Oxfordshire. [ "Elly'~
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136 IFFLEY. OXFORDSHIRE. [ "ELLY'~ whik colour, but the latter is a less common variety. 18,179• March 25, r885, a detached parl of Iffiey was Other estates here are held by Pembroke and Lincoln annexed to Littlemore. Colleges. The Knights Templars had property here in Parish Clerk, John Philip Cunnington. the r3th century. The governors of Donnington Hos pital, near Newbnry, Berks, are the lords of the manor Post & M. 0. 0., S. B. & A. & I. Office.-Miss Ellen Maria and principal landowners. The ancient manor courts Blay, postmistress. Letters through Oxford arrive at were heid at Court Place, now the residence of Log.m 6.20 a.m. & 1.10 p.m.; dispatched at I1.55 a.m. & Pe:~.rsall-Smith esq. The soil is loam and clay; subwil, 6.28 p.m.; sundays, arrive 6.20 a.m.; dispatched 3-IO sand and gravel. The chief crcps are wheat and barley. p. m. Cowley is the near est telegraph office, I mile The area is 388 acres of land and IO of water; rate~ble distant value, £2,712; ~he population in 1901 was 386 in the Wall Letter Boxes, at Rose hill, cleared at II-45 a.m. & civil and 6g2 in the ecclesiastical parish. By Local 5· ro p.m. ; at Iffley Turn, cleared at 12 noon & 6.30 Government Board Order, 18,179, dated March 25, 1885, & g.2o p.m. ; sundays, 3.:<o p.m . the hamlet of Hockmore was transferred from Iffiey to Elementary School, built in 1828, for 120 children; aver Cowley, and by Order 19,430, March 25, I886, Hockmore age attendance, 98; Joe Wilson, master; Mrs. Mason, Farm and Cottages were also added to Cowley. By Order mistres1 PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Lucas Frank Greenwood, Rivermead I Cross William, dairyman Alien John, The Elms Macphail J. E. St. Maur, Isis Bank Cunnington John Philip, carpenter Armstrong Mrs. The Lodge Sewbolt Rev. Michael Robert B.A. Edginton Henry, grocer Barclay Capt. Robert, The Cottage (vicar) Harris Arthur Charles, grist miller Benfield George Owen Mrs. Wood house (water), Jffiey mill Dryden Miss, Beechwood Parker Arthur Read, Brookside Jackman Thomas, baker Embling John Edwards, Hawk well Pearsall-Smith Logan, Court Place Martin Matilda (Miss), dress maker Foort Ralph, Rosendale Sotham Robert, The Priory Quelch Alfred, farmer, Court farm Forest George, Iffiey Turn Turner Edward Henry, ~Ianor houH' Rowbotham George, Thames Conser. .FGwell Leonard Clive, Mill house W ilson J oo vn.ncy inspector Hall Mrs COMMERCIAL. Watts George Frederick, agent for J"ones Miss, Lncia house Beckett Edwin, beer retailer Donnington Hospital estate Canard Henrv, Tree P.H White Thomas, butcher .Lever Major Reginald Croft M.B. Den • ton house Cook Fred, insurance agent ·white Thos. ·farmer,Donnington farm • IPSDEN is a parish and picturesque village, close the east window of the chancel was filled with stained to the Chiltern Hills, 3' miles east from Cholsey glass: and there is another to the late K. E. Symons ..and Moulsford station, and 4 miles south-east from esq. given by his widow: the church affords 220 sittings . Wallingford ter:ninal station, both on the Reading The register of baptisms and burials dates from the year .and Oxford section of the Great Western rail r569; marriages, r6g5. The living is a vicarage, consoli w~y. in the Southern division of the county, hun- dat~d with that of North Stoke, together with the ··dred of Langtree, pr.t.ty Sl'Ssional division of Henley, rectory of Newnham-Murren, joint net yearly value •union of Henley, county court district of Wallingford, [470, with residence and 23 acres of glebe, in the gift •:rural deanery of Henley, and archdeaconry and diocese of St. John's College, Cambridge, and held since 1872 by o~Jf Oxford. The old British trackway, called the "Ick the Rev. Charles Stanwell M.A. formerly" fellow of that nield road," or "Ickleton way," passes through the college. The great tithes of Ipsden and North Stoke "lJarish. The church of St. Mary, originally a chapel of belong to St. John's College, Cambridrre. The B~ptist the mother church of North Stoke, is an edifice chiefly of chapel here, erected at the expense of Mr. Henry Hutt, Early English date, and consisting of chancel, nave, of Oxford House, Reading, will seat 250 persons. Three north aisle or chapel, south porch and a western turret cottages and nearly 7 acres of land, now producing containing 2 bells : the chancel is Early English, rather [, 13 yearly, and representing a charity left by the Rev. r.ude in execution, and has a small chancel arch resting Richard Headlam in 1729, the produce to be distributed on single polished shafts with fioriated caps: the nave is annually at Christmas in clothing- to poor men of Ipsden of the same period, and originally had a south aisle with and Stoke Row; in 1875 W. J. Dodd esq. bequeathed the an arcade of five Pointed arches, but this has been sum of £4oo to be invested in Government securities, the destroyed and the arches filled up: the nave roof is proceeds to be annually rli~tributed in flannel and blankets. PerpPndicular, with moulded tie beams and a battle Near the church is a deep well. Ipsden House is the mented cornice: the chapel on the north ~ide opens to residence of Henry Ross Todd esq. L.R.C.P.I. Herbert the nave by two Pointl•d archps : the walls are Early Vincent Reade esq. is lord of the manor and chief "English and Perpendicular, and within, on the west and landowner. The ~oil is ch:J.lk and gravel; ~ubsoil, north, have a stone bench attachE'd: the roof belongs chalk and g-ravel. The chief crops are wheat and barley. "'to the Decorated period: the font is plain and of rough The area is 3,416 acres of land and 9 of water; rateable material: there are brass effigiE's with inscription to value, [,2,76o; the population in 1901 was 726. ""Master Thomas Englysche " and Isbell his wife, both Sexton, William George Shail. -of whom died in I')2<;; both figures are palimpsests, Post. M. 0. & T. 0., T. M. 0., P. P., S. B. & A. & I. -the male figure, which is in armour, exhibiting on th~ ' reverse side the upper part of a female figure, c. 1420, Office.-"Miss Janet Lindsay, sub-postmistress. Letters and the female effigy part of a Latin verse inscriptiun through Wallintrford arrive at 7.30 a.m. & 12.50 p.m.; "to . nit Stapilton, wife of John: a stainerl dispatched at 10.30 a.m. & 7 p.m. Pillar Box (Bailey), window in memory of Malcolrn Reade P~fl. Bengal Civil cleared at ro.2o a.m. & 6.55 p.m.; sunday, 10.20 a.m Service, d. 6 Feb. I87S• and William. Winwoode R~>ade, ElemenLny School (mixed), built in 1802, for 84 children; d_ 2~ April, r87~. sons of the late W. Barrington Reade average attendance, _')o; Miss Hannah Amelia Wrar. esq. of Ipsden House, who also died II Dec. 18Br, has mistress. The school was enlarged in rBg7, a room for been placed in the south aisle: and in August, 1885, infants having been added . PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Reinhardt Charles Emanuel M.D. Lindsay Duncan, farmer, Hailey Arnold Francis S., B.A., M.B.Oxon. The Warren • Lindsay Janet (Miss), grocer, Post off . Hailey house Stanwell Rev. Charles M.A. Vicarage Pag-e Wm. farmer & wood merchant, Dibley Edwin, Talana Todd Hy. Ross L.R.C.P.I. Ipsden ho Scott's farm (postal address, Check· Dyer Samuel, Little Stoke house endon, Reading) Hatt Thomas P COMMERCIAL. i,g· treet A nn ("'"~nrs. ) , b eer ret. H ar'1 ey Matthews RE'v. Joseph H~·- (Baptist) Chiltern Open Air Sanatorium (Fras., Wear Bartholomew, farmer, Cross Page William, Scott's farm S. Arnold B.A., M.B.Oxon) Roads farm Poppy Arthur William, Well place Batt Thos. Panter, farmer & land agt i Woodley Frank, farmer, Stone farm ISLIP (A. S. Githes:epe, the leap of Githa), is a bridge of four arches crosses the former immediately parish and village, with a station on the Oxford and be:nw the church. The church of St. Nicholas is an Bletchlev• section of the London and North Western edifice of stone ~hiefly of the 14th century, although railway, and is 56 miles from London, 6~ south-east the piers and arches on the north side of the nave are from Woodstock, 7 north-east from Oxford and 6~ south Transition Norman, and belong to a period considerably west from Bicester, in the Mid division of the county. Parlier than the rest of the building: the church con hundred and petty sessional division of Ploughley, si,ts of chancel, nave of three bays, aisles, south porch Bicester union and county court district, rural deanery and a lofty embattled western tower of Perpendicular of Islip and archdeaconry and diocese of Oxford, situ date, with crocketed pinnacles, and containing a clock llted on the northern bank o! thA river Ray near its and 6 bells: the chancel, destroyed during the civil confluence with the CherwPll: Cl !"'""l h:~'n>'tr~rl,-rl w;~r~, was rebuilt in r68o by Robert South D.D· .