Web Design: Geoff Roynon |
Last Update: 30th January 2020 |
This page, and pages linked to this one, will discuss the history of Horspath and the local area from ancient times up to the present.
The majority of the text and images making up this section were supplied by Brian Lowe.
95 AD |
Roman road from Dorchester to Alchester already in use, as a bridge over River Ray
recently dendro-dated to that year. |
400 |
End of large-scale pottery production as monetary system collapses. Possible limited production for an unknown time afterwards. Currently under investigation by Jemma Underdown. |
956 |
Saxon land charter mentions Hollow Brook as the boundary to the south. |
1086 |
Domesday Book entry for "Horspadan". |
1298 |
First delineation of the Royal Forest of Shotover. |
1377 |
19 taxpayers in Upper, or Old Horsepath, 41 in Lower, or Church, Horspath. (Poll Tax returns). |
Late 14th early 15th c |
Old Horsepath disappears from official records. Worsening climate probably major factor. 1349 Black Death implicated, but not prime cause. Some continued occupation noted in Hollowbrook valley up to 18th century. |
1400 |
Church tower, arch built and corbel figures carved. |
1452 |
Church appropriated to the Hospital of St John the Baptist in Oxford. (i.e. the later site of Magdalen College). It became a perpetual curacy with Magdalen College until the 1950s. |
1480s |
Oak felled in Shotover for Henry VII's navy - and the chancel roof at St Mary's. |
1524 |
Subsidy rolls: 20 taxpayers. |
1539 |
Henry VIII's Muster Roll compiled for Horsepath. |
1552 |
Edward VI's Church Inventory of Church Goods compiled. |
1555 |
Highways Act. |
1561 |
Existing Parish Registers begun. |
1576 |
Mileways Act; (Horsepath not affected as more than 5 miles from Oxford). |
1602 |
Oldest existing bell cast with Elizabeth 1st's cipher. |
1605 |
Corpus Christi Estate Map showing land in Horsepath. |
1611 |
Present tenor bell cast. |
1613 |
Bailiwick of Shotover passed to Sir Timothy Tyrell. Much oak felling for construction (Bodleian, Oxford Prison). |
1624 |
Earliest known date for the Chequers Inn, evidenced by small plaque on the front exterior. |
1629 |
Shotover surveyed for oaks for naval construction: 24,000 trees in census. |
1630 |
Thomas Westbrook (shepherd) left £20 for the village poor. |
1635 |
John lanquett (Lancott ?) paid £1 for tenement bought by Westbrook executors. |
1642 |
(onwards) Much fuel taken for the Siege of Oxford. |
1642 |
13 burials in the parish this year. Normally two or three on average. County Trained Bands disarmed on Bullingdon Green by the Royalist army. |
1644 |
Charles 1 reviewed troops on Bullingdon Green. 16 burials in the parish this year, including "Captain James Playfott (sic) of Portsmouth - of the King's armie". |
1645 |
Review of Parliamentarian troops on Bullingdon Green by the Earl of Essex. |
1648 |
George Nicholson, Curate, deprived of his demyship for abusing Parliamentarian soldiers. |
1660 |
Shotover disafforested [reduce (a district) from the legal status of forest to that of ordinary land]. |
1661 |
Parishioners given 30 acres to make up for the loss of common rights. |
1663 |
Turnpike Act. |
1665 |
Hearth Tax compiled. |
1676 |
One Nonconformist recorded in the village. |
1687 |
William Joyner fled to the Manor House; seized as a catholic priest, but later released as a "mere lay papist". |
1713 - 1728 |
Curate Reynolds Walker recorded as neglecting services at Horsepath. |
1719 |
Old Road made a turnpike road. |
1738 |
Nine poor children educated at a cost met by the minister, Robert Seeley. (Defunct by 1759) Bishop Secker holds the Visitation for St Giles Church. |
1739 |
(October) Charles Wesley held up on the Old Road up to Shotover. |
1740 |
President of Magdalen College gave the Copcot window to the Church. Painted by William Price who was working at New College at the time. Copcot a Horsepath name, John Copcot studying at The Queen's College. |
1745 |
Shotover Estate purchased by Augustus Schultz from the Crown. |
1789 |
Old Road abandoned as the main route to London. |
1801 |
Population 205. |
1802 |
Another school established. |
1803 |
Poor Rate assessed at £93-18s-7d. |
1808 |
One Anabaptist recorded in the village. |
1811 |
Population 241. |
1812 |
Magdalen consented to some inclosure on condition that a tithe free piece of land be provided. |
