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Secret Oxfordshire |
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The
(former) Town Hall, Banbury, c1800
Copyright Oxfordshire County Council Photographic Archive |
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On
this page you can listen and read about some amazing stories from
Oxfordshire.
You
can find out more unusal stories from the county town in on the
secret Oxford page here.
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Secret
Oxford >>>
Castle
- Banbury |
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Plan
of the site of Banbury Castle, 1685
Copyright Oxfordshire County Council Photographic Archive
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The
excavations that took place before the construction of Banbury's
new shopping centre "Castle Quays" revealed a remarkable
fact - that this historic town had had not just one castle
but a succession of castles. This major dig revealed the very
first castle - a Saxon Manor House constucted from wood and
an impressive stone castle built for Alexander the Magnificent
who was the Bishop of Lincoln with Banbury in his patch. You
might have thought that "new towns" began with Welling
Garden City but these excavations give Banbury the chance
to claim that it was the site of a 12th century new town.
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Hear
91热爆 Oxford's Mark Young explain more ... |
Globe
- Banbury |
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The
Reindeer Inn, the Globe Room, c1889
Copyright Oxfordshire County Council Photographic Archive
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A
1912 edition of the Banbury Guardian claimed that the Globe
Room had disappeared and had been seen in the United States.
The Globe Room which forms part of Banbury's Ye Olde Reindeer
Pub is a superb panelled room dating from the 16th century
which witnessed several trials of Royalists during the English
Civil War. Find out how the room was found in the 1960's in
London and now has been restored to its original Banbury home.
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The
Reindeer Inn, courtyard, c1885 Copyright Oxfordshire County Council Photographic Archive
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Hear
91热爆 Oxford's Mark Young explain more ... |
Townhall
- Banbury |
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The
(former) Town Hall, Banbury, c1800
Copyright Oxfordshire County Council Photographic Archive
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Few
people know that Banbury's town hall in the 19th century stood
at the top of Market Place and was later moved to a site near
the town's historic waterway. Hear the remarkable tale of
the town's former mayor, Thomas Draper, who loved the first
town hall so much that he had it dismantled brick by brick
and reconstructed in the canal zone. The canal zone was also
home to Banbury's legendary 19th century beer houses which
quenched the thirst of its hard working population. The Golden
Lion, constucted in 1860, was one of the best known beer houses
which sadly closed in the 1960's.
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Hear
91热爆 Oxford's Mark Young explain more ... |
Shipton
Fountain |
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Fountain
on the green, Shipton-u-Wychwood, 31.1.1974
Copyright Oxfordshire County Council Photographic Archive |
The
charming village of Shipton under Wychwood is home to a fountain
which commemorates one of Britain's worst maritime disasters.
The monument was erected in 1878 to remember the 17 villagers
from Shipton who lost their lives on their way to a new life
in New Zealand. The good ship Cospatrick was an emigrant ship
working for the New Zealand Government. It caught fire off
Tristan da Cunha and only 3 crew members survived with 477
passengers losing their lives to fire and the sea. The national
press of the time claimed that the survivors drank the blood
of and ate the livers of the dead as they drifted for weeks.
The captain, Alexander Elmslie remained on the ship before
finally jumping overboard and drowning. Two full rescue boats
were launched but only one was eventually found by the British
ship - the Sceptre. Charles Macdonald, Thomas Lewis and James
Cotter were the only survivors.
The
17 villagers from Shipton were hoping to escape the poverty
of being an agricultural worker by finding a new life. They
all came from two families - the Townsends and the Hedges.
In 1974 a beech tree was planted in Shipton under Wychwood
to commemorate 100 years since the sinking.
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Hear
91热爆 Oxford's Mark Young explain more ... |
Benson
Lido |
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In
1937 RAF Benson began to expand - anticipating aggression
from a Germany ruled by the Nazi Party. By 1939 the 150th
Squadron had moved in and within two years, this historic
village was also home to the new Photographical Reconnaissance
Unit.
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Throughout
the war the servicemen had exclusive use of a lido run by
a Mr Young, of which only a lichen incrusted plaque remains.
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Hear
91热爆 Oxford's Mark Young explain more ... |
Seacourt |
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Six
hundred years ago the prosperous village of Seacourt was the
ideal stopping point for pilgrims on their way to St Margaret's
Well at Binsey. The lost village of Seacourt, which was situated
just off the Botley Road, lay at the Western End of Oxford close
to the old Berkshire and Oxfordshire border. It took its name
from the church of Seckworth - hence Seacourt. Today this former
"lost village" lies under pasture on the eastern end
of Wytham Hill and on the Berkshire bank of Seacourt stream
which marked the county boundary.
Evidence
that the village ever existed emerged in the summer of 1939
when Oxford archaeologists took advantage of the proposed
western bypass to begin excavations. Later excavations were
able to pinpoint the exact site but the reasons for the demise
of this once busy stop off point, which left the village which
only two residents in 1439, are not clear. Flooding and the
Black Death are considered to be the two key factors. Discover
how Oxford's well known "Park and Ride" takes its
name from this "lost village".
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Hear
91热爆 Oxford's Mark Young explain more ... |
Check
out our photo gallery of the Canal Basin. |
Secret
Oxford >>>
:
If
you know any interesting or unusual stories about Oxfordshire then
we want to know about it. Email
your story here.
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