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See Below

A comment on a comment

12/5/2026

 
In response to the post here I received some emails from another erstwhile village resident, Davnet Van Tinteren - as follows:

"Re Virginia Jealous's comment about the dawn chorus walk to Badbury Hill, that was in fact my 11th birthday party and Mrs Nias wasn't leading that one although I think she and her son Philip came along.

Virginia had a sleepover at my house which was terribly exciting for me because I think it was the first time I'd done that. We and a troop of village children and, what I now realise, was a bunch of very kind parents, including the Teagle family congregated before dawn and walked up The Holloway to Badbury Hill and watched the dawn come up and hear the birds start to sing. For me and my youngest sister it's an enduring memory that was very special. After we'd rambled about a bit everyone went back to our house (now called Helm's Deep, in Puddleduck Lane) and my father had got a barbecue going and made bacon sandwiches and tea for everyone.

Mrs Nias most certainly did lead us carol singing round the village - again a large gaggle of children and some devoted parents. I think we were trying to raise money to restore the Reading Room which was very dilapidated and still had an old fashioned pump in the kitchen.

Another memory is when a BBC film crew came in 1974 and filmed Beowulf, directed by Don Fairservice. Virginia and I were given roles as serving wenches. 

One winter the pond at the Tythe Barn froze (much to the bewilderment of its resident geese) and we skated - well I fell over - and my father amazed me skating when I had no idea he could do such a thing.

I recall summer days in the school holidays when a bunch of the village children would pack together, and go for great long walks that kept us out most of the day. Invariably we walked up Puddleduck Lane well beyond Bob Miles's pig farm and then down a lane known to us as Muddy Lane up where Billy Nias had his sawmill, and eventually wound its way round the village to the very bottom. Somewhere along the way we'd make a camp fire and bake potatoes in the embers and warm cans of baked beans for lunch.
It was a lovely place to live and grow up, and I remember it very fondly."

I asked Davnet a bit about the house she mentions on Puddleduck Lane

"We actually lived in 2 houses in Puddleduck Lane (one after the other), which were the 2 houses literally as th Hill flattens out, on the left as you go downhill.
 
One was built in Cotswold stone and had a deeply pitched roof and deep eaves, and the other was a pale brick house next door. Again with deep eaves as my mother wanted to attract swallows to nest there. 
 
They were self built houses with my father doing as much of the work as he could. My mother designed the first house we lived on and wanted it to echo the Tythe Barn in its shape.
 
Someone along the way has extended it very beautifully indeed.
 
It wouldn't surprise me at all if our first house was called Swallows now, but when we lived there it didn't have a name.
 
If you had a surname like van Tinteren and lived in Puddleduck Lane your post was never going to go astray!

We moved to the village from Faringdon in March 1968."

Having checked the map we settled on the houses being Jemima and Meadowcroft as they are called today, I found some original planning documents for that time.

West Winds was granted permission in 1961, Shallows (not Swallows as the planning map shows) was granted permission in 1964, Orchard Cottages was granted permission to be converted from 2 cottages to the 1 we see today in 1965; and what was described (maybe transcribed incorrectly) as Holms Dees in 1966 followed by Jemima in 1968.

Mallards 1971
Brookside 1971
South View extended in 1976

The Cattle Barn on Puddleduck Lane was shown as being used as a pig farm as late as 1989 before conversion to the stables and tack room and is, I guess,  Bob Miles' Pig Farm referred to by Davnet

In the maps below from 1883 and 1899 we can see Orchard Cottages, Puddle House and Southview and just about make out the field or orchard in the 1947 aerial photo (its pretty dark!) before the few houses were added to the village during the 60s and 70s.

Anything to add? Email Gavin - [email protected]

Picture
Picture
Picture

And a nightingale sang in Badbury Clump

2/5/2026

 
Dear all
 
I'm the Great Coxwell-born person who house-sat Chapel House for a few weeks last year...
 
