1
Southdale Road crosses Wentworth Road
Image: © Sarah Charlesworth
Taken: 8 Oct 2010
0.08 miles
2
Looking west along Carlton Road, Oxford
Carlton Road is a typical 1930s private housing development no different from many others. It looks much like this one http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1985413 However its occupiers were deemed to be under threat from the folk living in the neighbouring estate to the extent that a wall had to be put up to keep them out. Why? Because the occupiers of the latter estate were council tenants.
Note. This image has a detailed ‘shared description’ which you won’t see by viewing this image on a slideshow. To read it click on the image.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.08 miles
3
Banbury Road, Cutteslowe
Looking towards Oxford city centre from the northbound bus stop just south of Upland Park Road.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 8 Nov 2016
0.09 miles
4
Benchmark on flats (#448) Banbury Road
Ordnance Survey cut mark benchmark described on the Bench Mark Database at http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm35219.
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 13 Aug 2010
0.09 miles
5
Block of flats on Banbury Road
There is an OS benchmark
Image on the front side of the nearest apartment
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 13 Nov 2012
0.09 miles
6
Banbury Rd
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 22 Feb 2014
0.09 miles
7
Carlton Rd
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 22 Feb 2014
0.09 miles
8
Wolsey and Carlton Roads, Oxford
The white-painted house is 32 Carlton Road. Its neighbour on the other side of the lamp-post is 61 Wolsey Road. They don't look a great deal different and the accommodation they provide is probably broadly similar, three bedrooms, bathroom, kitchen and one or two reception rooms. They are even about the same age having been built in 1933 or 34. However the then occupiers of the redbrick house were deemed to be such a threat to the wellbeing of the occupiers of the white house that a wall was built across the road between the two to keep them separate. This curious example of segregation in the United Kingdom survived more or less intact for the entire period from 1934 until 1959 (a car did crash into it in 1936 but the wall was quickly repaired).
Note. This image has a detailed ‘shared description’ which you won’t see by viewing this image on a slideshow. To read it click on the image.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.10 miles
9
Looking west along Wentworth Road, Oxford
This view won't have changed a great deal since around 1934 when Wentworth Road was completed. The cars won't have been German-built VWs and Fords, more likely they would have been Morris Oxfords made down the road in Cowley. It would have been a different story looking in the opposite direction http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1984885
Note. This image has a detailed ‘shared description’ which you won’t see by viewing this image on a slideshow. To read it click on the image.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.10 miles
10
Carlton and Wolsey Roads, Oxford
Why bother with this? Streetview do it just as well. In most cases I wouldn't have. However, there is a reason and it's to do with class distinctions. The white house on the left is 59 Carlton Road. Its neighbour on the right is 94 Wolsey Road. Carlton Road was developed by a private company; Wolsey Road by the City of Oxford. The street names are different because the private company didn't want the reputation of its estate sullied by association with the council estate. The developers felt so strongly about this that they built a wall between the two houses extending across the road towards the viewpoint. Hard to credit but it stayed there for the great majority of the time between late 1934 and 9th March 1959. To find out why read on.
Note. This image has a detailed ‘shared description’ which you won’t see by viewing this image on a slideshow. To read it click on the image.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.10 miles