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Shipton-Under-Wychwood

Shipton-Under-Wychwood photos (3 available)

Old photo of Shipton-Under-Wychwood

Shipton-Under-Wychwood maps (2 available)

Old map of Shipton-Under-Wychwood

Shipton-Under-Wychwood books (11 available)

Shipton-Under-Wychwood memories

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Oxfordshire memories

The Marlborough

Charlbury, view from Grammar School Hill c1950

The white building in the picture below the church tower was the Marlborough pub. During the war through till the early 1950s my grandmother and grandfather were licencees and my father was brought up there. I have a picture of my grandfather and myself as a small child in the back yard of the pub. I'm not sure when it stopped being a pub - my grandmother left after my grandfather died in 1953, but the last time I went to Charlbury it was a private house.
A memory of Charlbury contributed by Diana Larkworthy

Escape to the country

I travelled to Chipping Norton to start a new life.  When I stepped off the coach on the high street and looked across the road I saw a very grand looking building and a sign saying The White Hart Hotel.  My next thought was I am going to work in that hotel, which I did!  I was also able to live-in, as other staff also did.  The White Hart at that time was a privately run hotel with a friendly informal atmosphere, especially in the public bar which was very popular with local residents.  The hotel was originally a coaching inn, and was one of the last, if not the last, to be used as such. The White Hart was also ...read more here
A memory of Chipping Norton contributed by Jane MacCallum

Cadel shop - Market Square

Witney, the Market Square c1955

The shop in the middle of the picture with the two awnings (now the Nationwide building society) used to belong to my great grandmother Eva Cadel and was a wool and toy shop.  My Grandmother and Great Aunt ran it until 1971.  My grandmother Joan ran the toy side and my Great Aunt Mary ran the wool.  Many people still today tell me that their first pram/doll/train set came from the Cadel shop. Pictures such as these are very special and are a treasure.
A memory of Witney contributed by Nicola Best

A child's memories of Eynsham

Eynsham, a Quaint Corner c1950

I lived in Eynsham for just 6 months when I was 9 years old.  My mother was doing her health visitor training in Oxford and so from Monday to Friday we lived in a rented cottage in the village and I attended the local school.  At the weekends, we returned to the family home in Stafford.  I have such happy and vivid memories of that episode in my life; it seemed to me that we had stepped back in time to some bygone era.  I shared a bed with my mother - the mattress was made of horsehair and it was lumpy and tickly.  We had a paraffin stove that made me feel sick at times, I did not like the ...read more here
A memory of Eynsham contributed by Sue Carlyon

Extracts From Shipton-Under-Wychwood & Oxfordshire books

Oxford, All Souls College and the Radcliffe Camera 1890

Founded in 1437 by Henry Chichele to commemorate Henry V and those who fell at Agincourt, All Souls is distinguished by some of the finest architecture in Oxford. The tower displaying the college arms was designed by Hawksmoor. The Radcliffe Camera is one of the reading rooms for the Bodleian Library, its dome an outstanding landmark on the city’s skyline.
An extract from from"Oxford Pocket Album".

Sandford-On-Thames, the Main Road c1955

The village is situated on a loop of the Thames between Oxford and Abingdon. Today, Sandford is a rapidly-expanding riverside village, but in the 1950s, it was a quiet rural community. Note the old RAC logo on the left.
An extract from from"Oxford Pocket Album".

Oxford, View on the Cherwell 1906

Hemmed in by a circle of hills and built on a gravel bank between the Thames Isis and the River Cherwell, Oxford creates the impression of sitting on an island. It was the damp climate here which probably drove the Romans away.
An extract from from"Oxford Pocket Album".

Oxford, College Barges 1922

This scenic stretch of the Thames, overlooked by Christ Church Meadow, has long been a rowing reach; at one time the bank would have been lined with eye-catching college barges, which were used as grandstands and clubhouses. Many of them have now gone—fallen into decay or converted into modest houseboats or holiday accommodation.
An extract from from"Oxford Pocket Album".

Oxford, Carfax Tower 1922

Over on the left there used to be a ‘pennyless bench’, where women sold butter and beggars scrounged a few shillings from passers-by. More than 300 years before this photograph was taken, the Carfax Conduit was built in the middle of the junction, conveying piped water from nearby Hinksey.
An extract from from"Oxford Pocket Album".