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Eynsham

Eynsham /ˈɛnʃəm/ is an English village and civil parish in Oxfordshire, about 5 miles (8 km) north-west of Oxford and east of Witney. The 2011 Census recorded a parish population of 4,648.[1] It was estimated at 5,087 in 2020.[2]

Eynsham
St Leonard's parish church
Eynsham
Location within Oxfordshire
Population4,648 (parish, including Barnard Gate) (2011 Census)
OS grid referenceSP4309
Civil parish
  • Eynsham
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWitney
Postcode districtOX29
Dialling code01865
PoliceThames Valley
FireOxfordshire
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
WebsiteEynsham Online!
List of places
UK
England
Oxfordshire
51°46′52″N 1°22′30″W / 51.781°N 1.375°W / 51.781; -1.375

Etymology edit

Eynsham's name is first attested in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which took its present form in the later ninth century, as Egonesham. (The Chronicle portrays the settlement as one of four captured by a West Saxon named Cuthwulf in 571 CE following the Battle of Bedcanford. The historicity of the battle is, however, in doubt.) The name is thought to derive from the Old English personal name Ægen, in its genitive form Ægenes, combined with the word hamm ("river-meadow"). Thus the name once meant "Ægen's river-meadow".[3]

History edit

 
Bartholomew Room in The Square

Eynsham grew up near the historically important ford of Swinford on the River Thames flood plain. Excavations have shown that the site was used in the Bronze Age (3000–300 BCE) for a rectilinear enclosure edging a gravel terrace.[citation needed] Evidence has been found of 6th–7th-century Saxon buildings[4] at New Wintles Farm,[5] about three-quarters of a mile (1 km) from the present parish church. There is evidence that Eynsham had an early minster, probably founded in the 7th or 8th centuries.[4] In the reign of the early ninth-century Mercian king Cenwulf, Eynsham was the site of a royal manor of three-hundred hides.[6]: 32 

In 1005 Aethelmar, kinsman of Aethelred II founded a Benedictine abbey on the site of the earlier minster. The first abbot was Ælfric of Eynsham, a prolific writer in Old English.[7] The Domesday Book of 1086 includes a paragraph on the settlement, then known as Eglesham.[8] By 1302 Eynsham had a wharf handling cargo that included hay, straw, malt, grain and timber, beside the later Talbot Inn on Wharf Stream, a tributary of the Thames. By the medieval period Eynsham Abbey was among the largest in the area. It succumbed to the Reformation in 1538 and few remains can be seen today. After the dissolution, its estates were granted to Sir George Darcy.[8]

By 1790 a newly completed Oxford Canal was trading with Eynsham Wharf, mainly to sell coal from the Midlands.[9] From 1792 the Oxford Canal employed a wharfinger at Eynsham[10] and in 1800 bought the lease of the wharf.[11] It consolidated its position by buying the Talbot Inn in 1845 and the freehold of Eynsham Wharf in 1849,[12] perhaps in response to the railway mania that was taking traffic from canals and navigations. Eynsham Lock, on the Thames just above the confluence with Wharf Stream, was the last flash lock on the Thames, not rebuilt as a pound lock until 1928. The village suffered several fires in its history.[13] Among the worst were a Whit Monday morning one in 1629,[13] which destroyed 12 houses[14] and another in 1681 that destroyed 20.[13] By the early 19th century the parish had its own fire engine in a parish fire station on the ground floor of the early 18th-century Bartholomew Room, where it remained up to 1949.[15]

The Bartholomew Room was built in 1703 from an endowment of John Liam Bartholomew in 1701 to found a parish charity school.[15] Its lower storey was arcaded, presumably as market premises,[15] but the arcades were walled up in the later 19th century.[15] While some parts of the ground floor continued to serve as the fire station; others were turned into a village gaol.[15] From 1928, a local Roman Catholic congregation used the upper room for its services.[16] In 1983 the parish council bought and restored the building.[15]

 
Map of the village

Roads edit

 
Swinford Bridge over the Thames

By the mid-18th century, Swinford had a ferry, but the main road was in poor condition. Heavier road traffic between Oxford and Witney preferred to pass further north via Bladon, where the better-maintained OxfordWoodstock and Witney–Woodstock roads met. When the latter became a turnpike in 1751, the road via Eynsham and Swinford ferry was included as a branch.[15] In 1769 the Earl of Abingdon opened Swinford Toll Bridge to replace the ferry. The Witney–Woodstock road ceased to be a turnpike in 1869, but the Witney–Oxford road remained one until 1877.[15] Eynsham was a major coaching stop on the LondonFishguard road.[citation needed] Since 1922 this has been numbered as the A40. There is a planned expansion of the A40 between Eynsham and Witney into a dual carriage way, with work expected to commence in 2023 should planning permission be granted.[17] In 1936 a bypass for the main road was built north of the village and the road over Swinford bridge renumbered as B4044.

