presence of nonconformist meetings and the
absence of an alehouse.61
Domestic Architecture. The
oldest domestic buildings in the parish are the medieval manor house
(Minster Lovell Hall) and the nearby Manor Farm House, both described
below.62
Most houses in Minster Lovell village are of the 17th century or
later, built of local limestone rubble in traditional vernacular
style, and many retained thatched roofs in the early 21st century.63
The earliest is probably the Swan hotel at the village's
south-western end, exceptional in retaining a timber-framed
cross-wing probably of the 16th century,
with a jettied first floor.64
Windrush Farm, south of the river, may also be of 16th-century
origin, and on the ground floor has some re-used windows of the late
14th or early 15th centuries with traceried heads; on the first floor
is a round-headed one possibly of the 12th century, both sets having
perhaps been removed from Minster Lovell Hall. An additional bay was
added to the back in the 17th century to create an L-plan, and
the house was further extended in the early 19th and again in the
20th century. The house was perhaps used as a dower house by the
Wheelers, lessees of the manor farm in the 17th century,65
to which the barn can also be dated.
The Swan from the south-west
showing jettied cross wing
Seventeenth- and
18th-century houses
in the village include Locks, Causeway, Tullochs, and Lily Cottages
and the Old House, and the White Hart public house on the Burford
road is also 18th-century. The Old Manor House, the largest house in
Little Minster and, with the Hall and Manor Farm House, one of only a
few gentlemens houses, is also described below.66
Orchard House north of Church Lane, a large detached building in
Arts-and-Crafts style, was built in the early 20th century by Mrs. de
Sales la Terriere, and Dundon House was built in 1937--8, using
materials from a dismantled 17th-century house in Fulbrook.67
Little Minster:
the Old Manor House
The Charterville cottages built
under O'Connor's aegis, mostly of uniform appearance and detached,
were 3-bayed single-storeyed dwellings of rendered stone rubble with
slated hipped roofs, the central bay
projecting forward. The front
part comprised 3 rooms for domestic use, each roughly 12 ft. square;
at the rear were service and agricultural rooms, including a
scullery, dairy, hen house, pigsty, and woodstore, with a privy and
lean-to shelters for a cow and a pony and cart.68
Most survived in the early 21st century, though often heavily
altered.69
Charterville:
surviving bungalow
Inns, Clubs, and Parish
Customs. Ale-sellers were mentioned in the 16th century.70
In 1753 there were two licensed houses, probably, as in 1786, the
Swan in Minster Lovell village, and the White Hart on the
Witney--Burford Road.
In the 1930s the Swan became an hotel and
restaurant, and in the late 20th century was run in connexion with a
conference centre established in the former mill nearby.71
The White Hart remained open in 2000. The New Inn opened in the mid
19th century on Burford Road to serve Charterville.
Minster Lovell:
the White Hart Inn
Two Friendly Societies were founded, one in the 1800s, the other in 1843, but both had disappeared by 1856.72 Clubs and societies in 2001 included the Women's Institute, founded in 1925, a Village Protection Society, a history society, and a social club.73 A supposed Plough Monday tradition, of unknown antiquity, was recorded in the early 1950s, according to which any carter who, before the farmer could stop him, carried a piece of a plough to the farmhouse while reciting a particular verse acquired the right to a haycock, to be kept until May Day and used as a target for cockshy.74 No confirmatory evidence has been found, however.
1 e.g. Skelton, Antiq. Oxon.; Brewer, Oxon.; cf. Pevsner, Oxon. 707--9.
2 The principal maps used were O.R.O, tithe map; O.S. Maps 1/2,500, Oxon. XXV. 15; XXXI. 2--4, XXXI. 6--7 (1880 and later edns.); ibid. 6", Oxon. XXV, XXXI (1884 and later edns.); ibid. 1/25,000, sheet 180 (1999 edn.).
3 V.C.H. Oxon. xiii, p. 1; Cal. Inq. p.m. xix, p. 144; Bodl. MS. Film 704 [Minster Lovell ct. rolls in Holkham Archives], ct. 15 Oct. 1588.
4 P.N. Oxon. (E.P.N.S.), ii. 364--5; below, church.
5 O.S. Area Bk. (1881); Census, 1881--1991.
6 O.R.O., tithe award and map; O.S. Map 1/25,000, sheet 180 (1999 edn.); below, Witney, gen. intro. (boundaries).
7 Geol. Surv. Map 1/50,000 (solid and drift), sheet 236 (1982 edn.); O.S. Map 1/25,000, sheet 180 (1999 edn.).
8 Jefferys, Oxon. Map (1767).
9 Grundy, Saxon Oxon. 99; cf. below, Witney, intro. (communications).
10 Gloucester and Oxford Road Act, 24 Geo. II, c. 28; Turnpike Continuation Acts, 2--3 Vic. c. 90.
11 Jefferys, Oxon. Map (1767); Oxf. Jnl. Synopsis, 12 Oct. 1773; 15 Apr. 1774; T. Worley, Witney District in Old Photos. (1992), 152; C.O.S., PRN 5887.
12 Jefferys, Oxon. Map (1767); A. Bryant, Oxon. Map (1824); O.R.O., tithe award and map, calling the lane Back Pike.
13 J. Blair, A.-S. Oxon. 131; below, Witney: Hailey, intro. (roads).
14 Below, Witney: Crawley, intro. (roads).
15 Jefferys, Oxon. Map (1767).
16 Oxon. Justices in the 17th Cent. (O.R.S. xvi), 35.
17 Thame Cart. i (O.R.S. xxv), p. 71.
18 Bodl. MS. Film 104, s.a. 1586, 1588; J. M. Davenport, Oxon. Bridges (1869), 8.
19 C.O.S., PRN 5886.
20 O.R.O., MS. Wills Oxon. 179, f. 260; Bodl. MS. Film 704, s.a. 1588.
21 Kelly's Dir. Oxon. (1891 and later edns.).
22 Ibid.; local inf.
23 C.O.S., PRN 1566, 4597, 4729, 5324, 5437--5439, 5590, 8864, 9525, 13367, 15414; R. Holgate, Neolithic Settlements in Thames Basin (1988), 241, 234.
