Shelswell
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Shelswell is a hamlet in Oxfordshire about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Brackley in neighbouring Northamptonshire.
Contents
Manor
Shelswell's toponym comes from Old English and suggest's that the settlement may originally have been the well belonging to Scield, a Saxon settler.[1] The spring that gave rise to this well is no longer traceable. The toponym was "Scaldeswelle" in 1180[1] and "Saldeywell" in 1219[1] before evolving into the present form.
Before the Norman Conquest of England the manor of Shelswell belonged to a Saxon called Edwin, but the Domesday Book records that by 1086 Shelswell had been granted to Geoffrey de Montbray, Bishop of Coutances.[1] In 1093 the Bishop left Shelswell to his nephew Robert de Mowbray, Earl of Northumbria, but in 1095 the Earl was imprisoned and forfeited his estates for rebelling against William Rufus.[1] By the 12th century Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester, an illegitimate son of Henry I, was Shelswell's feudal overlord.[1] Shelswell remained part of the honour of Gloucester during the 13th century and apparently as late as 1560.[1] Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet of Hanwell, Oxfordshire bought Shelswell in 1595 and it remained with the family of the Cope baronets until after 1675.[1]
Shelswell had a mediaeval manor house that still stood in 1530. Moats near Home Farm (OS grid reference SP611308) may mark its site.[1] A new manor house (OS grid ref. SP603306) southwest of the former village was built either early in the 18th century according to record or in 1699 according to a date-stone found in 1875.[1] In the 18th century that house was enlarged and plantations made to improve its parkland.[1] In 1875 the house was almost completely demolished and replaced with Shelswell Park's present Italianate country house designed by the architect William Wilkinson.[2] The house has a Tuscan porte-cochère and retains some rooms of the 18th-century house.[2] In 1956 the 1875 house was unoccupied and falling into disrepair.[1]
Parish church
Shelswell had a parish church before the end of the 11th century, and its dedication to the Northumbrian Saint Ebbe reflects the Earl of Northumbria's feudal overlordship of the manor from 1093 until 1095.[1] From 1573 the Benefice was held with that of neighbouring Newton Purcell, and Shelswell was usually referred to as a chapel of the latter. St. Ebbe's was still standing in 1618 but became increasingly dilapidated in the 18th century and was demolished in either 1796[1] or 1810.[2] Two 17th century[2] or late 16th century figures from the church have been preserved and are in Shelswell Park[2] northeast of the house.[1]
Late in the 20th century a Church of England comprising Newton Purcell and nine other local parishes was established and named after Shelswell.[3]
Economic and social history
Shelswell was a poor parish and during the Middle Ages its population tended to decline. Its lands were enclosed in different stages.[1] In 1497 the husband of the lady of the manor evicted people, demolished two houses and enclosed 60 acres (24 ha) of land for arable farming.[1] By 1528 another landowner had made further evictions and enclosures and in 1533 Brasenose College, Oxford bought a 90 acres (36 ha) farm in the parish.[1] By 1601 Shelswell's enclosures were complete.[1] In 1634 the parsonage was still standing but unoccupied.[1] No building from the former village survives today.
In 1899 the Great Central Railway built its main line to London through the eastern part of the then Shelswell parish and built Finmere for Buckingham station where the line crosses the main road about 0.5 miles (800 m) northeast of Newton Purcell.[1] Buckingham was almost 5 miles (8.0 km) from the Great Central station, so the name was subsequently shortened to the more appropriate "Finmere". British Railways closed Finmere station in 1963, and closed the section of the Great Central line through the station and parish in 1966.
Shelswell was a separate civil parish until 1932 when it was merged with Newton Purcell to form the present civil parish of Newton Purcell with Shelswell.[1]
In 1939 the novelist Flora Thompson used Sheldon Park as the basis of "Skeldon Park"[1] in Lark Rise, the first book of her Lark Rise to Candleford trilogy.
References
Sources and further reading
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