Hanwell, Oxfordshire

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Hanwell
Oxfordshire
St Peter's in spring - geograph.org.uk - 435050.jpg
St Peter's Church, Hanwell
Location
Grid reference: SP436438
Location: 52°5’28"N, 1°21’50"W
Data
Population: 263  (2011)
Post town: Banbury
Postcode: OX17
Dialling code: 01295
Local Government
Parliamentary
constituency:
Banbury
Website: hanwellvillage.com

Hanwell is a village in Oxfordshire, about two miles north-west of Banbury. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 263.

The village has a church, St Peter's, and a pub, the Moon and Sixpence, a 'gastropub', which used to be known as the Red Lion, at least since 1792.

Early history

Remains of a substantial Roman villa have been found just west of the B4100 main road.[1][2] Hanwell village is Saxon in origin, on an ancient minor road linking the villages of Wroxton and Great Bourton. The road's Old English name of Hana's weg gave rise to the village's name. Hanwell has a reliable spring, so its toponym later changed from -weg to -welle.[1]

Manor

Before the Norman Conquest the manor was held by Lewin or Leofwine, along with those of Chinnor and Cowley. Leofwine still held Hanwell manor by the time the Domesday Book of 1086. The de Vernon family held the manors of Hanwell and Chinnor, and retained Hanwell until 1415 when Sir Richard de Vernon transferred the manor to Thomas Chaucer, Speaker of the House of Commons: at his death in 1434 Hanwell passed to his widow Maud and then their daughter, who married William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and Hanwell remained with the Dukes of Suffolk until almost the end of the 15th century.[1]

In 1825 Hanwell was inherited by Elizabeth Sackville-West, Countess De La Warr, wife of George Sackville-West, 5th Earl De La Warr. Hanwell manor has remained with the Earls De La Warr: in 1946 Herbrand Sackville, 9th Earl De La Warr passed the manor to his son Lord Buckhurst, the future William Sackville, 10th Earl De La Warr.[1]

Church and chapel

The earliest record of the Church of England parish church, St Peter is from 1154, but only the Norman font survives from this time. The north and south doorways are 13th century, the east window of the south aisle are late 13th century, and all are Early Gothic. In the first half of the 14th century St. Peter's was almost entirely rebuilt in a Transitional style between Early and Decorated Gothic, and north and south aisles and the Decorated Gothic bell tower were added. The arcades linking the aisles with the nave have capitals decorated with carved figures, and the chancel has a frieze of carved people and monsters. Both sets of carvings were made in about 1340 and are the work of a school of masons whose work can be seen also in the parish churches of Adderbury, Bloxham and Drayton. Around 1400 a Perpendicular Gothic clerestory was added to the nave. In the Tudor era new side windows were inserted in the north aisle.[2][1]

In 1776 the floor of the chancel was raised to accommodate a burial vault for the Cope family, but in the 19th century the floor was restored to its former level[1] In 1671 Sir Anthony Cope, 4th Baronet had a turret clock made for St. Peter's by the noted clockmaker George Harris of Fritwell.[3] It is at the west end of the nave below the bell tower.

Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet (1550–1615) was a puritan, and in 1584 the Church of England excommunicated his choice of curate at Hanwell, Jonas Wheler for refusing to hold church services on Fridays and Saturdays. Instead of him, Sir Anthony presented John Dod, another puritan, who was accepted. Dod was a friend of the puritan divine Thomas Cartwight, who at Dod's invitation preached at Hanwell. Sir Anthony was MP for the Banbury constituency for most of the period 1571–1601. In 1587 he was jailed for introducing to the House of Commons a puritan prayer book and a bill for abrogating ecclesiastical law. John Dod was a hardworking and popular preacher who served as Hanwell for 20 years, but by 1607 the Bishop had deprived Dod of his living and Sir Anthony appointed Robert Harris to take over the curacy. During the Civil War, Royalist troops had expelled Harris from Hanwell by the end of 1642. In 1648 he was made a Doctor of Divinity and President of Trinity College, Oxford. Puritan influence at Hanwell was ended in 1658 with the appointment of a Royalist curate, George Ashwell, who was as pious, hardworking and scholarly as his predecessors.[1]

