Iliffe Cottage, 45 Church Road and Nos. 47-49

  • Rooftops c. 1900
  • 47 Church Road
  • Extract from 1910 map
  • 49 Church Road
Archive Notes:

Photograph of rooftops in the centre of the village, possibly taken from a window of Wheatley House, at a time when there were only three dwellings along the north side of Church Road to the east of the Parish Church and before Friday Lane, circa late 1800s. Numbers 45 and 47 Church Road (the two similar looking ones with 'white' roofs) are visible, while 49 church Road (set back) was not. According to the 1910 map, only numbers 45 (Iliffe House), 47 (Hornsey Cottage) and 49 were built by then, with No. 41 added by the 1930s.

45 Church Road is now called Iliffe House after William Iliffe Pike who lived here, as evidenced by the 1910 valuation survey. The URC suffered a severe loss in 1915 by the death of its beloved and devoted Church Secretary, Iliffe Pike, who had given the site for the schoolroom adjacent to the URC. He bequeathed his house (called ’’Iliffe Cottage”) to the Church to be used as a Manse for the Minister. By the terms of his Will, the property was entrusted to 9 Trustees - 5 appointed by himself, 5 by the County Union, and 5 from Church members. The plaque to the right of the Organ in the present Church interior testifies to his faithful service and to the high esteem in which he was held by his friends. See record 2519 for Pike's imnvolvement with the Urban District Council.

In 1896. He owned the lean-to cottage property on the side of the URC chapel and gave it to the congregation for a building site. The problem was, what to build? The congregation wanted a new Sunday Schoolroom; the friends at Oxford on whom Wheatley depended financially wanted a new Chapel and the old one converted into a schoolroom. The Schoolroom foundation stone was laid in Sept 1898. The weekday cottage prayer meetings revived and a Gospel Mission was held in 1913, the year Mr Pike died. William Iliffe Pike left his house on Church Road, (Iliffe Cottage, now No. 45) as a minister’s house (Manse) and had already given the property he owned for the Chapel school room. (Iliffe Cottage, the Manse House, was sold by auction at the Golden Cross Hotel on 20 February 1924, when the Chapel was under joint ministry with Cowley). (see Record 1628 for more details of the history of the URC). In the 1930s, Caleb Hawes lived here.

Source https://wheatleyurc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/TanningBarnToChurch.pdf page 47.

A photo of 47 Church Road is attached. Now known as Stonecroft, it was probably known as 'Owl's Nest' in 1921 as this house name was the next sequential propery on the enumerator's route for the census of that year, when Percival Pinnick, seed merchant, was living here.

49 Church Road was built in 1881, then called Park Hill, now Holywell Cottage, see record numbers 1800 and 1801

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