Compton Beauchamp: Difference between revisions

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The moated Compton Beauchamp House was the home of the King's Councillor, Sir Thomas Fettiplace, from about 1507. His only daughter, Elizabeth, the wife of Sir Francis Englefield, had no children and the property passed to her Fettiplace cousins who took little interest in the property. In 1589 it was sold to an in-law, Sir Henry Poole. The old house had deteriorated and Poole appears to have pulled it down and replaced it with the present house in about 1600. Early in the 18th century a fashionable Palladian facade was attached to the eastern entrance front of this small Tudor manor house. The house was rented in the later 19th century by Vice-Chancellor Bacon and in 1940 by Singer sewing machine heiress Daisy Fellowes.
The moated Compton Beauchamp House was the home of the King's Councillor, Sir Thomas Fettiplace, from about 1507. His only daughter, Elizabeth, the wife of Sir Francis Englefield, had no children and the property passed to her Fettiplace cousins who took little interest in the property. In 1589 it was sold to an in-law, Sir Henry Poole. The old house had deteriorated and Poole appears to have pulled it down and replaced it with the present house in about 1600. Early in the 18th century a fashionable Palladian facade was attached to the eastern entrance front of this small Tudor manor house. The house was rented in the later 19th century by Vice-Chancellor Bacon and in 1940 by Singer sewing machine heiress Daisy Fellowes.


==Outside links==
{{Commons}}
*[http://www.berkshirehistory.com/castles/compton_beauchamp_house.html Royal Berkshire History: Compton Beauchamp House]
[[File:Odstone Coombes - geograph.org.uk - 292616.jpg|right|200px|Odstone Coombes]]
==References==
==References==
[[File:Odstone Coombes - geograph.org.uk - 292616.jpg|right|200px|Odstone Coombes]]
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==Sources & further reading==
*{{VCH|vol=4|p=523–528}}
*{{cite book |editor1-last=Page |editor1-first=W.H. |editor1-link=William Henry Page |editor2-last=Ditchfield |editor2-first=P.H. |editor2-link=Peter Ditchfield |series=[[Victoria County History]] |title=A History of the County of Berkshire, Volume 4 |year=1924 |publisher=|location=|pages=523–528}}
*{{pevsner|p=121}}
*{{cite book |last=Pevsner |first=Nikolaus |authorlink=Nikolaus Pevsner |series=The Buildings of England |title=Berkshire |year=1966 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=Harmondsworth |isbn=|page=121}}
 
==Outside links==
{{Commons category|Compton_Beauchamp}}
*[http://www.berkshirehistory.com/castles/compton_beauchamp_house.html Royal Berkshire History: Compton Beauchamp House]

Latest revision as of 08:48, 21 February 2016

Compton Beauchamp
Berkshire

"The Manger", near Compton Beauchamp
Location
Grid reference: SU2887
Location: 51°35’6"N, 1°35’56"W
Data
Population: 50  (2001)
Postcode: SN6
Dialling code: 01367
Local Government
Council: Vale of White Horse
Parliamentary
constituency:
Wantage

Compton Beauchamp is a hamlet in western Berkshire, found 3 miles southeast of Shrivenham in the Vale of White Horse.

The village is at the foot of the Berkshire Downs and here there sweep down for the Downs the unusual Odstone Coombes, where the hillsides are as if engraved into waves across their face.

The parish includes the hamlets of Knighton and Hardwell. Nearby is the Iron Age hill fort of Hardwell Castle.

Parish church

St Swithun's

The parish church of Saint Swithun is distinctive 13th century church built of chalk.[1] The east window is a Decorated Gothic insertion and the north transept east window is early 14th century.[1] The font is a Perpendicular Gothic addition.[1] The painting on the chancel walls was executed by members of Vice-Chancellor Bacon's family, principally Lydia Lawrence [1].

The reredos, rood and altar rail were made by the artist Martin Travers[1] in the 1930s under the patronage of the banking heir and publisher, Samuel Gurney, who lived at the time in the Old Rectory.

History

Compton's name is derived from the Old English cumb meaning "rounded valley"; thus "valley farmstead" Its manor was held by the Beauchamp family in the 13th century, from whom comes the suffix.

The moated Compton Beauchamp House was the home of the King's Councillor, Sir Thomas Fettiplace, from about 1507. His only daughter, Elizabeth, the wife of Sir Francis Englefield, had no children and the property passed to her Fettiplace cousins who took little interest in the property. In 1589 it was sold to an in-law, Sir Henry Poole. The old house had deteriorated and Poole appears to have pulled it down and replaced it with the present house in about 1600. Early in the 18th century a fashionable Palladian facade was attached to the eastern entrance front of this small Tudor manor house. The house was rented in the later 19th century by Vice-Chancellor Bacon and in 1940 by Singer sewing machine heiress Daisy Fellowes.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Compton Beauchamp)
Odstone Coombes
Odstone Coombes

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Pevsner, 1966, page 121