Taynton is a village and civil parish about 1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) northwest of Burford in West Oxfordshire. The village is on Coombe Brook, a tributary of the River Windrush. The parish is bounded in the south by the River Windrush, in the north partly by Coombe Brook and its tributary Hazelden Brook, in the west by the county boundary with Gloucestershire and in the east by field boundaries. The 2001 Census recorded the parish's population as 108.[1]
The Domesday Book records that in 1086 Taynton had two water mills.[11] There is still a Taynton Mill in the Windrush valley downstream from Coombe Brook's confluence with the river. The Manor of Taynton's other mill may have been 14 miles (23 km) away at Northmoor, where the Manor of Taynton held land.[11]
Taynton stone
The Domesday Book records a quarry at Taynton.[3][12] The Taynton Limestone Formation is a Middle Jurassic Cotswold limestone.[13] It is a high-quality freestone that for centuries has been used for ashlar and other precision masonry. The quarries, now all disused, are on the east side of the valley of Coombe Brook, starting 1⁄2-mile (800 m) north of the village and extending another 1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) up the valley.[14]
The navigability of the River Thames affected Taynton's ability to supply building stone. Originally the stone was taken 14 miles (23 km) overland to Eynsham before being loaded onto barges.[15] However, when Eton College was being built in the 15th century, navigation on the Upper Thames was so bad that stone was taken overland 40 miles (64 km) to river wharves at Henley-on-Thames.[17] In the 17th and 18th centuries the river was sometimes navigable upstream from Eynsham, so barges loaded the stone at Radcot, 12 miles (19 km) from Taynton.[23] Despite transport limitations in earlier centuries, products from Taynton sometimes included substantial monoliths. In the 17th century Robert Plot recorded that Sir Compton Reade had a stone mash tun made at Taynton that measured 6+3⁄8×3+3⁄8×4+1⁄2 feet (1.9×1.0×1.4 m) and held about 65 bushels[19] (about 2,400 litres). A team of 21 horses hauled it by road from Taynton to Shipton-under-Wychwood,[19] a distance of about 4 miles (6.4 km).
Local buildings
No. 16, or Strong's House, is a gable-fronted house with a date stone of 1676.[5] It was built for Thomas Strong, who was master mason to Sir Christopher Wren. It is a Grade II* listed building.[24] As well as the manor house and Strong's House, a number of other houses in the village date from the 17th century. No. 5 is much restored but in its garden are two gothic stone window frames that may be medieval.[5] The village school was built in 1877 and a post office had opened by 1895.[25] Neither remains open today.