The toponym "Faringdon" means "hill covered in fern". Claims, for example by P. J. Goodrich,[2] that King Edward the Elder (reigned 899–924) died in Faringdon are unfounded.[3] The Domesday Book of 1086 records Farendone as large settlement with 45 households (in the top 20% of all settlements in England for population) in the ancient hundred of Wyfold in Berkshire.[4] Faringdon was one of many settlements owned by the king, so had the benefit of paying no geld, a land tax.
After the Conquest a castle was erected in Faringdon by the Earl of Gloucester, which was afterwards razed by Stephen, who built upon its site a priory for Cistercian monks, subject to Beaulieu Abbey, in Hampshire. Faringdon developed into a borough and was apparently already separate from the hundred of Wyfold when granted by King John to Beaulieu Abbey.[5] King John established an abbey in Faringdon in 1202 (probably on the site of Portwell House), but its monks removed to Beaulieu Abbey in 1203.[6] The Faringdon land grant became an outlying grange, one of a network of farms, worked to provide food for the monks and also to help support the abbey's economy.[7] The hundred of Faringdon, as held by the abbot of Beaulieu, included the parishes of Great and Little Faringdon and Coxwell.[5]
The town was granted a weekly market in 1218, and as a result came to be called Chipping Faringdon.[8] A weekly outdoor market is still held on Tuesdays.[9]
At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the early sixteenth century, the abbey lands in Faringdon were sold to wealthy nobles.
In 1838, Faringdon (also written as Farringdon Great), and Faringdon Little located six miles distant, and other parishes were mainly within Faringdon hundred, Berkshire.[10] In the late 19th century as technology increased the ability to provide higher general standard of living, new specialized units were formed to provide additional functions such as poor law unions rather than parish-level charity, and rural sewer districts to provide sub-county level health improvements, leading to the formation of the Faringdon Rural District. So the hundred faded from use, especially as county- and city-level courts of justice were instituted.
Due to major populations increases in boroughs and cities, the increase in transportation between regions, and longstanding ties between communities, the centuries-old county boundaries had in many areas become a hindrance to "getting things done", both in the administration of government functions and in some areas in daily business and personal activities. So in the 20th century a major restructuring across England and Wales meant that the local impact would cause Faringdon and nearby parishes (i.e. all the parishes of the hundred of Faringdon) to be transferred from Berkshire to Oxfordshire when the border was redrawn on 1 April 1974 due to the Local Government Act 1972.
All Saints has a central bell tower, which was reduced in height in 1645 after it was damaged by a cannonball in the English Civil War.[6] Faringdon was fought over because it commanded the road to the Radcot Bridge over the River Thames. The tower now has a ring of eight bells.[13] The three oldest bells were cast in 1708. James Wells of Aldbourne, Wiltshire, cast the tenor bell in 1779 and another bell in 1803. The three youngest bells, including the treble, were cast in 1874 by Mears and Stainbank.[6]
Local legend
The churchyard is said to be haunted by the headless ghost of a naval officer, Hampden Pye.[14] Local legend has it that Pye was decapitated in a battlefield explosion while fighting in the War of the Spanish Succession, after being convinced to join up by his mother, who sought to separate him from a local girl she considered an unsuitable match. An alternative legend states that Pye was an unfaithful husband who was decapitated by his wife with a gun. The ghost was reportedly exorcised shortly after Pye's death.[15]
Just east of the town is Folly Hill or Faringdon Hill, a Greensand outcrop. In common with Badbury Hill to the west of the town, it has an ancient ditched defensive ring (hill fort). This was fortified by supporters of Matilda sometime during the Anarchy of 1135–1141, when she claimed the throne from King Stephen, but was soon defeated by him. Oliver Cromwell fortified it in an unsuccessful campaign to defeat the Royalist garrison at Faringdon House. The Pye family had Scots pines planted around the summit, around the time that Faringdon House was rebuilt in the late 18th century. The building is a conspicuous landmark from the Vale of White Horse, White Horse Hill, the Berkshire Downs near Lockinge, and the Cotswolds to the north-west.
