The parish measures about 1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) east–west and about 2 miles (3 km) north–south. It is bounded by the River Cherwell to the west, Aves ditch to the east, and field boundaries to the north and south. In 1959 the parish covered an area of 1,765 acres (714 ha).[2]
Prehistory
Aves ditch is pre-Anglo-Saxon. It may have been dug as a boundary ditch. It still forms the eastern boundary of the parish.
The toponym "Heyford" is derived from Old English. It probably means "ford used at the time of the hay harvest".[3] The earliest known record of it is a document from AD 995 now included in the Codex Diplomaticus Aevi Saxonici, which records it as Hegford.[3]
Since then its spelling has varied greatly. The Domesday Book of 1086 also records it as Hegford, and also as Egford. A charter from 1172 records it as Heiford, and other spellings of that era include Heiford', Heiforde, Heyforde and Heyfordia. Other charters record it as Eiforde in 1193–1200 and Eifort in 1254–55.[4] An entry in the Book of Fees from 1242 records it as Heyford Magna.[3] It was recorded as Heyrford in 1263, Hyford in 1278–79 and 1308 and also Hayford in 1308.
After the bridge over the Cherwell was built (see below) the village was recorded as Heiford ad Pontem in 1254–55, Brigeheyford in 1275, Heyforde ad Pontem 1278–79, Hereford ad Pontem and Wyford ad pontem in 1285, Heyford manor ad pontem in 1291, Heyford at Bridge in 1314, Heyford Pont in 1384, Heighford ad pontem, Higheford ad pontem, Heiford ad pontem in 1428 and Heyford apud Pontem in 1539.[4]
In 1634 the Rector recorded it as Heyforde Porcells[2] and in 1728 it was recorded as Heyford Purcell.[4] The reason is not clear, but there is a village of Newton Purcell about 10 miles (16 km) east of Lower Heyford.
It was recorded as Nether Heyford in 1246–47 and Nytherhayford in 1384.[4] "Nether", like the present "Lower", distinguishes the village from Upper Heyford which is about 1 mile (1.6 km) upstream along the Cherwell valley. There are both a Nether Heyford and a Little Heyford in Northamptonshire, so the current "Lower Heyford" reduces confusion.
An opening high in the wall west of the south arcade suggests that the nave once had a west gallery. This has been removed, as has the rood and rood loft, but the 15th-century wooden screen to the chancel survives.
In the reign of Edward VI the west tower had a ring of four bells.[7] It now has a ring of six, of which the second and fourth were cast in 1766 by Matthew III Bagley[8] of Chacombe, Northamptonshire.[9]W&J Taylor cast the fifth bell in 1825, presumably at their then foundry in Oxford.[9] Mears and Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast the tenor bell in 1867[8] and the treble and third bells in 1925.[8]
The church is said to have had a 17th-century clock that was made in 1695 and removed during the 1867–68 restoration.[7]
In the latter part of the 17th century Lower Heyford had also a Quaker congregation. Lower Heyford had a Methodist congregation by 1804, which soon had a chapel in the village and eventually became part of the United Methodist Church. A new chapel was built in Mill Lane in 1906, was still used for worship in 1955 but is now a private house.[2]
There has been a bridge over the River Cherwell between Lower Heyford, Rousham and Steeple Aston since at least 1255.[2] The present bridge has nine arches and was noted by the early 16th-century antiquaryJohn Leland.[11] In the 1970s Jennifer Sherwood dated part of it to the 13th century, and its north side to either the 15th or 16th century.[12] However, English Heritage dates the earliest parts of the present bridge to the 14th century, its alterations to the 17th century and its widening to the 19th century.[13] The bridge is a Grade II* listed building and forms an important part of the view from the historic adjacent landscape garden of Rousham House.[13]
The stretch of the Oxford Canal between Banbury and Tackley was completed in 1787.[14] It runs along the Cherwell valley and bounds Lower Heyford village on its north and west sides. Coal mined in Leicestershire and Warwickshire was unloaded on Heyford Wharf at Lower Heyford.
In 1797 the road between Bicester and Enstone was made into a turnpike.[2] Lower Heyford had two toll-gates: one at Heyford Bridge and the other at the east end of the village. The road was disturnpiked in 1876, is now the B4030 road and Heyford Bridge continues to carry its traffic.
In 1808 Lower Heyford had two dame schools, and by 1833 there were three more formal schools. A National School was built in Market Square and opened in 1867. The building was extended by the building of an extra classroom in 1894. In a reorganisation of schools in 1932, the National School became a junior school and senior pupils from Lower Heyford had to go to Steeple Aston. Lower Heyford school became a Church of England controlled school in 1952.[2] It closed in 1974[16] and is now a private house.
Amenities
The Bell Inn is a late 17th- or early 18th-century building[17] that has been a pub since at least 1819.[2] In the 20th century it was controlled by Halls Oxford and West Brewery. It is now a free house.
Red Rose Travel bus route 25 serves Lower Heyford, linking the village with Bicester viaUpper Heyford and Middleton Stoney. The bus stops are outside the Kingdom Hall at the east end of the village. Buses do not serve Lower Heyford railway station.
Buses run from Mondays to Saturdays, mostly at hourly intervals. There is no late evening service, and no service on Sundays or bank holidays.[22]