next to
St Helen's parish church A Neolithic stone
hand axe was found at Abingdon.
Petrological analysis in 1940 identified the stone as
epidotised tuff from
Stake Pass in the
Lake District, to the north. Stone axes from the same source have been found at
Sutton Courtenay,
Alvescot,
Kencot and
Minster Lovell. Abingdon has been occupied from the early to middle
Iron Age and the remains of a late Iron Age defensive enclosure (or
oppidum) lies below the town centre. The oppidum was in use throughout the
Roman occupation. A Neolithic
causewayed enclosure was found in Abingdon, dating to the 36th or 37th century BC. It was found in 1926 while quarrying for gravel, and was partly excavated in 1926 and 1927 by
E.T. Leeds. Subsequent excavations took place in 1954 and 1963. A Roman villa and subsequent Saxon farmstead buildings have been excavated at Barton Court Farm.
Abingdon Abbey was founded in
Saxon times, possibly around 676, but its early history is confused by numerous legends, invented to raise its status and explain the place name. The name seems to mean 'Hill of a man named Æbba, or a woman named Æbbe', possibly the saint to whom
St Ebbe's Church in
Oxford was dedicated (
Æbbe of Coldingham or a different
Æbbe of Oxford). However, Abingdon stands in a valley and not on a hill. It is thought that the name was first given to a place on
Boars Hill above
Chilswell, and the name was transferred to its present site when the Abbey was moved. In 1084,
William the Conqueror celebrated Easter at the Abbey and it is possible that his son Henry I received some schooling at the abbey. In the 13th and 14th centuries, Abingdon was a flourishing agricultural centre with an extensive trade in
wool and a famous weaving and clothing manufacturing industry. The abbot seems to have held a market from very early times and charters for the holding of markets and fairs were granted by various sovereigns, from
Edward I to
George II. In 1337 there was a famous riot in protest at the Abbot's control of this market in which several of the monks were killed. After the abbey's
dissolution in 1538, the town sank into decay. In 1556, upon receiving a representation of its pitiable condition,
Mary I granted a
charter incorporating the town as a
borough, governed by a mayor, two
bailiffs, twelve chief
burgesses and sixteen secondary burgesses, the mayor to be clerk of the market, coroner and a
JP. The present
Christ's Hospital originally belonged to the Guild of the
Holy Cross, on the dissolution of which
Edward VI founded the
almshouses instead, under its present name. The borough elected one
member of parliament; this right would continue until the
Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. The 1556 charter also catered for the appointment of a town clerk and other officers, and the borough boundaries were described in detail. Later charters, from
Elizabeth I,
James I,
James II,
George II and
George III, made no considerable change. James II changed the style of the corporation to that of a mayor, twelve
aldermen and twelve
burgesses. Abingdon became the
county town of
Berkshire sometime after receiving its charter in 1556.
Assize courts were held in Abingdon from 1570, but in the 17th century it was vying with
Reading for county town status. The
county hall and
court house were built between 1678 and 1682, to assert this status. The building, now the
Abingdon County Hall Museum, was reputedly designed by
Christopher Kempster, who worked with Sir
Christopher Wren. Abingdon borough police was the police force responsible for policing the Borough until 1889. It was formed as a result of the
Municipal Corporations Act 1835. The force was amalgamated into the
Berkshire Constabulary following the
Local Government Act 1888, which required all boroughs with populations of less than 10,000 to amalgamate their police forces with their adjoining county constabulary. Today, the area is policed by the successor to Berkshire Constabulary,
Thames Valley Police. In 1790
Abingdon Lock was built, replacing navigation via the
Swift Ditch. In 1810, the
Wilts & Berks Canal opened, linking Abingdon with
Semington on the
Kennet and Avon Canal. Abingdon became a key link between major industrial centres such as
Bristol,
London,
Birmingham and the
Black Country. In 1856 the Abingdon Railway opened, linking the town with the
Great Western Railway at . However, Abingdon's failure to engage fully with the railway revolution, accepting only a branch line, sidelined the town in favour of
Reading which became the County Town in 1869. The
Wilts & Berks Canal was abandoned in 1906 but a voluntary trust is now working to restore and re-open it.
Abingdon railway station was closed to passengers in September 1963. The line remained open for goods until 1984, including serving the
MG car factory, which opened in 1929 and closed in October 1980 as part of a
British Leyland rationalisation plan. The nearest railway station is , away. Much of the original Abingdon branch line is now a cyclepath, whilst the land on which the station stood has been extensively redeveloped, and is now the site of a large
Waitrose store and surrounded by a large number of new flats and houses. The corporation was reformed, under the
Municipal Corporations Act 1835, but was abolished under the
Local Government Act 1972, which enacted extensive local government reorganisation across England and Wales with effect from 1 April 1974. As a result of this reorganisation, Berkshire County Council's northern boundary was much reduced and Abingdon's governance was transferred to
Oxfordshire, with the town becoming the seat of the new
Vale of White Horse District Council, and Abingdon becoming a
civil parish with a town council. Since the 1980s, Abingdon has played host to a number of information communication companies, with many based in the town's respective business and science parks. As a consequence, and owing to Abingdon's proximity to academic and scientific institutions in
Oxford, the town has seen an influx of young professionals taking residence in the town's many residential areas such as Peachcroft. The town was sometimes historically called "Abingdon-on-Thames", but the official name of the borough (as given in statutes from the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 to the Local Government Act 1972 and all intervening Ordnance Survey maps) was simply "Abingdon". Local councillors voted in November 2011 to change the official name of the town to "Abingdon-on-Thames", and the change took effect on 23 February 2012. ==Leisure and media==