Rail edit

The Witney Railway between Witney and Yarnton opened through Eynsham parish in 1861. The station was on the south side of the village. The Great Western Railway took over the line in 1890 and enlarged Eynsham station in 1944. British Railways closed the line to passenger trains in 1962 and in 1970 to goods traffic. The track was dismantled. The station has since been demolished and a business park built there. In February 2015 the Witney Oxford Transport Group proposed reopening the station as an alternative to improving the A40 road as proposed by Oxfordshire County Council. The case centred on the severe traffic congestion on the roads to and from Oxford.[18]

Industry edit

Local industries include gravel extraction and a factory for superconducting magnets, Siemens Magnet Technology Ltd.[19]

Churches edit

Church of England edit

The Church of England parish church, St Leonard's, was built the 13th century. In the 15th, the nave was rebuilt, a clerestory and north aisle were added and a west tower was built.[20] There are Mass dials on the south wall. The building was restored three times: by William Wilkinson in 1856, Harry Drinkwater in 1892[20] and over eight years in the 1980s.[citation needed] The west tower has a ring of six bells. James Keene of Woodstock cast the third in 1653. Richard Keene cast the fifth in 1673. John Taylor & Co of Loughborough cast or recast the treble, second, fourth and tenor bells in 1895. The church also has a Sanctus bell that Mears and Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast in 1924.[21] St Leonard's is a Grade II* listed building.[22]

 
Eynsham Baptist Church

Baptist edit

The Baptist church in Lombard Street was opened in either 1808[23] or 1818.[24]

Roman Catholic edit

In 1895 Herbert May founded a Roman Catholic mission at his home, Newland Lodge.[16] The lodge burnt down in 1897, after which Mass was said at the Railway Inn until May had a new house built for him.[16] The mission closed when May moved to Oxford.[16] In 1928 the Roman Catholic parish of Witney leased the upper storey of the Bartholomew Room, making it St Peter's Chapel.[16] Building of a new Roman Catholic church began in the 1930s but was delayed by the Second World War and completed only in 1967.[16]

Amenities edit

Eynsham Primary School[25] is a community primary school. Eynsham's Bartholomew School[26] is the county secondary school for the district. As a specialist technology college, it draws pupils mainly from primaries at Eynsham, Standlake, Stanton Harcourt, Freeland, Cassington and Hanborough.[26]

Eynsham Football Club plays in the Oxfordshire Senior League Division One.[27] Eynsham Sports and Social Club plays in Witney and District Football League Division Three and its reserve team in Division Four.[28] Eynsham Cricket Club[29] plays in Oxfordshire Cricket Association League Division Three.[30]

Eynsham has a Women's Institute[31] and a Morris dancing troupe.[32]

Notable residents edit

In order of birth:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Eynsham Parish (1170217937)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  2. ^ Eynsham (Parish, United Kingdom) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map and Location (citypopulation.de)
  3. ^ The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society, ed. by Victor Watts (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), s.v. EYNSHAM; ISBN 9780521168557.
  4. ^ a b Blair 1994, p. 63.
  5. ^ Rowley 1978, p. 97.
  6. ^ Sims-Williams, Patrick (1983). "The Settlement of England in Bede and the Chronicle". Anglo-Saxon England. 12: 1–41. doi:10.1017/S0263675100003331. JSTOR 44510771..
  7. ^   Godden, Malcolm (1885–1900). "Ælfric of Eynsham". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  8. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 November 2021. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  9. ^ Compton 1976, p. 58.
  10. ^ Compton 1976, p. 59.
  11. ^ Compton 1976, p. 60.
  12. ^ Compton 1976, p. 117.
  13. ^ a b c Crossley & Elrington 1990, pp. 110–115.
  14. ^ Emery 1974, p. 118.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Crossley & Elrington 1990, pp. 98–110.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Crossley & Elrington 1990, pp. 152–153.
  17. ^ "A40 dual carriageway extension | Oxfordshire County Council". www.oxfordshire.gov.uk (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 17 August 2022.
  18. ^ Elvery, Martin (5 February 2015). "Campaigners want new railway station at Yarnton to ease A40 congestion in West Oxfordshire". Witney Gazette. Newsquest. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  19. ^ Company site. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  20. ^ a b Sherwood & Pevsner 1974, p. 600.
  21. ^ Davies, Peter (5 November 2016). "Eynsham S Leonard". Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Central Council of Church Bell Ringers. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  22. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Leonard (Grade II*) (1048964)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  23. ^ Crossley & Elrington 1990, pp. 153–154.
  24. ^ Historic England. "Eynsham Baptist Church (Grade II) (1048984)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  25. ^ Eynsham Primary School 4 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ a b Bartholomew School.
  27. ^ Oxfordshire Senior Football League website.
  28. ^ Witney and District Football League.
  29. ^ Eynsham Cricket Club
  30. ^ Oxfordshire Cricket Association.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 September 2003. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  32. ^ Eynsham Morris.
  33. ^ Bradford, Richard (2012). The Odd Couple: The Curious Friendship between Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin. London: Robson Press. p. 64. ISBN 9781849543750.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Eynsham Online

