Church of England The oldest parts of the
Church of England parish church of
St Leonard are
Norman, including a
diapered tympanum that was over the north door until this was dismantled for the building of the north
aisle. The church was extensively rebuilt in the 14th century, and the
arcade of the south aisle survives from this period. The south
chapel is 15th century, built for Maud Warner as a memorial for her husband Richard, a woolman. The tower is also Medieval. A few
Decorated Gothic and
Perpendicular Gothic windows survive, but in the 1870s some were moved to different positions within the church. In 1763
Edward Horne, a local landowner, obtained permission to build a burial vault east of the Warner chapel and south of the
chancel. In 1877 the architects
H.J. Tollit and
Edwin Dolby restored St Leonard's. The church is a
Grade II* listed building. The west tower had a
ring of six bells until 1909, when two recently cast ones were hung and increased it to eight. Henry I Knight of
Reading, Berkshire cast the fourth bell in 1587. Ellis I Knight cast the sixth bell in 1635. Henry II Knight cast the third and fifth bells in 1663. Charles and John
Rudhall of Gloucester cast the seventh bell in 1785. Mears and Stainbank of the
Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast the tenor bell in 1869 and the treble and second bells in 1905. St Leonard's parish is now part of the
Benefice of Icknield, along with the parishes of
Britwell Salome,
Pyrton and
Swyncombe.
Roman Catholic During the
English Reformation Oxfordshire had numerous
recusant Roman Catholics. In 1549
William Grey, 13th Baron Grey de Wilton was sent to Oxfordshire with 1,500 troops to enforce the Reformation. Grey ordered William Boolar, a Catholic of Watlington, to be
hanged as an example. Despite persecution, a number of local landowning families including the Stonors remained Catholic, and they and their chaplains supported small numbers of other Catholics in the area. In 1930 Fr. William Brown, the chaplain at
Stonor Park, brought about the building of the Roman Catholic church of the
Sacred Heart in Watlington. The present Roman Catholic church in Watlington is dedicated to St
Edmund Campion, a
Jesuit priest who was executed at
Tyburn in 1581.
Non-conformist During the 17th and 18th centuries several
nonconformist denominations existed in Watlington, with
Quakers,
Baptists and
Seventh Day Baptists most prominent in different periods.
Methodist preachers visited Watlington by invitation from 1764, with
John Wesley himself preaching in the town in 1766, 1774 and 1775. The current
Wesleyan chapel was built in 1812, and now forms part of the Oxford
Methodist Circuit. ==Education==