24 B. Schumer, Evolution of Wychwood to 1400 (1999 edn.), 10; C.O.S., PRN 3271, 5325--6, 8921, 13368; Oxoniensia, v. 162; vii. 109--11; xxxii. 71; V.C.H. Oxon. i. 341.
25 C.O.S., PRN 1567, 5322, 9169, 13366, 13369.
26 Ibid. PRN 13365; V.C.H. Oxon. i. 325; Oxf. Jnl. 1 Apr. 1848.
27 J. Blair, A.-S. Oxon. 9, 83.
28 Witney Express, 21 Mar. 1872.
29 C.O.S., PRN 15899; M. Roberts, 'Minster Lovell Hall Access Road, Minster Lovell, Oxon.: Archaeol. Evaluation Report' (Oxf. Arch. Unit unpubl. rep. 1995); S. Midlands Arch. xxvi. 57.
30 Alfred and Minster Lovel Jewels (Ashmolean Mus. 1948); J. Blair, A.-S. Oxon. 55, 66--7, 70, 100, 108; below, church.
31 V.C.H. Oxon. i. 424.
32 Bk. of Fees, ii. 827.
33 V.C.H. Oxon. i. 410, 424.
34 Rot. Hund. ii. 727--8; the figure for Minster Lovell includes another 16 cottagers noted in 1252--3: Cal. Inq. p.m. i, p. 69.
35 P.R.O., E 179/161/8.
36 Poll Taxes 1377--81, ed. Fenwick, 291; P.R.O., C 139/6, no. 51 (18).
37 P.R.O., E 179/161/170; E 179/161/198; E 179/255/4, pt. ii, f. 139; Oxoniensia x. 101--4; Protestation Rtns. and Tax Assess. 93; Hearth Tax Oxon. 181; Compton Census, ed. Whiteman, 423.
38 C.O.S., par. reg. transcripts.
39 Secker's Visit. 103; O.R.O., MSS. Oxf. Dioc. d 556, f. 109; d 559, f. 114; d 562, f. 129; Census, 1801.
40 Census, 1821--61.
41 Census, 1871--1991.
42 Below, manor; church; for early burials near the church, above, this section.
43 C.O.S., PRN 11153; Oxoniensia, xvi. 86--8, fig. 21, nos. 1--4.
44 C.O.S., PRN 4755.
45 Below (dom. archit.).
46 Thame Cart. i (O.R.S. xxv), p. 71.
47 C.O.S., PRN 10023--4.
48 Below, manors (rectory estate); church.
49 Below, manors.
50 D.o.E., Revised Hist. Bldgs. List: Minster Lovell (1989), p. 30: copy in C.O.S.
51 Jefferys, Oxon. Map (1767); below, econ. hist.
52 P.R.O., RG 9/907; RG 10/1453.
53 Below, church; nonconf.; educ.; C.O.S., PRN 769.
54 O.S. Maps 6", SP 30 NW, SP 31 SW (1955 and later edns.).
55 Ibid.
56 Local inf.
57 C.O.S., Anon. MS. Hist. of Minster Lovell (4 vols., c. 1953), i, p. 8; O.S. Map 6", SP 31 SW (1977 edn.).
58 Univ. Coll. Estates Bursary, agreement with Wessex Elec. Co. 1938; Kelly's Dir. Oxon. (1939); Sale Cat., The Bakery (1951): copy in C.O.S.
59 O.R.O., Witney U.D.C. III/i/8, pp. 100, 192, 259.
60 Para. based on K. Tiller, 'Charterville and the Chartist Land Company', Oxoniensia, l. 251--66; A. M. Hadfield, Chartist Land Company (1970), 152--229.
61 Bodl. MS. Top Oxon. d 213, f. 148. For buildings, below.
62 Below, manors.
63 D.o.E., Revised Hist. Bldgs. List: Minster Lovell (1989), pp. 30--53: copy in C.O.S; C.O.S., PRN 14402.
64 D.o.E., Revised Hist. Bldgs. List: Minster Lovell, 43; illust. in T. Worley, Witney District in Old Photos. 153.
65 Below, manors; O.R.O., Oxf. Archd. Oxon. c 142, f. 179.
66 Below, manors (Little Minster).
67 B. Rodgers, Minster Lovell: A Historic Guide to this Ancient Village (n.d.), p. 21; local inf.
68 C.O.S., PRN 11421; Oxoniensia, xliii. 206--12, figs. 9--10; Rec. Witney, [vol. 1], no. 15 (1982), p. 19; Bodl. MSS. Top. Oxon. c 494; d 218, p. 175; T. Worley, Witney District in Old Photos. 150; Charterville, Apr./May and Oct./Nov. 1977: copy in C.O.S.
69 D.o.E., Revised Hist. Bldgs. List: Minster Lovell, 31--40, 50--3.
70 O.R.O., QSD V/1--4.
71 Below, econ. hist. (mills).
72 P.R.O., FS 2/9, FS 4/42, s.v. Minster Lovell.
73 Local inf.
74 C.O.S., MS. Hist. Minster Lovell, i, pp. 131--2.