eynsham, english, village, civil, parish, oxfordshire, about, miles, north, west, oxford, east, witney, 2011, census, recorded, parish, population, estimated, 2020, leonard, parish, churchlocation, within, oxfordshirepopulation4, parish, including, barnard, ga. Eynsham ˈ ɛ n ʃ em is an English village and civil parish in Oxfordshire about 5 miles 8 km north west of Oxford and east of Witney The 2011 Census recorded a parish population of 4 648 1 It was estimated at 5 087 in 2020 2 EynshamSt Leonard s parish churchEynshamLocation within OxfordshirePopulation4 648 parish including Barnard Gate 2011 Census OS grid referenceSP4309Civil parishEynshamDistrictWest OxfordshireShire countyOxfordshireRegionSouth EastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townWitneyPostcode districtOX29Dialling code01865PoliceThames ValleyFireOxfordshireAmbulanceSouth CentralUK ParliamentWitneyWebsiteEynsham Online List of places UK England Oxfordshire 51 46 52 N 1 22 30 W 51 781 N 1 375 W 51 781 1 375 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Roads 2 2 Rail 2 3 Industry 3 Churches 3 1 Church of England 3 2 Baptist 3 3 Roman Catholic 4 Amenities 5 Notable residents 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEtymology editEynsham s name is first attested in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle which took its present form in the later ninth century as Egonesham The Chronicle portrays the settlement as one of four captured by a West Saxon named Cuthwulf in 571 CE following the Battle of Bedcanford The historicity of the battle is however in doubt The name is thought to derive from the Old English personal name AEgen in its genitive form AEgenes combined with the word hamm river meadow Thus the name once meant AEgen s river meadow 3 History edit nbsp Bartholomew Room in The Square Eynsham grew up near the historically important ford of Swinford on the River Thames flood plain Excavations have shown that the site was used in the Bronze Age 3000 300 BCE for a rectilinear enclosure edging a gravel terrace citation needed Evidence has been found of 6th 7th century Saxon buildings 4 at New Wintles Farm 5 about three quarters of a mile 1 km from the present parish church There is evidence that Eynsham had an early minster probably founded in the 7th or 8th centuries 4 In the reign of the early ninth century Mercian king Cenwulf Eynsham was the site of a royal manor of three hundred hides 6 32 In 1005 Aethelmar kinsman of Aethelred II founded a Benedictine abbey on the site of the earlier minster The first abbot was AElfric of Eynsham a prolific writer in Old English 7 The Domesday Book of 1086 includes a paragraph on the settlement then known as Eglesham 8 By 1302 Eynsham had a wharf handling cargo that included hay straw malt grain and timber beside the later Talbot Inn on Wharf Stream a tributary of the Thames By the medieval period Eynsham Abbey was among the largest in the area It succumbed to the Reformation in 1538 and few remains can be seen today After the dissolution its estates were granted to Sir George Darcy 8 By 1790 a newly completed Oxford Canal was trading with Eynsham Wharf mainly to sell coal from the Midlands 9 From 1792 the Oxford Canal employed a wharfinger at Eynsham 10 and in 1800 bought the lease of the wharf 11 It consolidated its position by buying the Talbot Inn in 1845 and the freehold of Eynsham Wharf in 1849 12 perhaps in response to the railway mania that was taking traffic from canals and navigations Eynsham Lock on the Thames just above the confluence with Wharf Stream was the last flash lock on the Thames not rebuilt as a pound lock until 1928 The village suffered several fires in its history 13 Among the worst were a Whit Monday morning one in 1629 13 which destroyed 12 houses 14 and another in 1681 that destroyed 20 13 By the early 19th century the parish had its own fire engine in a parish fire station on the ground floor of the early 18th century Bartholomew Room where it remained up to 1949 15 The Bartholomew Room was built in 1703 from an endowment of John Liam Bartholomew in 1701 to found a parish charity school 15 Its lower storey was arcaded presumably as market premises 15 but the arcades were walled up in the later 19th century 15 While some parts of the ground floor continued to serve as the fire station others were turned into a village gaol 15 From 1928 a local Roman Catholic congregation used the upper room for its services 16 In 1983 the parish council bought and restored the building 15 nbsp Map of the village Roads edit nbsp Swinford Bridge over the Thames By the mid 18th