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Sutton Courtenay
is a largish straggling village on the south side of the River Thames
about 3 miles north east of Didcot and about half way along the B4016
between the villages of Appleford-on-Thames
and Drayton.
The extreme south
of the village has nothing to commend it at all, being mainly unattractive
1950s housing. However, as you travel north along High Street towards
the centre of the village it starts to look more attractive with a mixture
of
older buldings and more
expensive modern houses.
The geographic centre of the village is the junction of High Street and
Church Street, but the historic village centre, centred on the large Green,
is a quarter of a mile further on along Church Street. The quarter-mile
stretch between
the Green and the road junction appears
to be rather a no-man's land with the grounds of The Manor House on one
side and of The Abbey on the other, and appears to split the village in
two!
The name of the village comes from 'Sutton', which meant 'South Town'
(i.e. 'South Farm') in Saxon times and 'Courtenay' from from the name
of Reginald
Courtenay who became Lord of Sutton
in the 12th century.
The Manor House, together with the house now known as Norman Hall, is
on the site of a former Royal palace, and Queen
Matilda,
wife of King Henry I lived here at one time. Most
of the present building dates from the 14th & 16th centuries. However,
one wing dates mostly from the 13th century and part of it, including
a vaulted undercroft, dates from the 11th century.
Reginald’s younger son, Robert, expanded the buildings at Sutton and erected
the house now known as 'Norman Hall' in late i n the 12th century. It
may originally have been a chapel and was part of the same complex as
the manor house until early in the 14th century.
The building now known as 'The Abbey' was the Rectory House which was
built in the 13th century. It incorporated some of an earlier dilapidated
Parsonage that had been used as a Grange for Abingdon Abbey.
All Saints Church has a 12th century tower but the rest of the building
dates from 13th-16th century. During the Civil War, the vicar of Sutton,
a staunch parliamentarian, kept
stores of powder and ammunition in the church
- King Charles was of course not far away at Oxford. In 1643 the whole
lot unfortunately
exploded,
shattered the glass in the windows and damaged the tower. The graves of
former
statesman Herbert Asquith and author
George Orwell are in
the churchyard.
Asquith's second wife brought the family to Sutton Courtenay, buying the
Wharf in 1912 and converting its barn. George
Orwell was
not a parishioner but wished to be buried in a country churchyard!
There are still has four pubs in the village - The George and Dragon and
The Swan are both on The Green. The Fish, known for its French cuisine,
is along the Appleford Road, and The Plough is in High Street
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Images
of Sutton Courtenay
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(Click
to view)
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