1813 |
Arthur Young describes Horsepath land usage. |
1815 |
Fourteen children recorded at the day school. |
1821 |
Population 164. |
1825 |
Dr. Ellerton (Vicar, from Magdalen) bought two cottages with land attached - devised by will to Magdalen - one a house for a schoolmistress, and the other rented to pay for schooling 12 to 15 poor children. |
1826 |
Resolved to grow one furlong of clover. Day labourers assessed for the first time. |
1828 |
A cow keeper appointed. Only four people on Parish Relief. |
1829 |
John Henry Newman rents a cottage for his mother & sisters from a Mr. Charles Talmage. |
1829 |
Parish found work for those on Parish Relief - a small daily wage from a lump sum provided by farmers. |
1831 |
Population 275. Militia Roll prepared - 51 names entered. |
1837 |
Dr. Ellerton's Charity to Horsepath of £30 established. |
1840 |
Chancel found to be out of alignment and demolished. Early English windows preserved with some of the mediaeval glass in the new chancel. |
1841 |
Census - first one to list names, ages and occupations. |
1842 |
Another school is recorded. |
1844 |
Gallery removed from west end of the Church, again revealing the mediaeval arch of 1400. |
1847 |
Tithe Schedule. |
1849 |
Tithe Award and map prepared. Church described as "being in a dilapidated state". |
1850 |
Revd. J H Parker reviews the church of St Giles. |
1851 |
Census: Population 333. Two wings added to Shotover House. |
1852 |
Church restored. |
1854 |
Oxfordshire Landowners Return compiled. Bishop Samuel Wilberforce holds a Church Visitation. |
1856 |
Magdalen advance £100 to the present school. |
1858 |
Open fields enclosed with 18 acres set aside for the labouring poor. The remaining strip system disappears
as enclosed fields replace them. Fields to the west of the village largely unaffected (The Meadow, Upper & Lower Charley, Hill Ground, Peril).
Cuddesdon Road laid out, also Sandy Lane as new enclosure roads. Gateley linked by road to Littleworth, and Blenheim Road extended to Old Road.
|
1860 |
Railway excavations begun, with Railway Cottages begun. |
1861 |
Census - population 334. |
1863 |
Outbreak of Scarlet Fever in the village - ten children buried this year. |
1864 |
Thame to Oxford railway line opened Oct. 24th. Nearest station to Horsepath at Wheatley! |
1866 |
Old Vicarage demolished. New one built to the rear of the original. Revd. Bramler provides a new treble bell, making the tower a six-bell ring. |
1871 |
Census - population 373. Revd. Bramley publishes his 2nd. collection of Christmas Carols with Sir John Stainer. First Methodist Chapel opened on Oxford Road. School records 48 children in attendance. |
1873 |
Horspath NALU [National Agricultural Labourers Union] Branch serve notice on farmers Eeley & Herman for wage increase by threat of strike. Wage rise agreed without recourse to strike action. School enlarged with 48 pupils recorded. |
1874 |
NALU Meeting on village green & collected 14s. 10d. for lockout fund. |
1876 |
NALU Meetings held at the Chequers - many attended. |
1881 |
Census - Population 324. Westbrook & Deane charity established. |
1883 |
Horsepath rail tunnel relined. (Illustrated as "Wheatley Tunnel", but entirely in Horsepath parish!). |
1885 |
Manor extended. |
1891 |
Census - Population 330. |
1894 |
4th December: First Parish Meeting at the Schoolroom, and first Parish Council Meeting on 13th December. Land for a cricket ground purchased from Corpus Christi College. |
1895 |
Cricket Club applied for ground within the Recreation Ground, which was bought from Corpus Christi for £50 an acre. |
1898 |
Church purchases land to the north of the existing churchyard as a new burial ground. |
1901 |
Census - Population 333. |
1903 |
Old Horsepath Farm built. |
1906 |
Average school attendance was 73 for a new Chapel. |
1908 |
Farmer Wm Lindsay occupies College Farm & buys land from Corpus Christi (£25) for a new Methodist Chapel. |
1909 |
New Methodist Chapel begun, built by A.E. Vallis. |
1910 |
Teacher's house remodelled. First service in the new Chapel on 10th January. |
1911 |
Census - Population 382. Chapel opened. The Pound added to Parish Property. Old Chapel becomes the Parish Reading Room. Also, a small railway Halt opened at the same site as the later (1933) one. |
1912 |