century Swinford had a ferry but the main road was in poor condition Heavier road traffic between Oxford and Witney preferred to pass further north via Bladon where the better maintained Oxford Woodstock and Witney Woodstock roads met When the latter became a turnpike in 1751 the road via Eynsham and Swinford ferry was included as a branch 15 In 1769 the Earl of Abingdon opened Swinford Toll Bridge to replace the ferry The Witney Woodstock road ceased to be a turnpike in 1869 but the Witney Oxford road remained one until 1877 15 Eynsham was a major coaching stop on the London Fishguard road citation needed Since 1922 this has been numbered as the A40 There is a planned expansion of the A40 between Eynsham and Witney into a dual carriage way with work expected to commence in 2023 should planning permission be granted 17 In 1936 a bypass for the main road was built north of the village and the road over Swinford bridge renumbered as B4044 Rail edit The Witney Railway between Witney and Yarnton opened through Eynsham parish in 1861 The station was on the south side of the village The Great Western Railway took over the line in 1890 and enlarged Eynsham station in 1944 British Railways closed the line to passenger trains in 1962 and in 1970 to goods traffic The track was dismantled The station has since been demolished and a business park built there In February 2015 the Witney Oxford Transport Group proposed reopening the station as an alternative to improving the A40 road as proposed by Oxfordshire County Council The case centred on the severe traffic congestion on the roads to and from Oxford 18 Industry edit Local industries include gravel extraction and a factory for superconducting magnets Siemens Magnet Technology Ltd 19 Churches editChurch of England edit The Church of England parish church St Leonard s was built the 13th century In the 15th the nave was rebuilt a clerestory and north aisle were added and a west tower was built 20 There are Mass dials on the south wall The building was restored three times by William Wilkinson in 1856 Harry Drinkwater in 1892 20 and over eight years in the 1980s citation needed The west tower has a ring of six bells James Keene of Woodstock cast the third in 1653 Richard Keene cast the fifth in 1673 John Taylor amp Co of Loughborough cast or recast the treble second fourth and tenor bells in 1895 The church also has a Sanctus bell that Mears and Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast in 1924 21 St Leonard s is a Grade II listed building 22 nbsp Eynsham Baptist Church Baptist edit The Baptist church in Lombard Street was opened in either 1808 23 or 1818 24 Roman Catholic edit In 1895 Herbert May founded a Roman Catholic mission at his home Newland Lodge 16 The lodge burnt down in 1897 after which Mass was said at the Railway Inn until May had a new house built for him 16 The mission closed when May moved to Oxford 16 In 1928 the Roman Catholic parish of Witney leased the upper storey of the Bartholomew Room making it St Peter s Chapel 16 Building of a new Roman Catholic church began in the 1930s but was delayed by the Second World War and completed only in 1967 16 Amenities editEynsham Primary School 25 is a community primary school Eynsham s Bartholomew School 26 is the county secondary school for the district As a specialist technology college it draws pupils mainly from primaries at Eynsham Standlake Stanton Harcourt Freeland Cassington and Hanborough 26 Eynsham Football Club plays in the Oxfordshire Senior League Division One 27 Eynsham Sports and Social Club plays in Witney and District Football League Division Three and its reserve team in Division Four 28 Eynsham Cricket Club 29 plays in Oxfordshire Cricket Association League Division Three 30 Eynsham has a Women s Institute 31 and a Morris dancing troupe 32 Notable residents editIn order of birth Dida of Eynsham late 7th century a Mercian noble AElfric of Eynsham c 955 c 1010 a monk abbot and religious writer Adam of Eynsham early 13th century a monk abbot and writer Anthony Kitchin 1471 1563 became Abbot of Eynsham then Bishop of Llandaff Thomas Jordan c 1612 1685 child actor and poet may have been born in Eynsham where his family had land John Deval 1710 1774 Master Mason to the King E K Chambers 1866 1954 Shakespeare scholar and local historian retired to Eynsham and died there Eric Gordon 1905 1992 Bishop of Sodor and Man retired to Eynsham and died there Mollie Harris 1913 1995 actress and author lived in Eynsham and wrote a book about it From Acre End 1982 Kingsley Amis 1922 1995 author lived in Eynsham with his wife Hilary Amis