Pitchcott

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pitchcott is a village in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located in the Aylesbury Vale, about two and a half miles north east of Waddesdon, and four miles south of Winslow.

Pitchcott was described in 1806 in Magna Britannia as follows:

PITCHCOTE, in the hundred of Ashendon and deanery of Waddesdon, lies about seven miles [11 km] north-west of Aylesbury. The manor was in the family of Vernon as early as the year 1377, and continued to be their property in 1557. It was anciently held under the Bohuns, earls of Hereford. In 1603 it was purchased of Sir Walter Pye by an ancestor of Thomas Saunders esq. who is the present proprietor, and patron of the rectory.

The village name is Anglo Saxon in origin, and means 'cottage where pitch is stored'. In manorial rolls of 1176 the village is recorded as Pichecote.

The parish church dedicated to Saint Giles, has been deconsecrated and converted to a private house, although the churchyard is still in use.

Pitchcott today is a small parish of only 1000 acres (4 km²), this includes approx. 32 acres (130,000 m²) of arable land, the remainder being grassland. There are a few new barn conversions that were built in 2007. Oving church, all saints, is linked with the village, after being called 'All Saints, Oving with Pitchcott'