Parish Council adopt "HORSPATH" as accepted future spelling. |
1914 |
Church redecorated, with the frieze painted over; Tower re-roofed (£750 ?) and attempts to repair the blacksmith's clock unsuccessful. |
1917 |
Horspath Halt closed as a wartime economy measure. |
1918 |
The Pound is demolished. |
1920 |
"Ribbon development" begins at the bottom of Gidley Way, on the left-hand side going up. |
1921 |
Census - population 361. Foot & Mouth disease in the village. Village World War One Memorial unveiled on 13th November in the Church. |
1923 |
Council decide to buy an ex-army hut as a village hall. Brought from Wendover. |
1924 |
Village Hall opened on October 3rd. Parish Council acquire recreation ground adjacent. |
1925 |
Pond filled in before the church south wall due to diphtheria outbreak. |
1926 |
Horspath Song & Dance Club formed. |
1928 |
Parish boundaries changed, with Open Magdalen Wood and Brasenose Wood added from Headington, and also extended north to the Littleworth Road. |
1931 |
Census - Population 540. |
1933 |
A new Horspath Halt is erected from railway sleepers with a tin pagoda, and opened on June 5th. The Church changed from gas to electric lighting around this time. |
1935 |
School milk scheme started. |
1936 |
The Queen's Head catches fire from sparks from the thatched cottage opposite by the Vicarage. |
1937 |
Horspath Womens' Institute formed in October. Cdr. Wrightson DSO moves into the Manor House. |
1938 |
Boy Scout troop formed by Cdr. Wrightson, resident of the Manor House. Slade Camp started within part of parish for the Ox & Bucks Light Infantry. |
1939 |
Horspath Local Defence Volunteers formed with 30 men from the village. Warden's post is the Manor House with Mrs. Wrightson the Billeting Officer. The Village Hall becomes the Rest Centre, and 50 evacuees come to Horspath in August from Rosebery Avenue School, Holborn. ARP lectures begin in the Village Hall. List of village nicknames compiled. |
1940 |
Horspath Branch of the Mother's Union formed by Mrs. Robinson. Horspath Common and the Plain used as a tank testing ground. Part of No. 1 MPRD is situated over the southern boundary of the village. June 16th., Church bells ring for the last time during hostilities (except for invasion or parachutists). |
1941 |
No Census taken this year. |
1943 |
Regular School canteen opened, and the Manor cowhouse used as a British Restaurant. During the war years a village choir sang. |
1946 |
Child Welfare Clinic started. Senior children begin to go to Wheatley or Littlemore. Horspath School reorganised as a Church school for juniors & infants. Older children transferred to Littlemore County School. |
1947 |
Horspath British Legion Branch formed. MPRD area to south of village closed. |
1948 |
Population now 549. (There had been no 1941 census, due to the war). |
1949 |
British Legion standard dedicated to St Giles on 22nd May. |
1950 |
A womens' section of the British Legion formed on 24th May. Also, a Workers' Education Association was formed. |
1951 |
Census - Population now 937. |
1952 |
Mark Hassall discovers Roman head-making mould in the Row (Rough) Field. |
1953 |
New road established to North of Manor Farm (Blenheim Way). Brasenose sells land (due to compulsory purchase)
to Oxford City Council for allotments. Coppocks open the village shop. |
1954 |
College Way council housing. - 18 houses to begin with. |
1955 |
Roman coin found on the steep track to Shotover. Identified as Constantine the Great, c. AD 330. "Horspath Scrapbook" completed by Miss Callard, the schoolmistress. A valuable account of the village and a comprehensive social document of the village in the 1950s, illustrated with photographs. |
1956 |
Horspath Cycle Speedway founded. "Horspath Hammers". |
1956-7 |
Church has electric heating installed, the old boiler removed. Font is moved from near the ringing room to its present position in the nave by the north wall. Land bought for the expansion of the School; Mains water comes to the village. Sewage plant installed on the north side of Oxford Road. |
1958 |
Chapel extended to include a kitchen and toilet. |
1960 |
Houses built opposite Village Hall in Oxford Road. Butchers shop opens on the Green. Four bungalows built on the allotments W. Of the Church. Horspath Cycle Speedway track built. Chapel holds its Golden Jubilee. |
1961 |
