Tusmore, Oxfordshire

Tusmore

Tusmore House
Tusmore
Tusmore shown within Oxfordshire
OS grid reference SP5630
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Bicester
Postcode district OX27
Dialling code 01869
Police Thames Valley
Fire Oxfordshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament

Tusmore is a settlement about 5 12 miles (9 km) north of Bicester in Oxfordshire. It is the location of the Tusmore Park country house and estate.

Manor

Tusmore was settled in Saxon times. The toponym comes from Old English, either Thures mere ("Thur's pool") or Þyrsmere ("a lake haunted by a giant or demon").[1]

The Domesday Book records that in 1086 the manor of Tusmore belonged to Walter Giffard, 1st Earl of Buckingham.[1]

By the early part of the 14th century Tusmore was the poorest village in the Ploughley Hundred. Thereafter it was depopulated by the Black Death. By 1358 the village had been abandoned and Sir Roger de Cotesford was licensed to enclose the abandoned land.} The fact that Tusmore was not required to pay tax in 1428 indicates that by then it had fewer than ten householders.[1]

The Fermor family were lords of the manor of Tusmore from 1606 until 1828, and Tusmore House was their family seat from about 1625 until 1810. In 1828 the last William Fermor died without a male heir and left the estate to his adopted daughter and her husband, John and Maria Turner Ramsay. In 1857 the Ramsays sold the estate to Henry Howard, 2nd Earl of Effingham. In 1929 the heir of Henry Alexander Gordon Howard, 4th Earl of Effingham sold the estate to Vivian Smith, a merchant banker who in 1938 was created 1st Baron Bicester of Tusmore.[1] Late in the 1990s the Smiths sold Tusmore to the Syrian billionaire Wafic Saïd.

Church and chapel

Records suggest that Tusmore may have had a parish church by 1074, and it cerainly existed by 1236. After the depopulation of Tusmore in the 14th century the church continued as a chapel or free chapel, and fragments of 15th century masonry found on the site indicate that it was rebuilt at that time. It seems to have ceased to exist by the early part of the 16th century, as records of episcopal visitations at that time make no mention of Tusmore. However, the living continued to exist until 1840 when it was united with that of Hardwick. The place names "Church Yard" and "Churchyard Close" indicate roughly where the parish church once stood.[1]

The Fermors were recusants and supported the continuation of Roman Catholicism in Tusmore and neighbouring villages from the English Reformation in the 16th century until after the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1791. The family always had a resident priest, usually a Jesuit, and several Fermors entered religious orders. All of the Fermor's staff were Roman Catholics, and attended Mass at the Fermor chapel at Tusmore along with co-religionists form neighbouring villages. This practice continued uninterrupted except for a period from 1768 when Tusmore House was being rebuilt and the chapel was being refurbished (see below). Mass at Tusmore resumed thereafter and continued until 1810 when the last William Fermor moved out of the house and his priest moved to Hardwick.[1]

Tusmore Park

Sir Roger de Cotesford or his successors may have built a manor house at Tusmore. It does not survive, but an early 16th-century combined granary and dovecote on staddle stones remains.[2] It is an oak-framed building, which is unusual in a part of England historically dominated by stone buildings.[1] The granary and dovecote are now a Grade II* listed building.[3]

An engraving of Arabella Fermor, published in 1807

The Fermors' house at Tusmore was large, for in 1665 it was assessed as having 19 hearths for the hearth tax. It was built of local stone and had a Roman Catholic chapel as well as ornamental gardens and a fish pond. After 1758 William Fermor had the house demolished except for the chapel and commissioned the Scottish architect Robert Mylne to design a new house. The exterior was completed by 1770 and the interior by 1779.[1] Mylne's house was of seven bays[2] and built of local stone, most of it from Fritwell. Mylne laid out the gardens and landscaped the park, the latter with a lake and an ornamental Temple of Peace dedicated to the late poet Alexander Pope (1688–1744).[1] Pope had been a friend of the Fermor family and in 1712 had written The Rape of the Lock about an incident in which Robert Petre, 7th Baron Petre had offended Arabella Fermor.

The chapel burned down in 1837. In 1857 the new owner, the 2nd Earl of Effingham, commissioned the Scottish architect William Burn to build an office wing on the site of the chapel. This was completed along with alterations to the house in 1858. After 1929 Vivian Smith had the house restored, most of the Victorian office wing demolished and some other alterations made.[1] Despite the 1858 and 1929 alterations, a number of the principal rooms retained their original 18th-century ceilings in the style of Robert Adam.[2] Smith greatly changed the gardens and park, retaining little of Milne's landscape design except the Temple of Peace and the lake.[1]

Gate lodges to Tusmore Park

In 1960 Randal Smith, 2nd Baron Bicester had the house demolished, which Sherwood and Pevsner condemned as "a great loss to a county in which important houses of the last quarter of the C18 are few". The stables were retained and are now a private house. In 1964–65 the architect Claud Phillimore had a new Tusmore House built on the site.[2] It was neo-Georgian but smaller than the house by Mylne. In 1970 the 2nd Baron died in a car accident and was succeeded by his nephew Angus Smith, 3rd Baron Bicester.

In 2000 Wafic Saïd replaced Phillimore's house with a large new neo-Georgian one designed by Sir William Whitfield (born 1920) of Whitfield Lockwood Architects.[4] In 2004 the Georgian Group gave the completed house its award for the "best new building in the Classical tradition",[5] although other architectural critics have been more sceptical.[6]

Air crash

A Handley Page Hampden aircraft similar to that shot down at Tusmore

On 2 September 1941 a Junkers Ju 88 fighter-bomber of Luftwaffe Nachtjagdgeschwader 2, flown by flying ace Oblt Paul Semrau, bombed RAF Upper Heyford. Meanwhile a Handley Page Hampden I aircraft, P5314 of No. 16 Operational Training Unit RAF, had been on a night training flight and was preparing to land at its base, RAF Croughton. Semrau fired cannon and machine guns at the Hampden, which caught fire and then crashed into a field near Tusmore Park, killing all four members of the crew.[7]

The Hampden crew were members of the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve. The pilot, P/O NP van der Merwe, was from Salisbury in Southern Rhodesia. He and two other crew are buried in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission section of St Mary's parish churchyard, Upper Heyford. The fourth is buried in St Andrew's parish churchyard, Kingsbury, northwest London.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Lobel 1959, pp. 333–338.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Sherwood & Pevsner 1974, p. 820.
  3. Historic England. "Granary/Dovecote at SP56523068  (Grade II*) (1046450)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
  4. "Tusmore Park". Lost Heritage. Matthew Beckett. Archived from the original on 9 June 2009.
  5. "Architectural Awards/ 2004 Awards". The Georgian Group.
  6. Glancey, Jonathan (3 November 2004). "I built it. Me. Moi". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 October 2009.
  7. 1 2 "20.09.1941 No. 16 O.T.U. Hampden I P5314 P/O Van der Merwe". Archive Report: Allied Forces. Aircrew Remembered. Retrieved 13 November 2015.

Sources and further reading

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