The name derives from a compound of the
Old English personal name Whitlac with the noun for a river crossing "
ford". The village is first mentioned when Ufa, a
Saxon Earl of Warwick, gave the land at Wixford and his body to be buried to the
monastery of
Evesham Abbey in 974. However, Godwine, a powerful man who had purchased the inheritance of that
abbey from
King Ethelred, granted it to Wulfgeat, son and heir to Ufa, for life, upon condition it was returned. Notwithstanding this agreement, Wulfgeat's heirs retained the land until the time of
King Edward the Confessor, when
Abbot Agelwyne purchased it from Wygod, a potent
baron and heir to Wulfgeat. Wulfgeat's heirs paid a valuable price and regained the land for the
monks. It is recorded in the
Domesday Book "In Ferncombe Hundred, Evesham Abbey holds 5
hides in Witelavesford. Land for 6 ploughs. In lordship 2; 3 male and 2 female slaves; 4 villagers and 6 smallholders with 2 ploughs. A mill at 10s and 20 sticks of eels; meadow, 24 acres; woodland 1 furlong long and 1/2 wide. Value before 1066, 40s; later 30s; now 50s. Wigot held this land before 1066."
William Shakespeare is said to have joined a party of
Stratford folk which set itself to outdrink a drinking club at
Bidford-on-Avon, and as a result of his labours in that regard to have fallen asleep under the crab tree of which a descendant is still called Shakespeare's tree. When morning dawned, his friends wished to renew the encounter but he wisely said "No, I have drunk with "Piping
Pebworth, Dancing
Marston, Haunted Hillboro', Hungry
Grafton, Dodging
Exhall, Papist Wixford, Beggarly
Broom and Drunken Bidford" and so, presumably, I will drink no more. The story is said to date from the 17th century, but of its truth or of any connection of the story or the verse to Shakespeare there is no evidence. The reasons for the village being described as papist remain unclear, but may be a reference to the
Catholic Throckmorton family. In 1541, the village passed to Sir
George Throckmorton, in whose family it remained until 1919, when the estate was sold and the
manorial rights extinguished. ==Notable buildings==