Deddington, Oxfordshire
Historical Description
Deddington, a small town and a parish in Oxfordshire. The town stands near the Cherwell river and the Oxford Canal, 2½ miles W of Aynho station on the G.W.R., and 6 S of Banbury, has a post, money order, and telegraph office under Oxford, and is a seat of petty sessions. It formerly had a weekly market on Tuesdays, and several fairs, but the market has become obsolete, and now only one fair is held on 22 Nov. It dates from Saxon times, and sent two members to parliaments of Edward I. Remains of a beautiful groined crypt are beneath the Plough Inn. A curious house, a tall, square, balustraded tower is near the church, and vestiges of a large castle of unknown antiquity, where Piers Gaveston, the favourite of Edward II., was seized for execution, are on the east. The church, of mixed styles, with a square tower, was rebuilt about the time of Charles I., and generally repaired and altered between 1858 and 1865. It contains stone seats, a piscina, a female effigy, and some brasses. The large east window was filled with stained glass by Kempe in 1888. Several Roman coins and quantities of Roman pottery were found in the neighbouring field of Blackingrove. There are Congregational and Wesleyan Reform chapels, Salvation Army barracks, and some endowed almshouses. Charles I. slept in the parsonage after the Battle of Cropredy, and Sir Thomas Pope and Chief-Justice Scroggs were natives. The parish includes also the hamlets of Clifton and Hempton. Acreage, 4271; population, 1777. The living is a vicarage, united with the chapelries of Clifton and Hempton, in the diocese of Oxford; gross yearly value, £290. There is also an allowance of £120 a year from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners for a curate. Patrons, the Dean and Chapter of Windsor.
Administration
The following is a list of the administrative units in which this place was either wholly or partly included.
Ancient County | Oxfordshire | |
Ecclesiastical parish | Deddington St. Peter and St. Paul | |
Hundred | Wootton | |
Poor Law union | Woodstock |
Any dates in this table should be used as a guide only.
Church Records
Ancestry.co.uk, in association with Oxfordshire Family History Society and Oxfordshire History Centre, have images of the Parish Registers for Oxfordshire online.
Civil Registration
For general information about Civil Registration (births, marriages and deaths) see the Civil Registration page.
Directories & Gazetteers
We have transcribed the entry for Deddington from the following:
- Samuel Lewis' A Topographical Dictionary of England, by Samuel Lewis, seventh edition, published 1858. (Deddington (St. Peter and St. Paul))
Land and Property
A full transcript of the Return of Owners of Land in 1873 for Oxfordshire is available online
Maps
Online maps of Deddington are available from a number of sites:
- Bing (Current Ordnance Survey maps).
- Google Streetview.
- National Library of Scotland. (Old maps)
- OpenStreetMap.
- old-maps.co.uk (Old Ordnance Survey maps to buy).
- Streetmap.co.uk (Current Ordnance Survey maps).
- A Vision of Britain through Time. (Old maps)
Newspapers and Periodicals
The British Newspaper Archive have fully searchable digitised copies of the following Oxfordshire newspapers online:
- Oxford Journal
- Banbury Advertiser
- Banbury Guardian
- Oxford University and City Herald
- Oxford Chronicle and Reading Gazette
- Faringdon Advertiser and Vale of the White Horse Gazette
- Oxford Times
- Banbury Beacon
- Ossett Observer
Visitations Heraldic
The Visitations of Oxfordshire, 1566, 1574 &1634 are available on the Heraldry page.