The original village developed around the church, which remains along with a few dwellings around it. The population started to decline after 1349, so that by the 19th century it consisted only of a few scattered farmhouses.[6] This has been attributed at various times to bubonic plague,[7] to emparking[1] and to sheep farming.[5] Late in the 19th century, a group of houses was built on the Lechlade–Faringdon road, designed by the architect Ernest George for Alexander Henderson, 1st Baron Faringdon, as part of a social improvement project. Many people now regard this as Eaton Hastings,[6] as the remaining buildings of the original settlement are hidden down a narrow lane.