Today's article (link below) about very vocal nightingales in Kent reminded me of my one and only almost-nightingale experience at Badbury Clump, c1967-ish. Courtesy of postmistress Margaret Nias, wearing one of her many community hats as Brown Owl (?) in the village scouting/guiding group - and with several parents as back-ups - took a bunch of us village kids for an 'over-nightingale' excursion up to BC, where they were common at the time. I have no memory of actually hearing the birds but remember, in no particular order, sleeping bags and baked beans cooked in cans over a fire and the wonder of being out overnight. Set me up for a life of birding and camping and the wonder of being outside.
 
You might like to check out the recorded song below and, if you head up there, listen while you walk. Fingers crossed!
 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/apr/30/rspb-cautiously-welcomes-slight-increase-in-uk-nightingale-population
 
All good wishes and hope to be back later in the year.
 
Virginia Jealous (born in Manor Cottage in 1960)

​

Local History

25/2/2026

 
I picked up a copy of "The Buildings of England - Berkshire" by Nikolaus Pevsner the other day (ISBN 0140710302 published 1966, reprint 1975), here's what he had to say about Great Coxwell:

ST GILES. At the end of the village. Nave of c.1200. The N wall has two small lancets. In the S wall a jolly lot of odd windows, the earliest early C14 (with cinquefoiled rere-arch). The chancel N side of the same date as the nave, though the chancel arch must be mid C13, the s window with bar tracery (a spherical triangle) later C13, and the E window (three stepped pointed-trefoiled lights under a round arch) late C13. Inside the E window two plain lancet niches. Do they go with the N side? A window like the E window also in the tower W wall, but the top of the tower is Perp; battlements and gargoyles.  - PULPIT. Jacobean.  - COMMUNION RAIL. Later C17, with flat balusters of dumb-bell outline. - NORTH DOOR with impressive, large-scale tracery. It might well be of c.1300.  - STAINED GLASS. In the E window clear glass panes with engraved shields. 1792 by Eginton. - PLATE. Chalice inscribed 1680; Paten probably of the same date. BRASS to William Morys, c.1500; 18 in. figures.

COURT FARMHOUSE. Late C17 stone farmhouse. Front of five bays, the ground-floor windows with stone crosses. Pitched roof. To the farmhouse belongs the magnificent BARN which William Morris (whose country-house was only a few miles away at Kelmscott) called 'as noble as a cathedral'. It is of stone and roofed with stone slates, and is 1524 ft long and 51 ft high. The date is C13. The buttresses are still shallow, also in their set-offs. Entrances by a transept and an archway opposite the transept. The archways are segment-headed and have two continuous chamfers Posts divide the barn into nave and aisles. The coillare and straight braces, transverse in well as longitudinal, are strong and serviceable and entirely utilitarian.

In an Addendum added August 1965:

.. attention must be drawn .. to the explanation of the grandeur of the Great Coxwell barn by the fact of Great Coxwell Manor belonging to the Cistercian Abbey of Beaulieu in Hamphire

Domesday 900 (+ 40)

7/1/2026

 
Back in 1986 there was a project to celebrate the 900th anniversary of the Domesday Book, the previous post with the photo had me wondering whether the photo was from 1986.

Anyway I tracked down the entry for Great Coxwell from the national archives and you can review it here:

https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20120318181300/http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/domesday/dblock/GB-424000-192000

Quite an interesting read and certainly of it's time.
​
Picture
Twelfth century Saint Giles Church Great Coxwell. This view is of the southern aspect. It also shows a major part of the old churchyard. (1986)
Picture
Snowscene of the 1982 winter, showing the main street, plus a terrace of new houses in Great Coxwell. It also shows a recently renovated cottage. (1982)
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This photograph shows a typical thatched cottage of Great Coxwell. There were at least 14 thatched cottages 60 years ago, now only 3 left. (1986)

Village Group Photo

7/1/2026

 
I've been passed a couple of photos by a villager who is keen to know when they were taken, there are definitely some current villagers in the photo.

