Ipsden is a village and civil parish in the Chiltern Hills in South Oxfordshire, about 3 miles (5 km) southeast of Wallingford.
[3] The north aisle of the present church was built in the 12th century[2] and retains a Norman window.
Their other son, John Thurlow Reade died in India in 1827, and there is a pyramidal stone monument to him in a field around 0.5 miles (800 m) north of Ipsden House.
[6] Another member of the family, the historian and explorer William Winwood Reade (1838–75), is buried in St. Mary's churchyard.
Between 1930 and 1939, Ipsden House was the home of novelist Rosamond Lehmann and her husband Wogan Philipps, 2nd Baron Milford.
[7] Since 1950 it has been the premises of an educational trust, the Braziers Park School of Integrative Social Research.
[9] Ipsden Farm, just west of the village, has an 18th-century barn built of brick on an L-shaped plan with roofs that are tiled[6] and hipped.
It was presented to the community of Ipsden by an Indian gentleman named Maharaja Sir Deonarayun Singh, a year after the well at Stoke Row opened.
[15] The parish includes the hamlet of Hailey, immediately north of Ipsden village.