When Buddy and I walked
around Napton on Tuesday this week we visited an old clay pit at the top of the
hill. The clay was dug out and used for
making bricks at the, long demolished, Napton brickworks. I knew I had seen the remnants of the brickworks
when cruising on the South Oxford canal a few years ago so on Thursday we went
for a walk to see if we could find them again.
The remains of the wharf
at Napton brickworks which closed in 1970
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Coal was brought in by the
canal for the brick kilns and the empty boats were then loaded with bricks for
transporting to London and around the Midlands.
We had good views of
Napton-on-the-Hill as we walked along the canal as it goes practically ¾ of the way around
it.
View of the hill from the
north side – the windmill can be seen dead centre at the top
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A better view of the
windmill with a newly built half stone/half brick house.
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Remains of medieval strip
farming can be seen in the picture above.
Each strip used to be farmed by a different family and as non-reversible
ploughs were used the ridges and furrows built up over the centuries.
In the evening Karen and I
went into Leam to do any remaining present shopping that couldn’t be done on
line. Fortunately most of it involved picked
up parcels from shops where Karen had already ordered the goods on-line. We finished off with a pleasant dinner out.
2 comments:
Peter Nichols was the last legal tenant of the old wharf at Napton and he had his boat building business there. I can't remember what year he moved out probably somewhere around 2000.
Thanks you - I'll do some research on him and it :)
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