​Probably best viewed on computer rather than a phone, if you click on the image below it will take you to the high resolution image and you can zoom in to spot the faces.

Please let me know ([email protected]) if you spot yourself and others and I will try to fill in all the names and republish it.

But more importantly in order to settle a bet we need to know when it was taken, what was the occasion and year?
​
Email me at [email protected] with any information you have, thanks in advance.
​

Great Coxwell Nativity

12/12/2025

 
The current incarnation of the nativity scene up at the Great Barn started in 1999, and even with one pause in 2020 its been running for more than 25 years.

Jennifer has kindly shared some photos with us so I am adding them here.

You can read about the history of the nativity scene in an older post here. In it Ian Beckwith talks about finding some small ceramic nativity figures in the vestry, Joy Lee talks about being inspired by seeing life-size figures of the Nativity in Prague and Jennifer Norman talks about how the current incarnation came about with help from Geoff Lee, John Rounce, Richard May, Peter Turner and Helen Anderson and others no doubt.

The nativity scene and figures have had running repairs over the years, but apart from the Angel and sheep, are broadly the same as they were 26 years ago - a testament to the creativity, ingenuity and hard work of the original barn team and the tenacity of the current team to keep them going.

There were also some Christmas cards produced in the past to help with fund raising, one from 2011 and one from 2015 - both from photos by John Rounce.

Click on an image below to see it full-size, it may take a while to load as the images are quite big.
​

Soldiers of Great Coxwell

19/11/2025

 
For those that were not able to attend the Remembrance Sunday Service at the War Memorial on Sunday 9th November 2025, you can find the words spoken about James Wearn on his page here, along with a more detailed biography and links to relevant artefacts and further information.

I've also taken the time to update the information about Tom Titcombe, who was spoken about back in 2018 on the 100th anniversary of The Armistice, you can find that information on Tom's page here. With much help from a distant relative of Tom's (Richard Titcombe) we've been able to fill in the gaps, I think it's a fascinating tale of Great Coxwell life from the late 19th into the 20th century.

If you have any more stories or information on these 2 soldiers, or any of the soldiers commemorated on the memorial (you can find a list here) please email me.

For those new to the village you might like to know that in remembrance of the soldiers of Great Coxwell the streets on the development on land of Steeds Farm were named for them. The land formed part of the Parish of Great Coxwell before the development and the Parish Council were asked to name the streets, now called Fern Hill Gardens, James H Wearn and James L Wearn were commemorated with a road name (Wearn Road) on the opposite side of the Coxwell Road.

Many thanks,

Gavin Anderson - biographical research
Robbie Burns - militrary research

Historic England Archive

25/3/2025

 
Historic England has a great collection of photos, some of which show Great Coxwell, mostly the barn and church - the ones from 1895 show how much has changed.

I've put them on a new Local History page - here.

Memories of Great Coxwell

22/3/2023

 
I recently received a lovely email from Janet Longstreeth (was Morse) who lived in Great Coxwell between 1945 and 1969.

"The lady that ran the post office was  Mrs Sweetland and her daughter Phyllis was my friend. I also  remember Mr & Mrs Hunter who ran the Royal Oak; and the old lady who had the shop next to The Laurels was called Miss Roberts. The Laurels was my family home, we were the Morse family. The house is now I think called Warrene house. I also have a painting of the house done during the 2nd world war by Fred Jarchow and wondered if this was the same person mentioned in the letter who did paintings in a shed [as referred to here]. I also remember Mr Cox and his milk round with his pony."

If you have anything to add or would like to share any memories of Great Coxwell for the website please email [email protected].

Robert (Bob) Miles

21/3/2023

 
I am told that some of you will remember Bob Miles who used to farm pigs at the top of Puddleduck Lane.  Bob passed away on 7th March and is to be buried with his late wife in our churchyard on Maundy Thursday, 6th April at 12 noon.
 
His daughter, who grew up in the village, and her family would welcome anyone from the village who remembers Bob to join them at his funeral. 
 
Pat
​
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