Near Enstone is a ruined cromlech known as the ”Hoar Stone.” The villagers say that “it was put up in memory of a certain general named Hoar, who was slain in the Civil War. It was put there, as that was a piece of land no one owned. A letter signed ZWn in the Oxford Times of March 29, 1902, mentions this story, and adds that “there was a battle over there, Lidstone way.” Lidstone being a hamlet of Enstone, about one and a half miles to the north west. Mr W Harper in ‘Observations on Hoar-Stones,’ printed in Archaeologica (1832) xxv., 54, speaks of the “War Stone at Enstone. This conspicuous object is said by the country people to have been set up ‘at a French wedding.’”
From:Stray Notes on Oxfordshire Folklore, by Percy Manning, in Folklore, Vol. 13, No. 3. (Sep. 29, 1902), pp. 288-295.