The ancient Roman road between Alchester and Towcester, now the A4421, forms the eastern boundary of the parish.
Caversfield's toponym has evolved from Cavrefelle in the 11th century through Kaueresfuld, Chauresfeld, Caffresfeld, Caueresfeud and Kaveresfeld (12th–13th centuries), and by the 18th century it was Catesfield.[1]
By 1317 Caversfield was held by Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, and when the Earl died in 1324 it passed to his niece Joan.[1] She was the wife of David II Strathbogie, Earl of Atholl, who although Scottish had become a peer of England after King Robert the Bruce deposed and exiled him for rebellion. Caversfield remained with the Earl of Atholl's descendants until 1375, when it passed to the heirs of a different branch of the de Warenne family.[1]
By the 12th century the Gargate family held the feudal tenancy of Caversfield. In 1236 Muriel de Ros and Isabel de Munbury, the daughters of Hugh Gargate, endowed the tenancy of half of the manor to the AugustinianPriory at Bicester.[1] The priory retained this holding until the Dissolution of the Monasteries after 1536.[1]
In the 13th century the Gargate family owned a watermill, a windmill and a house where the manorial court was held.[1] The watermill was presumably on the small River Bure which rises at Bainton, flows south through Caversfield and Bicester and around Graven Hill, and joins the River Ray at Merton. No trace of either mill is known to survive, and the original manor house has gone.
Parish church
The oldest part of the small Church of England parish church of Saint Laurence is the Saxon ground stage of the bell tower,[1] probably from the 10th century.[3] The nave and chancel were rebuilt late in the 12th century.[3] Early in the 13th century the chancel was remodelled again[3] in the Early English Gothic style with two lancet windows at its east end, and the bell-stage of the tower was either added or rebuilt.[1] The small north and south aisles were added around the same time. Each aisle is linked to the nave by an arcade of two bays, in which the style of the piers is of about AD 1180 but the Early English Gothic style of the arches is of about 1230.[3] The south walls of the church include a lancet window, a Decorated Gothic window from early in the 14th century and a Perpendicular Gothic window from late in the 15th century.[1][3]
In the 18th century the north and south aisles of St Laurence church were demolished and the two arcades blocked up.[3] In 1874 the Gothic Revival architectHenry Woodyer restored the chancel, rebuilt the aisles and added a vestry to the east of the north aisle.[3]
St Laurence's parish is now part of the benefice of Bicester with Caversfield.[4]
Church bells
Until the 20th century the tower had three bells,[1] including a treble bell that was cast in about 1218[5] for Hugh and Sibilla Gargate and is believed to be the oldest inscribed bell in England.[6] In the 20th century this bell was removed from the tower and mounted as an historic exhibit inside the church.
The tower now has a ring of five bells. John Taylor & Co of Loughborough cast the tenor bell in 1874 and the fourth bell in 1876. Mears & Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast the third bell in 1928 and added new treble and second bells in 1949.[5]
Commonwealth War Graves
St Lawrence's parish churchyard includes 25 Commonwealth War Graves[7] connected with RAF Bicester, dating from before and during the Second World War. This was a training station for Bomber Command and a number of the burials are of airmen killed in training accidents. 19 are RAF airmen, including one Australian and one Canadian serving in the RAF. Four are RCAF airmen, one is from the RNZAF and one is a soldier from the Royal Artillery.
Caversfield is on the old main road between Bicester and BanburyviaAynho. In 1791 an Act of Parliament made both the Bicester–Aynho road and the Bicester–Finmere stretch of the old Roman road into turnpikes.[8] The two roads ceased to be turnpikes in 1877.[8] In the 1920s the Bicester–Banbury road was classified as part of the A41 and the Bicester–Finmere road was part of the A421. After the M40 motorway was completed in 1990, the Bicester–Banbury road was downgraded to B4100 and the Bicester–Finmere road was reclassified A4421.
The architect C.R. Cockerell designed Caversfield House, which was built in 1842–45 on the site of the former manor house.[9] The architect William Wilkinson designed the neo-Tudor style Brashfield House, which was built in 1872–75 in the east of the parish by the Roman Road.[9]
Until the 20th century Caversfield was a manor and parish with no village and a very small population.[1] However, in 1911 Bicester Airfield was created just east of the Roman road in Launton parish. At the end of the First World War the airfield became RAF Bicester and subsequently housing for RAF personnel was built in Skimmingdish Lane in the eastern part of Caversfield parish. RAF operations ceased in 2004, and the Skimmingdish Lane accommodation is now used by the Defence Logistics Organisation. The parish also now includes accommodation for USAFE personnel serving at the RAF Croughton communications base in Northamptonshire about 5 miles (8 km) north of Caversfield.
Late in the 20th century Bicester has been greatly expanded with new housing. Parts of the Bure Park housing estate, although in Bicester, are in Caversfield civil parish.