There was much new
building in Kingston Bagpuize and Southmoor in the early 18th
century. The present Kingston House was built about 1720.
John Rocque’s
map of 1761 shows a compact village centred on Kingston House
with 2 village streets on either side of the house and
a number of cottages long since gone.
John
Rocques
map of 1761
Southmoor was centred on the Town Pond area.
The pond purportedly had stocks and a ducking stool. Two footpaths
connected the villages.
Town Pond
(artist Brian Hook)
Inclosure and the Agricultural Revolution
The Inclosure Acts (1805-6 for Kingston and 1844
for Draycott ) meant that Rights of Common were abolished. Some
land had already been enclosed but these acts meant that all remaining
common land and large open fields with strips were divided up between
the larger tenant farmers, creating a new poor class. Rocque's map
of 1761 shows a large section of Kingston village, long since demolished,
in what is now open fields. Probably poorly constructed houses became
derelict as people left the land and went to towns. Many buildings
in Kingston Park were demolished at this time.
The Hind's Head, about 1910
The Kingston Inclosure map shows the Hinds
Head Inn across the main Oxford Road from the present inn,
which was then a bowling-green. On the other corner of the
Witney and Oxford roads there was the Pound. The tollgate
near the Hind's Head was for the turnpikes to Faringdon, Oxford,
Witney and Marcham. Houses were then built along the turnpikes
beginning the ribbon development along the A420.
Along the road was The George Hotel (now
the Stone House) a village green, known as the Warren beside
it and the forge opposite.
Stone House
(from The Manor of Kingston Bagpuize
by A. Henderson Livesey, circa 1932)
Methodist chapel, Southmoor
The 1844 Inclosure map for Draycott Moor
shows no buildings on the north side of Stonehill Lane, but
many on the south. Draycott Wood Estate land was farm and
woodland and the Methodist Chapel at the junction of the Faringdon
Road with Hanney Road was built in1841. In the second half
of the 19th century there was agricultural improvement generally
but the population of 2 parishes dropped from 639 to 409.