East Lockinge

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East Lockinge
Berkshire
All Saints, Lockinge - geograph.org.uk - 1779367.jpg
All Saints' parish church
Location
Grid reference: SU425874
Location: 51°35’2"N, 1°23’17"W
Data
Post town: Wantage
Postcode: OX12
Dialling code: 01235
Local Government
Council: Vale of White Horse
Parliamentary
constituency:
Wantage

East Lockinge is a village in north-western Berkshire, about a mile and a half east of Wantage, amongst the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

Manor

In 868 Queen Æthelswith of Mercia granted 15 hides of land to her thegn Cuthwulf.[1] This land became the manor of East Lockinge, which during the Anglo-Saxon era came to be held by the Benedictine Abingdon Abbey. After the Norman Conquest, the manor was granted to the Norman soldier Henry de Ferrers.[2]

At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s the Abbey surrendered all its property to the Crown, which sold East Lockinge in 1546.[1]

Matthew Wymondsold (died 1757), a speculator in the South Sea Company, who escape the bursting of the South Sea Bubble, bought the manor in 1718 and settled here.[1] In 1750 he had Lockinge House built: a three-storey Georgian country house with two wings that was later enlarged.[1] Matthew was a descendant of Sir Robert Wymondsold (died 1687) of Welbeck Place, Putney in Surrey, and Deeping St James in Lincolnshire, whom James II knighted in 1684.[3] Matthew Wymondsold had three sons by his wife Sara who outlived him: Francis, William and Charles, the latter who married and divorced Henrietta Knight, daughter of Robert Knight, 1st Earl of Catherlough, who married secondly Josiah Child, younger son of Richard Child, 1st Earl Tylney.[4]

The Wymondsold family retained East Lockinge until 1853, when it was sold to Samuel Jones-Loyd, 1st Baron Overstone.

In 1858 Overstone gave East Lockinge as a wedding present to his daughter Harriet Sarah Jones-Loyd upon her marriage to Colonel Loyd-Lindsay VC.[1] East Lockinge is now a village of estate cottages that Colonel Loyd-Lindsay had built in the 1860s.[5] Loyd-Lindsay was ennobled on 23 July 1885 taking the name, style and title of Baron Wantage of Lockinge in the County of Berkshire. He died at Lockinge House on 10 June 1901.[6] Lockinge House was demolished in 1947.[7] Its early Georgian orangery was still standing in the 1960s.[5]

Parish church

The Church of England parish church, All Saints, was built in about the middle of the 12th century.[1] The Norman north door of the nave survives from this time.[1][8] The chancel and the south chapel parallel with it were built in the 13th century[1] but the chancel was rebuilt early in the 14th century.[8] A south aisle was added in the 13th or early in the 14th century.[1] A window in the north wall of the nave was added in the 15th century, but was altered to accommodate the west belltower that was added in 1564.[1][5] In 1886[5] the south aisle and chapel were demolished, the three-bay arcade between the south aisle and the nave was rebuilt and a new nave and chancel were built in place of the demolished aisle and chapel.[1] This became the main body of the church, leaving the earlier nave and chancel as a north aisle and chapel.

The reredos paintings are by the Arts and Crafts movement artist Kate Bunce and their beaten metal frames are by her sister Myra Bunce.[8] Lady Jane Lindsay, presumably a relative of the Colonel, designed the glass of the east window.[5]

Outside links

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References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 Page & Ditchfield 1924, pp. 307-311.
  2. Page & Ditchfield 1924, pp. 307–311.
  3. Lysons 1792, pp. 404-435.
  4. Crisp 1905, p. 165.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Pevsner 1966, p. 170.
  6. Ford, David Nash (2008). "Col. Sir Robert James Loyd-Lindsay, Baron Wantage of Lockinge (1832-1901)". Royal Berkshire History. Nash Ford Publishing. http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/rjllinsay.html. 
  7. Ford, David Nash (2004). "Lockinge House". Royal Berkshire History. Nash Ford Publishing. http://www.berkshirehistory.com/castles/lockinge_house.html. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Pevsner 1966, p. 169.
  • Hutton, William Holden: 'Burford Papers: Being Letters of Samuel Crisp to His Sister at Burford; And Other Studies of a Century' (1745-1845)
  • Lysons, Rev. Daniel (1792). The Environs of London: Being An Historical Account Of The Towns, Villages and Hamlets Within Twelve Miles of That Capital Interspersed with Biographical Anecdotes. the First, County of Surrey. London. pp. 404–435. 
  • A History of the County of Berkshire - Volume 4 pp 307-311: Parishes: East and West Lockinge (Victoria County History)
  • Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Berkshire, 1966; 2010 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-12662-4