St Peter's is now a Grade I listed building.[4] Its parish is now one of eight in the Ironstone Benefice.[5]

Hanwell had Methodist congregation by 1822, which built its own chapel in the latter half of the 19th century. The chapel was still used for worship in 1965.[1]

Modernity

The Red Lion; now the Moon and Sixpence

By the 13th century Hanwell had a watermill on the western edge of the parish, presumably on Sor Brook that forms the boundary with the adjoining parish of Horley. Before 1249 Sir Warin de Vernon granted the mill to the Augustinian canons of Canons Ashby Priory in Northamptonshire, who then rented or leased it out until the dissolution of the monasteries in 1536. The mill then became Crown property until it was sold in 1545.[1]

Hanwell Rectory dates from at least the 16th century. There is a record of it being leased in 1549, at which time it had one or more dovecotes. When it was assessed for hearth tax it was a large house, second in Hanwell only to the manor house. It was reduced in size and the remainder rebuilt in 1843, but parts of the original house survive in the Victorian building.[1]

In 1645 during the Civil War, Parliamentary troops were billeted in Hanwell for nine weeks and villagers petitioned the Warwickshire Committee of Accounts to pay for feeding them. Villagers farmed the parish on a two-field open field system until 1768, when Sir Charles Cope, 2nd Baronet bought out the rights of copyholders and leaseholders and enclosed the common lands.[1]

The main road between Banbury and Warwick, which runs north to south along a ridge in the western part of the parish, was made into a turnpike in 1744 and ceased to be one in 1871.[1] In the 1920s it was classified as part of the A41 road. After the completion of the M40 motorway in 1990 this part of the A41 was "detrunked" and reclassified as the B4100.

In 1848 George Sackville-West, 5th Earl De La Warr gave a cottage to be used as both the schoolroom and schoolmaster's house. In 1868 a National School was built and the cottage became exclusively the schoolmaster's home. The school must have proved unsatisfactory, for in 1872 it was forced to become a board school. By 1952 the school had only 17 children and in 1961 it was closed.[1]

Hanwell Castle

Hanwell Castle

Hanwell Castle was not a castle but a house with ornamental battlements, originally called Hanwell House or Hall. William Cope began building it in 1498, the year he had received the manor of Hanwell from the Duke of Suffolk. It is the earliest example of a brick building in northern Oxfordshire. It was a large house with west, north and south ranges around a central quadrangle. The house has fishponds fed by the village spring.

Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet entertained King James I at Hanwell House in 1605 and 1612, and at the castle Sir William Cope, 2nd Baronet entertained James I in 1616 and King Charles I in 1637.[1] Late in the 18th century most of Hanwell Castle was demolished. The western part of the south range was retained as a farmhouse, and in 1902 some restoration and extensions were made to the surviving building.[2] It is now a Grade II* listed building.[6]

Astronomical observatory

Hanwell Community Observatory is in the castle grounds, which are a dark site for astronomy. The observatory was founded in 1992 and the grounds are open to the public at the observatory's annual open weekend every February.[7] Note added 22.2.16 by Christopher Taylor, Director (and founder) of Hanwell Community Observatory: 1992 was the year that my own 12.5-inch reflector, the McIver Paton Telescope, was re-erected in the grounds at Hanwell, and serious astronomy began here. The Hanwell Community Observatory was begun on the same site in 1999, following a successful bid for a Royal Society Millennium Award for public outreach in astronomy the previous autumn.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hanwell, Oxfordshire)

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 A History of the County of Oxford - Volume 9 pp 112-123: Parishes: Hanwell (Victoria County History)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Sherwood & Pevsner 1974, p. 631–632.
  3. Beeson 1989, p. 39.
  4. National Heritage List 1216364: Church of St Peter (Grade I listing)
  5. "St Peter's Church Hanwell". The Ironstone Benefice Churches. http://hanwellvillage.com/st-peters-church/the-ironstone-benefice/. 
  6. National Heritage List 1287674: Hanwell Castle (Grade II* listing)
  7. "About Us". Hanwell Community Observatory. http://www.hanwellobservatory.org.uk/home/about.