1
Houses round a green, Collington Way
Part of a new residential development on the north side of Kingston Bagpuize.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 28 May 2020
0.09 miles
2
Collington Way, Kingston Bagpuize
Part of a new residential area on the north side of the village.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 28 May 2020
0.10 miles
3
Bend in Oxford Road, Kingston Bagpuize
Image: © andrew auger
Taken: 11 Apr 2010
0.10 miles
4
End of the road
This was the main A420 through Kingston Bagpuize and Southmoor prior to the building of the bypass just to the north. Now it just serves a few houses and the bowls club before becoming closed to motor vehicles at the barrier.
Image: © andrew auger
Taken: 11 Apr 2010
0.12 miles
5
Oxford Road junction with the A415
In Kingston Bagpuize.
Image: © andrew auger
Taken: 11 Apr 2010
0.13 miles
6
The Hinds Head, Kingston Bagpuize
Image: © Roger Cornfoot
Taken: 11 Aug 2009
0.13 miles
7
Benchmark on Kingston Bagpuize / Fyfield boundary stone
Ordnance Survey cut mark benchmark described on the Bench Mark Database at http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm19979
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 8 Jan 2016
0.14 miles
8
Old Boundary Marker by Oxford Road, Kingston Bagpuize
Parish Boundary Marker by the UC road, in parish of Kingston Bagpuize with Southmoor (Vale of White Horse District), East of Kingston on old road to Fyfield, in bracken beneath electricity poles.
Surveyed
Milestone Society National ID: BE_LG62pb
Image: © Milestone Society
Taken: Unknown
0.14 miles
9
Sales Office, Collington Way
Flags and immaculate gardening, there's no mistaking a new estate sales office.
Part of a large new residential area on the north side of the village.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 28 May 2020
0.14 miles
10
War Memorial Crescent (3) - story of the stones, Village Green, Kingston Bagpuize, Oxon
This plaque on one of the stones tells their story and that of the Memorial. It reads: - Ancient Local Stones. These ancient stones were donated by Oxfordshire County Council and placed in position near Draycott Road in 1992 by Edmund Nuttall, Bypass Construction Engineers, at the instigation of Richard F. Cox, a local farmer from Southmoor, who wanted to create a Southmoor Henge. The five stones were taken from the land bordering Southmoor and Longworth at the time of the bypass construction, 1992/93, and retained to commemorate the new highway. They were also used as a boundary marker between land owned by St. John's College and land owned by Mr Cox. Archaeologists from the University Museum, Oxford, advise that these Corrallian limestone rocks are 150 million years old and were formed when grains of sand were deposited and cemented together by lime in what was a warm shallow sea that once covered present day Oxfordshire. In October 2012, with the agreement of the late Mr Cox's family, the stones were removed by Cliff Belcher and his sons to this new position to form the Kingston Bagpuize with Southmoor War Memorial - a natural and lasting tribute to those who sacrifice for their country and the freedoms we enjoy."
Image
Image
Image: © P L Chadwick
Taken: 25 Feb 2018
0.15 miles