A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 13, Bampton Hundred (Part One). Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1996.
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A P Baggs, Eleanor Chance, Christina Colvin, C J Day, Nesta Selwyn, S C Townley, 'Lower Haddon: Church', in A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 13, Bampton Hundred (Part One), ed. Alan Crossley, C R J Currie( London, 1996), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol13/p89a [accessed 18 December 2024].
A P Baggs, Eleanor Chance, Christina Colvin, C J Day, Nesta Selwyn, S C Townley, 'Lower Haddon: Church', in A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 13, Bampton Hundred (Part One). Edited by Alan Crossley, C R J Currie( London, 1996), British History Online, accessed December 18, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol13/p89a.
A P Baggs, Eleanor Chance, Christina Colvin, C J Day, Nesta Selwyn, S C Townley. "Lower Haddon: Church". A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 13, Bampton Hundred (Part One). Ed. Alan Crossley, C R J Currie(London, 1996), , British History Online. Web. 18 December 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol13/p89a.
CHURCH.
No documentary evidence has been found for a parochial chapel at Lower Haddon, though a large, reportedly cruciform stone barn c. 360 yd. south of Lower Haddon Farm, demolished c. 1956 when its site was taken into Brize Norton airfield, featured lancet windows and crosses on the gables, and in the early 20th century was locally believed to have been a former chapel. (fn. 1) If so the absence of 16th-century documentation, in contrast with Bampton's other chapels, would suggest that it had been secularized before the Reformation, perhaps following late medieval depopulation; (fn. 2) the building was not marked on early 19th-century maps, however, and may simply have been a field barn built soon after Bampton's inclosure. (fn. 3)