A Brief History of the TownYou are here: Home > About Carterton > A Brief History of the Town
Carterton may well have seen earlier settlements
than our recent town. Bronze age flint tools have been found
in the area and a round barrow, now levelled, suggests that there
may have been an Iron Age settlement near the crossroads. Roman
settlements have been found at Alvescot and Kencot.
 |
| St Joseph's Church |
Much of what is now the northern part of the
town was owned by the Moleyns family from at least 1369, but
in 1429 William Lord Moleyns was killed at the siege of Orleans
and the land passed to the Hungerford family. During the mediaeval
period the main road through Carterton was one of the most important
in the country, taking trains of packhorses laden with Cotswold
wool over Radcot Bridge and on to Southampton for export to the
weaving centres of Europe.
In the 1770s the land was acquired by the
Duke of Marlborough. Rock Farm was built in about 1823 as a typical
Georgian farm complex, with a yard in front and two matching
threshing barns, one of which is now the Catholic Church, pictured
on the right.
The pattern of the present settlement dates
from 1894 when part of the estate was sold to Homesteads Limited
whose director was William Carter.
 |
| Ye Olde Aviator
|
The land was divided into plots of 6 acres and
sold for £20 an acre with bungalows costing from £120.
Many of the settlers were retired soldiers and refugees
from the towns. Carterton soon made its name in the market gardening
world. Black grapes from Frenchester Nurseries and the famous
Carterton tomatoes were sold at Covent Garden Market. There are
still a few of the original tin or asbestos settlers bungalows
in the town. The village flourished, with a tin mission church
and the first large building The Emporium being
built in 1911 with an upstairs room for meetings and dances.
This later became the Co-op, then The Golden Eagle, and is now
Ye Olde Aviator.
 |
| St John's Church |
Construction work on the airfield began in
1935. Wartime saw the rapid growth of the base. Following a raid
which destroyed 46 aircraft, the remainder were dispersed round
the village and one hangar still exists as a garage on the Alvescot
Road. From 1950 to 1965 the camp was to be the home of the USAF
bomber wings. The RAF returned in 1965 and undertook a large
building programme making RAF Brize Norton the main transport
base in the country.
With the growth of the village, the small
mission church at the central crossroads was replaced in 1963
by the church of St. John the Evangelist. The link with the mother
church of St. Marys at Black Bourton was kept alive by
the donation of one of the bells from the tower. This was made
by H. Knight of Reading and is dated 1619.
|