The folly on Folly Hill was designed by Lord Gerald Wellesley, later 7th Duke of Wellington, for Lord Berners, and built in 1935. It is 140 feet (43 m) high and affords panoramic views of the Vale of White Horse.[18] It once bore a sign saying "Members of the public committing suicide from this tower do so at their own risk."[19] During the Second World War the Home Guard used it as an observation post. The scholar John Garth has suggested that the folly was inspiration for Saruman's tower, Orthanc, in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings,[20] and that Berners's painting of the Folly atop its hill led Tolkien to make a similar painting of a view in the Shire, "The Hill: Hobbiton-across-the-Water".[21] In 1982 Robert Heber-Percy restored it and gave it to the town in trust. It has been a Grade II listed building since 1986.[22] Near the top of London Street near Faringdon Folly is a pub bearing that name.
Faringdon Folly, built by Lord Berners on his estate in 1935
Detail of Lord Berners's 1936 painting of Faringdon Folly, used as an advertisement by Shell, 1936
Faringdon House
There is a manor house and estate, close to the edge of Faringdon, called Faringdon House. The original house was damaged during the civil war. Its owner at the time, Sir Robert Pye, who was a Royalist, was put under siege by his own son Robert who was a Parliamentarian colonel.[23] Building of the current, smaller, house began about 1780 and was not completed until after 1785.[24] The house was bought in 1787 by William Hallett Esq. It was the home of Lord Berners in the mid-20th century. For a time it was owned by the writer Sofka Zinovieff, the granddaughter of Berners' companion, Robert Heber-Percy, who inherited it on Berners' death in 1950.[25][26]
Geology
Faringdon is the site of the Faringdon Sponge Gravel Member, part of the CretaceousLower Greensand Group.[27] It is rich in fossil sponges, other invertebrates, a few vertebrate bones and teeth, and good examples of bioerosion.[28]
Transport
Roads
The £1.6-million 3-mile (5 km) A420 Faringdon Bypass was opened in July 1979.[29]
Buses
Faringdon is linked with Swindon and Oxford by a frequent service operated seven days a week by Stagecoach West,[30] it is also linked by an hourly service to Stanford in the Vale, East Challow and Wantage, run by Pulhams Coaches and operating on Mondays to Saturdays, and by a 4 times a day service to Uffington, Childrey, East Challow and Wantage, also run by Pulhams Coaches, also operating on Mondays to Saturdays.[31][32]
Railway
A 3.5 miles (5.6 km) Faringdon branch line was opened in 1864 between Faringdon and the Great Western Railway (GWR) at Uffington, with construction funded by the Faringdon Railway Company (bought outright by the GWR in 1886). Passenger traffic peaked in 1913, but later declined to an extent that the passenger service was withdrawn in 1951. Goods traffic continued until the Beeching closures of 1964. The Faringdon railway station building remains. It currently houses a nursery school.
Media
Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC South and ITV Meridian. Television signals are received from the Oxford TV transmitter.[33]
Faringdon is notable for the dyed pigeons at Faringdon House. The custom of dyeing pigeons was started by the eccentric Lord Berners.[37] Around the town can be seen stone plaques with comments such as "Please do not throw stones at this notice", reflecting the ongoing influence of Berners. Since 2004, Faringdon has held an annual weekend festival known originally as the "Faringdon Arts Festival", now as "FollyFest". It is generally held as a non-profit event on the last summer weekend of the school year.[38]
William Hoare of Bath (c.1707–1792), portraitist, painter and printmaker.
Henry James Pye (1745–1813), Poet Laureate from 1790 until his death, inherited Faringdon House from his father (also Henry).
Arturo Barea (1897–1957), Spanish journalist, writer and broadcaster who went into exile in 1938 during the Spanish Civil War and settled in England in 1939. He lived for ten years in Faringdon, where he is buried.
Mark Haskins (born 1988), an international professional wrestler who fights as the "Star Attraction", was brought up in Faringdon and has family in the town.[39]
Leonard Simbarashe Rwodzi (born 1999), known professionally as S1mba, songwriter, singer and rapper, was brought up in Faringdon and has family in the town.
^ ab'Shrivenham hundred: Introduction', in A History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 4, (London, 1924) pp. 500-502. British History Online. Accessed 1 June 2024.
^Sullivan, Paul (2012). "Legends, Superstition and the Supernatural – Grave News". The Little Book of Oxfordshire. The History Press. ISBN978-0752477381.[page needed]