Cornell University Library
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April 2010 - 🇺🇸
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Recent uploads
The last upload was April 2010.
River above Eyjafjörður. uploaded April 2010
Eyjafjallajökull from Þórsmörk. Panoramic [view] A. uploaded April 2010
Reykjavík. National celebration, 1898. uploaded April 2010
Austurhlíð under Bjarnarfell. uploaded April 2010
Reykjavík.--Vesturgata. uploaded April 2010
Old chair from Rauðisandur. Nat[ional] Museum, Reykjavík. uploaded April 2010
Stórólfshvoll Church. - Bowl, etc. uploaded April 2010
Creamery (Rjómabú) at Seljaland (Eyjafjöll). uploaded April 2010
Þingvellir.--Nikulásargjá. uploaded April 2010
Svínafell. Flosi's home. uploaded April 2010
Geysir from Tungufljót. uploaded April 2010
Coast from Búðir, and Tröllkarl. uploaded April 2010
Hveravellir. Eyvindarhver. uploaded April 2010
Hvítá above Kópsvatn ferry. uploaded April 2010
Vopnafjörður. uploaded April 2010
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Nineteenth-century English House
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Hans-Bernd Abel said:
No. 113 Woodstock Road, North Oxford, seen from southeast. Built in 1863 by W. Wilkinson for wine merchant Edwin Butler. Named "Newton Lodge", this house was located opposite St. Philip & St. James Church. One of the houses which were demolished in the late 1960s to make way for the 'Butlers' Close' apartment building. Illustrated (in the same perspective) on plates IX and X of Mr. Wilkinsons's book 'English Country Houses'. Stylistically similar to No. 31 Banbury Road by Wilkinson, i.e. it shares the same elements (e.g. bay windows, tower) using a different layout. The bay window on the left is that of the dining room, next to the drawing room behind. The kitchen is (typical for WIlkinson) not in the basement but on ground level (on the right side). Four bedrooms on the first floor, with a dressing room in the "tower" above the entrance door. Sources: - T. Hinchcliffe: North Oxford (Yale Univ. Press) - Internet Archive (archive.org) for 'English Country Houses' - Picture Oxon, photographs by P. S. Spokes and R. F. Wills
Nineteenth-century House
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Hans-Bernd Abel said:
No. 33 Banbury Road, seen from east. Built in 1865-67, architect: Charles Edward Bruton. Named "Springfield". (At that time the address was 16 St Giles’s Road). The house was first leased by the Revd J. V. Durell for his widowed mother and his unmarried siblings. Members of the Durell family lived there until 1924. In 1928 Springfield was leased by nuns of the Anglican Community of St. Mary's who established a hostel there for students of the Society of Oxford Home-Students (after 1942 St. Anne's Society). Later, accommodation space was further extended by aquiring adjacent Nos. 31 (The Firs, also imaged here in this album) and 35 (todays Eleanor Plumer House). Together with other villas on Bevington Road, the three linked houses of Springfield St. Mary contributed to the development of what later became the site of St. Anne's College. After St. Anne's received full College status in 1959, they developed ambitious plans to meet accomodation requirements due to increasing student numbers. No. 33 Banbury Road was the first which had to make way for a modern, four storey student residence, Wolfson Building, and was demolished in 1963. Besides the Gardener who is proudly presenting his lawn roller here, another member of the household staff, probably the Butler or Footman can be seen in this photograph watching the scenery from the dining room window (1st floor right). Sources: - T. Hinchcliffe: North Oxford (Yale Univ. Press) - St. Sepulchres Cemetery web site, Oxford (The following material found at St. Anne's web site): - The Ship 2020-2021 - Amy Langer (ed.): St. Anne's College Alumnae Personal Histories - Dr. David Smith: St. Anne's College 1952-2012 - Bevington Road: A History
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