Hostelries, Hospitals, and Hotels all offer shelter. The Good Samaritan took the injured man to an inn. During the Civil War, 1642-6, The Bell and other inns nursed and buried casualties at parish expense. When the King reinforced bridge defences, Wheatley homes and inns quartered soldiers for a quartermaster’s billet (chitty), redeemable after victory.
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Wheatley Hospitality (2)
The George and Crown were our oldest inns. The King and Queen (the William and Mary sign of 1980 now shows Charles and Henrietta) and the White Hart were close behind. Mail was delivered and collected at the White Hart, 1650-1750, before the Crown took over, 1750-1860. Railways and telegraph
Continue readingWheatley Hospitality (1)
Travellers depended on Wheatley for shelter, hospitality and fresh horses. It was a ‘service station’ for two main roads and it has a memory of 20 inn names. The London to Oxford road passed over Shotover (Old Road), replaced by a new road in the 1700s along the present A40
Continue readingFred Naish’s Memories of the Crown
The Crown Hotel was in business and popular for the people living at the lower end of the Village. It was very exciting when the Fair Ground Showmen brought the Switchbacks and other Sideshows on the scene causing much excitement. Doctor Barnes who lived opposite The Crown, smoking his favourite
Continue readingWayside Inns
The old White Hart, Wheatley, 1822, drawn by James Buckler. It is on the site of the present Oxford House, High Street, opposite The Bell. The signboard names the landlord as George Crookes. Buckler also sketched the Manor House and 1795 chapel on Bell Lane. (Bodleian Library, University of Oxford,
Continue readingMemories of Wheatley – December 1999
History is the overlap of memories. Richard Dumbelow of Wheatley, born in 1477 during the Wars of the Roses, lived for over a century, well into the reign of Elizabeth Tudor; as he died, Sybell Pangbourne was born in Holton in 1583 and lived to well over a hundred, until
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