in 1948 where she gave birth to their first child Philip 33 Tommy Vance 1940 2005 was a BBC Radio 1 and Virgin Radio disc jockey born in Eynsham Anthony J Batten born 1940 Canadian visual artist was born at Eynsham Hall Marc Hudson born 1984 singer for power metal band DragonForceSee also editCrossings of the River Thames Locks on the River Thames TilgarsleyReferences edit UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Eynsham Parish 1170217937 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 2 August 2018 Eynsham Parish United Kingdom Population Statistics Charts Map and Location citypopulation de The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place Names Based on the Collections of the English Place Name Society ed by Victor Watts Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 s v EYNSHAM ISBN 9780521168557 a b Blair 1994 p 63 Rowley 1978 p 97 Sims Williams Patrick 1983 The Settlement of England in Bede and the Chronicle Anglo Saxon England 12 1 41 doi 10 1017 S0263675100003331 JSTOR 44510771 nbsp Godden Malcolm 1885 1900 AElfric of Eynsham Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co Retrieved 25 November 2014 a b Eynsham Interesting and notable dates in the village history PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 19 February 2020 Compton 1976 p 58 Compton 1976 p 59 Compton 1976 p 60 Compton 1976 p 117 a b c Crossley amp Elrington 1990 pp 110 115 Emery 1974 p 118 a b c d e f g h Crossley amp Elrington 1990 pp 98 110 a b c d e f Crossley amp Elrington 1990 pp 152 153 A40 dual carriageway extension Oxfordshire County Council www oxfordshire gov uk in Ukrainian Retrieved 17 August 2022 Elvery Martin 5 February 2015 Campaigners want new railway station at Yarnton to ease A40 congestion in West Oxfordshire Witney Gazette Newsquest Retrieved 12 February 2015 Company site Retrieved 9 July 2019 a b Sherwood amp Pevsner 1974 p 600 Davies Peter 5 November 2016 Eynsham S Leonard Dove s Guide for Church Bell Ringers Central Council of Church Bell Ringers Retrieved 2 August 2018 Historic England Church of St Leonard Grade II 1048964 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 2 August 2018 Crossley amp Elrington 1990 pp 153 154 Historic England Eynsham Baptist Church Grade II 1048984 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 2 August 2018 Eynsham Primary School Archived 4 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b Bartholomew School Oxfordshire Senior Football League website Witney and District Football League Eynsham Cricket Club Oxfordshire Cricket Association permanent dead link Oxfordshire Federation of Women s Institutes Archived from the original on 7 September 2003 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Eynsham Morris Bradford Richard 2012 The Odd Couple The Curious Friendship between Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin London Robson Press p 64 ISBN 9781849543750 Bibliography editAston Michael Bond James 1976 The Landscape of Towns Archaeology in the Field Series London J M Dent amp Sons Ltd pp 81 83 97 98 ISBN 0 460 04194 0 Blair John 1994 Anglo Saxon Oxfordshire Stroud Alan Sutton Publishing p 63 ISBN 0 7509 0147 0 Chambers Sir Edmund 1936 Eynsham Under the Monks Vol XVIII Oxfordshire Record Society Compton Hugh J 1976 The Oxford Canal Newton Abbot David amp Charles pp 58 59 ISBN 0 7153 7238 6 Crossley Alan Elrington C R eds 1990 A History of the County of Oxford Victoria County History Vol 12 Wootton Hundred South including Woodstock London Oxford University Press for the Institute of Historical Research pp 98 158 ISBN 978 0 19722 774 9 Emery Frank 1974 The Oxfordshire Landscape The Making of the English Landscape London Hodder amp Stoughton pp 40 42 53 55 56 111 118 148 150 163 164 167 191 192 209 ISBN 0 340 04301 6 Keevil G D 1995 In Harvey s House and God s House Thames Valley Landscape Series Vol 6 Oxford Oxford University School of Archaeology ISBN 0 904220 10 9 Page WH ed 1907 A History of the County of Oxford Victoria County History Vol 2 Ecclesiastical History etc Westminster Archibald Constable amp Co p 156 Rowley Trevor 1978 Villages in the Landscape Archaeology in the Field Series London J M Dent amp Sons Ltd p 137 ISBN 0 460 04166 5 Sherwood Jennifer Pevsner Nikolaus 1974 Oxfordshire The Buildings of England Harmondsworth Penguin Books pp 600 603 ISBN 0 14 071045 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eynsham Eynsham Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eynsham amp oldid 1216181626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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