History Occasional Paper Series (HOPS)
These are either new publications specifically commissioned by the Longworth and District History Society or are facsimile editions of previously published valued local historical literature which had gone out-of-print. We have published five books in this series in 2007 at bargain prices.
The latest in this series, was published in October 2007, is :-
Hinton Waldrist through the Centuries
by Jasmine S. Howse (1968 and 1969) £11.00
The book has been out-of-print for many years. The new 2007 facsimile edition is published by Thematic Trails in association with Longworth and District History Society.
ISBN 978-0-948444-52-4 211 pages (A5) 23 illustrations including the 1762 enclosure map.
The facsimile edition combines the original two parts of the book which were written in 1968 and 1969 respectively.
Part One contains four chapters detailing the history of the village from pre-Domesday to the seventeenth century.
Part Two covers the eighteenth and nineteenth century. The book is the result of meticulous research using, wherever possible, surviving historical documents and maps. Statistics and quotes are frequently used to support the account. It is a compelling read.
Longworth Through the Centuriesby Jasmine S Howse (1980-82).
163 pages, plus appendix, 33 illustrations.
ISBN 978-0-948444-51-7 £9.00This 2007 facsimile edition is published by Thematic Trails in association with Longworth and District History Society.
It is a comprehensively researched book and chapter headings include: Early period, Medieval period, sixteenth century, seventeenth century, eighteenth century, nineteenth century.
The Life and Times of Southmoor Methodist Chapel
by Jan Kelly (2007) £6.00
ISBN 978-0-948444-48-7 Published by Thematic Trails for Longworth and District History Society. 76 pages (A4 size). 75 illustrations including 9 maps of local historic interest.
The story of the chapel at the crossroads in Southmoor, Oxfordshire, becomes a social history of a village, which has grown in population five-fold since the chapel was built in 1842.
The chapel has played a significant role in the development of the village but social changes, as have happened elsewhere, has seen this role in gradual decline.
Jan Kelly has chosen an appropriate time to gather together from dispersed documentary evidence and the memories of older members of the congregation, an intriguing record of the way the chapel has contributed to the evolution of this village community.
Village Millennium, a short history of Kingston Bagpuize
and Southmoor
by W R Carmichael (1971).
The 2007 facsimile edition is published by Thematic Trails for Longworth and District History Society.
ISBN 978-0-948444-50-0. 36 pages (A5) 9 illustrations. £3.00
This little booklet makes easy reading. In one evening session you can acquire a sound introduction to the long and interesting history of this settlement of Kingston Bagpuize and Southmoor and make an important step to feeling part of the village community.
The Cultivators
by Murray Maclean (1970). The 2007 revised and extended 2nd edition is published
by Thematic Trails for Longworth and District History Society.
ISBN 978-0948444-49-4 20 pages (A5). 13 illustrations. £1.50
A brief but succinct history of the development of agriculture in Kingston Bagpuize and Southmoor in the county of Berkshire, now Oxfordshire. The history spans 1000 years and the booklet was originally written as a supplement to the book Village Millennium by W R Carmichael (see above). This 2nd edition has a 4-page ‘postscript’ to record events which have taken the village into the 21st century.
