Linton Road

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linton Road as seen from Banbury Road.
Linton Lodge hotel on the north side of Linton Road.[1]
Forecourt of Wolfson College, at the end of Linton Road, close to the junction with Chadlington Road.

Linton Road is a road in North Oxford, England.[2]

At the western end is the Banbury Road. At the eastern end is Wolfson College, a graduate college of the University of Oxford. To the north at the eastern end, Garford Road runs parallel with Linton Road. The road also adjoins Northmoor Road, Charlbury Road and Chadlington Road.

Linton Lodge Hotel[1] is located in this road, as well as the Parklands Hotel on the corner of Banbury Road and Linton Road. The Bishop of Oxford also had a house here, near the western end, until its owners, Wolfson, reclaimed it in late 2014.[3] St Andrew's Church[4] is on the southeast corner of the junction with Northmoor Road. The road has speed humps to prevent traffic from moving too quickly.

History

Houses in the road were first leased between 1895 and 1925.[2] Architects include J. C. Gray, N. W. Harrison, E. J. Marriott, Arthur C. Martin, A. H. Moberly (who also worked with William Crabtree on the Peter Jones department store in London[5]), and Harry Wilkinson Moore. Of special architectural interest, as noted by Pevsner, is No. 7 Linton Road, on the northwest corner of the junction with Northmoor Road, designed by A. H. Moberly in 1903.[6]

On 4 May 1941, during World War II, an Armstrong Whitworth Whitley bomber of the Royal Air Force, based at RAF Abingdon, crashed at the eastern end of Linton Road on the site of what is now Wolfson College.[7] The crew and one civilian were killed, and two further people on the ground were injured.

Residents

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI