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BRIGHTWELL

"BRIGHTWELL, a parish in the hundred of Moreton, in the county of Berks, 2 miles to the N.W. of Wallingford. It is situated on the S.W. bank of the Thames, not far from the Great Western railway, and is bounded on the S. by the small river Tadsey. A castle existed here at an early period, which is supposed to have been destroyed in the reign of Henry II., to whom it was surrendered. There are no remains of the building, and its site is uncertain. The living is a rectoryAsterisk denotes that there is a parsonage and glebe belonging to 
the living in the diocese of Oxford, of the annual value of £674, in the patronage of the Bishop of Winchester. The church, dedicated to St. Agatha, is a Norman structure, but the tower was rebuilt in 1797. The church was re-roofed in 1815, and again restored in 1858. It contains a monument to Dr. Thomas Godwyn, the archaeologist, who once held the rectory, and died here in 1642. This living was also held by two other eminent men - Edward Bernard, Professor of Astronomy at Oxford, 1673-1684, and Thomas Wintle, the Hebraist. The latter was rector here for 40 years, being appointed in 1774 and dying in the parish in 1814. There is a chapel belonging to the Baptists in the village, but it has been recently closed; also a National school. The charitable endowments, including a small bequest for education, produce about £28 a year."

"MACKNEY, a village in the parish of Brightwell, hundred of Moreton, county Berks, 1 mile W. of Wallingford. It is situated on the Thames, near the line of the Great Western railway."

From The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland (1868)
Transcribed by Colin Hinson ©2003


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