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 English Town Houses
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Hans-Bernd Abel said:
Nos. 12-13 & 14-15 Parks Road, North Oxford, seen from north east. Built in 1868 and 1869, architect(s) unspecified, Semi-detached houses on the Keble Road Triangle, called "South/North Grove" (Nos. 12/13) and "East View" (Nos. 14/15). The two remaining of originally four Victorian buildings on this section of Parks Road. Though no informations are available about the architects, Nos. 12-13 can be attributed to Frederick Codd, whose designs at 2 Bevington Rd and 58 Woodstock Rd are identical in style and workmanship. Nos. 14-15 represent a semi type which is quite common in this area, similar buildings can be found near Museums Rd and on Blackhall Rd, and particularly on Winchester Road. No. 15 was later enlarged at the north side, with additional windows and a chimney, furthermore attaching an extension at the north west corner. Everything else looks today almost like on this photograph, just 150 years older. A blue plaque at No. 12 notes today that this was the home of Novelist Joyce Cary from 1920 until his death in 1957. In 1963, Oxford University's Department of Theoretical Physics, headed by Prof. Rudolf Peierls, moved into Nos. 12 to 14. At that time the Victorian houses were already surrounded by modern buildings of the developing Science Area. Today, both buildings are housing offices and laboratories of the Department of Materials. The houses - not occupied yet - look brand new on this photograph, as if the last brick was set moments ago, the site not completely being cleaned up, thus the date of the photograph should also be around 1869. Sources: - T. Hinchcliffe: North Oxford (Yale Univ. Press) - Town Plan of Oxfordshire XXXIII.15.7 (1876), National Library of Scotland - Internet Archive (archive.org)
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