Lyford lies in the Vale of the White Horse, four miles north of Wantage, in northern (old) Berkshire, relocated since 1974 in Oxfordshire. It was formerly a chapelry of Hanney. In a directory of 1868 the name of West Hanney described both East and West Hanney and Lyford. The area is richly fertile arable land. Below is an extract from the 1880s Ordnance Survey map showing the layout of the village.

Size

The 1851 census gave Lyford’s acreage as 773.

Population

140 in 1851; 44 in 2001 (2011 not available)

Hundred

Ock

Poor Law union

Abingdon

Registration district

Abingdon

Present-day local authority

Vale of  the White Horse, Oxfordshire County Council

Grid reference

SU 39 94

Adjoining parishes in 1851

Charney Bassett, Denchworth, East Challow, Fyfield, Garford, Hanney, Kingston Bagpuize, Longworth, Stanford in the Vale, Wantage

Genealogical resources

See Berks FHS Books for coverage of this parish in the society’s range of CDs.

See also Berkshire Record Office holdings.

Published local history

Violet Mary Howse Lyford: a parish record

Anglican church and parochial organisation

The parish of Lyford is within the diocese of Oxford. The church of St Mary the Virgin was built during the first half of the thirteenth century, and was restored in 1875. In 1845 Lyford was made into a district chapelry. Today the ecclesiastical parish name is Lyford with Charney, and it belongs to the benefice of Cherbury with Gainfield.

Schools

According to Lysons Magna Britannia a free school was founded here in 1702. This was noted in several records of the 1830s, and the National Society’s accounts for 1849 note a £10 grant to Lyford school.

Other local history

Lyford Almshouses, illustrated below, were founded by Oliver Ashcombe in 1611. They form an open quadrangle of 20 tenements and a chapel.

Lyford Grange was originally a moated manor house of Abingdon Abbey. In 1581 it was occupied by Edward Yate and his wife. Here, in defiance of royal proscripton and vigorous persecution,the Yates entertained Catholics, including Edmund Campion, the Jesuit. A warrant for his arrest followed him to Lyford, where he was captured, along with two lesser-known priests. All were tortured and then executed at Tyburn for their faith. Campion was canonised in 1970.

Lyford remained a centre of Roman Catholicism for some time. In 1690 an informer discovered that a small estate at Garford had been granted for the purpose of erecting a nunnery at Lyford, “when Popish times should come”.

Picture of Berkshire Family History Society

Berkshire Family History Society