Lamport, Buckinghamshire

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Lamport Garden, 2016
Lamport Garden, 2016

Lamport (occasionally also Langport) was a hamlet in the parish of Stowe in north Buckinghamshire, England. It was cleared by the Temple family, as a result of enclosures, after 1739, to improve the amenity value of their new park at Stowe.<ref name=fisk>Template:Cite web</ref> The hamlet's name is Old English, meaning long town.<ref name=uki>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

Lamport consisted of two ancient manors, one of which was owned by the priory of Oseney and passed to Stowe; the other seems to have belonged to Luffield Abbey, whose estate had passed, by 1350, to a family named after the hamlet, and subsequently passed by marriage, in 1416, to the Dayrells (whose name continues in the village name of Lillingstone Dayrell).<ref name=uki /> It was annexed to Stowe to provide homes for the staff and servants of the new manor house thereTemplate:Citation needed.

In 1637, Peter Temple enclosed land around Lamport for his deer park. This aggrieved the Dayrells, who owned some of the enclosed land. A dispute, occasionally violent, ensued and eventually led to litigation in 1640 and a petition to Parliament. Notwithstanding the Dayrells' resistance, the village's continued to be enclosed and it was abandoned sometime after 1739.<ref name=fisk />

References

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