The Domesday Book of 1086 recorded a small settlement of ten households at Cadenham, close to the east end of present-day Foxham.[1]
The manor house, Cadenham Manor, is a house of five bays built in the second half of the 17th century. It replaces an earlier house, from which part of a window-head survives in the north porch that was added in the 20th century.[2] The manor was owned by a branch of the Hungerford family, including George Hungerford (1637-1712).
A Wesleyan chapel was built at Foxham in 1855, but it has been closed and converted into a house.[7]
Canal
Construction of the Wilts & Berks Canal began at Semington in 1796 and had reached Foxham by December 1798, when Foxham locks were under construction.[8] By June 1800 the next section, from Foxham to Dauntsey, was complete,[9] and the canal was completed to Abingdon in September 1810.[10]
The canal passed Foxham just east of Cadenham Manor, with two locks just north of the Foxham-Hilmarton road. It brought coal from the Somerset coalfield to Swindon and Abingdon. Traffic declined after the Great Western railway was completed in 1841 and was minimal by the end of the century, then ceased altogether in 1901 after the partial collapse of the aqueduct over the River Marden at Stanley, some 3.5 miles (5.6 km) south of Foxham.[11] The canal was formally abandoned by an Act of Parliament in 1914.[12]
The main line of the canal is now being restored.[13] As of 2010, restoration of the section east of Foxham Top Lock was complete.[14]
The Reading Room was built in 1884 by the Lansdowne family and extended in 1979.[15] It is Foxham's village hall and also houses its Sub-Post Office.[16]