Oxfordshire County Council Election Results 1973-2009

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Oxfordshire County Council Election Results 1973-2009 Oxfordshire County Council Election Results 1973-2009 Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher The Elections Centre Plymouth University The information contained in this report has been obtained from a number of sources. Election results from the immediate post-reorganisation period were painstakingly collected by Alan Willis largely, although not exclusively, from local newspaper reports. From the mid- 1980s onwards the results have been obtained from each local authority by the Elections Centre. The data are stored in a database designed by Lawrence Ware and maintained by Brian Cheal and others at Plymouth University. Despite our best efforts some information remains elusive whilst we accept that some errors are likely to remain. Notice of any mistakes should be sent to [email protected]. The results sequence can be kept up to date by purchasing copies of the annual Local Elections Handbook, details of which can be obtained by contacting the email address above. Front cover: the graph shows the distribution of percentage vote shares over the period covered by the results. The lines reflect the colours traditionally used by the three main parties. The grey line is the share obtained by Independent candidates while the purple line groups together the vote shares for all other parties. Rear cover: the top graph shows the percentage share of council seats for the main parties as well as those won by Independents and other parties. The lines take account of any by- election changes (but not those resulting from elected councillors switching party allegiance) as well as the transfers of seats during the main round of local election. The lower graph shows for each main round of local elections the overall percentage turnout (solid line), the percentage of women candidates standing at (dotted line) and the percentage of women among those elected (hashed line). Chinnor & Tetsworth (4795) Henley (North) (4383) vote share vote share Oxfordshire 1973 Barlow C. Ms. Con 1,175 54.2 Sadler R. Prog I 0 0.0 Tucker D. Ms. Lab 994 45.8 Turnout 0.0 0.0 Abingdon No. 1 (Caldecott) (2588) Turnout 45.2 8.3 vote share Henley (South) (4130) Carter K. Lab 1,049 64.9 Chipping Norton (4450) vote share Steggles L. Con 568 35.1 vote share Chalcraft J. Con 1,016 44.3 Hannis J. Ind 1,023 52.9 Cherrington E. Ms. Lib 705 30.8 Turnout 62.5 29.7 Latcham H. Ms. Lab 912 47.1 Boulton B. Lab 570 24.9 Abingdon No. 2 (5022) Turnout 43.5 5.7 Turnout 55.5 13.6 vote share Westall A. Con 1,266 71.7 Chipping Norton Rural No. 1 (5199) Henley Rural No. 1 (Mapledurham) (3850) Wesson J. Lab 500 28.3 vote share vote share Banbury J. Con 1,558 61.1 Darlow F. Con 1,226 82.6 Turnout 35.2 43.4 Pomfret R. Lab 990 38.9 Dent A. Lab 259 17.4 Abingdon No. 3 (4874) Turnout 49.0 22.3 Turnout 38.6 65.1 vote share Mettrick D. Con 1,056 50.8 Chipping Norton Rural No. 2 (4959) Henley Rural No. 2 (4622) Dyson A. Ms. Lab 