Census - Population 1540. |
1960s |
Manor House land sold and much bungalow expansion. Blenheim Road, Butts Road, Manor Drive and Manor Farm Road all receive new housing, and ribbon development up the east side of Gidley Way. The northern hamlet of Blenheim is joined by development to Horspath. |
1963 |
Bells are rehung by Whites of Appleton in a new oak frame, with new fittings and bellropes. |
1964 |
Railway closes after 99 years of operation. Line still used occasionally as a diversion, or for "football specials". |
1965 |
Old Village Hall demolished and a new purpose brick built one erected; Much of the money raised by local turf accountant Gwyn Morgan providing an interest-free loan of £4000. |
1966 |
Horspath Senior Residents Club established. |
1969 |
Rail tracks taken up. Roman kiln found in Open Brasenose. |
1971 |
Census - Population 1561. |
1974 |
Church roof reslated by Nathan & Franklin Ltd. Shotover Preservation Society formed. |
1978 |
Brasenose Wood sold by the college to BBONT. |
1981 |
Vicarage sold on the death of Revd. Bird, (May, 1980). Horspath combines with Garsington under a single priest living at Garsington. (Revd. Christopher Butler MA). |
1982 |
Parish Council buys a 5 acre site near the tunnel for £700. |
1986 |
Horspath Scout Band become Division One champions of the British Youth Bands contest. |
1989 |
Horspath wins the Marlborough Trophy .. Best kept village. |
1991 |
Peter & Valerie Zarecky purchase the "Queen's Head" as a free house. |
1994 |
Mothers Union Wall Tapestry completed and hung in the Church, depicting village organisations. Horspath Parochial Charities formed from the Ellerton & Westbrook/Deane charities. |
1995 |
Church boundary wall completely taken down and rebuilt, topped with York stone flags, largely at the instigation of Mr Colin Mutton. Revd Christopher Butler leaves his ministry in June. Residents move into Butler Close in July - named after Rev. Christopher Butler. (Affordable housing project). |
1996 |
Revd. Richard Cowles installed as Vicar. Village Hall renovated. |
1997 |
Village Hall re-opened. |
1999 |
Illegal "rave" held in railway tunnel. Shotover Wildlife Conservation Area formed. |
2000 |
Millennium Project : Nature Reserve. Horspath Village Sports Association formed. Traffic calming scheme installed - a chicane on Oxford Road & also along Cuddesdon Road. |
2001 |
Horspath comes second in Best Kept Village competition. OS Map of the village installed on the Green. |
2002 |
Tunnel becomes a bat hibernaculum, and the tunnel sealed off at each end for this purpose by O.C.C. The Salesian Field renamed Bowley Field in honour of Mr. Norman Kenneth Bowley, for long Chairman of the Parish Council. |
2004 |
New two-lancet window dedicated 20th November. New Burial ground opened north of the sports fields, on land provided by Mr. Bob Walker of Manor Farm. Village placed first in large village section of Best Kept Village in Oxfordshire. Cricket Club reformed after 3 year merger with Oxford Cricket Club. |
2005 |
Stan & Janet Hawkeswood take over the Queen's Head. Horspath wins Calor/CPRE Best Kept Village winners class. Scout Hut transferred to Village Hall charity; Horspath Village Sports Association formed. |
2006 |
BBC record Sunday Worship from St Giles, 3rd December. Village wins the fight to retain the Railway Bridge. |
2007 |
Revd. Richard Cowles leaves to be Vicar of Bray, Berks. |
2008 |
Revd. Emma Pennington installed, 19th August. |
2009 |
Shotover Brewing Company established at Coopers Yard, Manor Farm. |
2011 |
"Sheldonian Head" bought by Mensun Bound and displayed at the entrance to the Manor House. |
2013 |
Methodist Chapel put up for sale. Friends of St Giles list it as a Community Asset and purchase successful so that it becomes Horspath Hub. |
2016 |
December. Parish loses its bus service as part of national and thus SODC spending cuts. Shotover Brewery changes hands. |
2018 |
New Church paths laid with concrete edging. Land between the old railway embankment and Oxford Road
developed as a sports facility. The original Pressed Steel Sports Ground passed to BMW for expansion of the factory. |
2019 |
Rev. Emma Pennington leaves (for Canterbury Cathedral as a Canon). Revd. Karen Charman appointed in her place. List of Vicars since 1747 compiled. Horspath Archaeological and History Group established. |