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A notorious fire myth
There is an apocryphal story that
West and East Hagbourne were once one and the same village. The origins
of this myth can be traced to 10th March 1659 when most of East Hagbourne
was destroyed by fire. According to legend, this fire spread to houses
between the Hagbournes, thus separating them into two villages.
There is, however, plenty of evidence to support the fact that West and
East Hagbourne have always been two separate villages. Firstly, the fire
started at the east end of East Hagbourne and stopped at the church. Dr
J W Walker gave a lecture, based on his research and reported in the Reading
Mercury and Oxford Gazette in 1932, in which he stated:
On March 10th, 1659, the greatest calamity that ever befell Hagbourne
occurred; on that day a fire broke out at the east end of the village,
and, fanned by a strong east wind, spread among the thatched roofs of
the houses, causing the destruction of practically the whole village…
the flames spread from roof to roof and gutted every house until the church
was reached, and that sacred building, being of uninflammable material,
was spared, and thus the fire burnt itself out.
Secondly, historical documents written long before the fire of 1659 treat
West and East Hagbourne as two quite distinct villages. In the Domesday
Book, compiled in 1086, the two villages each have their own separate
entries. The villages were certainly tithed and taxed as two separate
holdings as far back as the reign of Edward the Confessor (1042-1066).
The two Hagbournes paid their taxes to different manorial lords and had
their own manors. In fact West Hagbourne had two manors by 1355 and probably
even earlier. The Lay Subsidy Rolls of 1334 confirm the separate status
of the two villages. Lay subsidies - so called because the clergy were
exempt - were a form of taxation on certain goods, and they show that
the two villages were taxed separately. Furthermore, in 1642, seventeen
years before the disastrous fire, the two villages each submitted their
own Protestation Returns. West Hagbourne's Return was signed by all 36
males of 18 years or over living in the village at the time.
Apart from this documentary evidence of two separate and distinct villages,
there are also geographical factors to consider. Centuries ago villages
were nucleated, that is to say, the village buildings were clustered together,
with their meadows, commons, woodlands and wastelands around them. Given
the distance between the two villages, it is most unlikely that West and
East Hagbourne could have been one large nucleated village.
Furthermore, there are no traces of any foundations of buildings or evidence
of any kind of habitation between the two villages and nothing has been
revealed by aerial photography. This evidence surely lays to rest the
myth which persists to this day that West and East Hagbourne were once
one village.
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