1,023 49.2 vote share vote share Juler E. Ms. Ind 1,617 66.6 Crook A. Con 1,202 62.9 Turnout 42.7 1.6 Norris P. Lab 812 33.4 Stoneham B. Lab 362 19.0 Thompson E. Ind 346 18.1 Banbury No. 1 (4540) Turnout 49.0 33.1 vote share Turnout 41.3 44.0 Greenman A. Lab 1,076 54.6 Chipping Norton Rural No. 3 (4330) Jelfs D. Con 895 45.4 vote share Henley Rural No. 3 (4217) Colston O. Con 1,583 72.5 vote share Turnout 43.4 9.2 Duncan J. Lab 601 27.5 Denning F. Lib 1,440 67.1 Goldsmid J. Con 586 27.3 Banbury No. 2 (5586) Turnout 50.4 45.0 Cooper H. Lab 119 5.5 vote share Black G. Lab 1,501 55.8 Cumnor (4986) Turnout 50.9 39.8 Fox W. Con 1,188 44.2 vote share Sinclair P. Con 1,506 65.1 Henley Rural No. 4 (4700) Turnout 48.1 11.6 Hope M. Ms. Lab 806 34.9 vote share Horne H. Con 1,347 50.6 Banbury No. 3 (Neithrop) (4656) Turnout 46.4 30.3 Winter M. Lib 945 35.5 vote share May C. Lab 371 13.9 Williams A. Lab 1,010 51.2 Didcot (Manor) (5665) Steer G. Con 720 36.5 vote share Turnout 56.7 15.1 Robson B. Lib 241 12.2 Hitchcock L. Lab 1,320 51.1 Clewes A. Con 1,261 48.9 Henley Rural No. 5 (4204) Turnout 42.3 14.7 vote share Turnout 45.6 2.3 Riley J. Lib 1,539 72.9 Banbury No. 4 (Ruscote) (5507) Parker V. Ms. Con 573 27.1 vote share Didcot (Mereland) (3930) Booth A. Lab 1,379 63.8 vote share Turnout 50.2 45.7 Fisher G. Lib 783 36.2 Duggan B. Lab 1,100 68.8 Daukes O. Con 498 31.2 Hinksey (4196) Turnout 39.3 27.6 vote share Turnout 40.7 37.7 Brogden J. Con 1,067 64.4 Banbury Rural No. 1 (4628) Inman P. Ms. Lab 590 35.6 vote share Dorchester (4734) Gardiner J. Con 862 42.0 vote share Turnout 39.5 28.8 Cairns D. Ms. Ind 841 41.0 Farrant H. Con 1,142 58.6 Marshall J. Lab 348 17.0 Tregear B. Ms. Lab 808 41.4 Hormer (5394) vote share Turnout 44.3 1.0 Turnout 41.2 17.1 Francis J. Con 1,409 53.4 Hall D. Ms. Lab 1,232 46.6 Banbury Rural No. 2 (4417) Drayton (4295) vote share vote share Turnout 49.0 6.7 Clifton H. Ms. Con 1,326 73.3 Norman C. Con 1,359 56.4 Dudman R. Lab 483 26.7 Price N. Lab 1,052 43.6 Littlemore (6354) vote share Turnout 41.0 46.6 Turnout 56.1 12.7 Ledger B. Ms. Lab 1,678 61.1 Todd J. Ms. Con 815 29.7 Banbury Rural No. 3 (5025) Faringdon No. 1 (4782) Johnson P. Lib 254 9.2 vote share vote share Mulley P. Con 1,146 60.8 Douglass N. Con 1,440 58.0 Turnout 43.2 31.4 Taylor N. Lib 740 39.2 Terry S. Ms. Lab 1,041 42.0 Marcham (5018) Turnout 37.5 21.5 Turnout 51.9 16.1 vote share Hook B. Con 1,469 71.0 Benson (5258) Faringdon No. 2 (5319) Newton P. Lab 599 29.0 vote share vote share Deed B. Ind 1,435 61.4 Bond E. Con 1,476 65.5 Turnout 41.2 42.1 Yarwood C. Con 904 38.6 Murphy E. Lab 573 25.4 Peters J. Ind 203 9.0 Moreton (6488) Turnout 44.5 22.7 vote share Turnout 42.3 40.1 Cross G. Con 1,892 64.6 Bicester (6742) Skinner R. Lab 1,036 35.4 vote share Great Milton & Wheatley (6376) Hollis J. Ind 1,842 51.6 vote share Turnout 45.1 29.2 Powell R. Lab 1,725 48.4 Audley-Miller P. Con 1,602 54.4 Cooper T. Lab 1,344 45.6 Turnout 52.9 3.3 Turnout 46.2 8.8 Results of the County Council Elections 1973-2009 1 Oxford (Blackbird Leys) (5434) Wantage Rural No. 2 (5716) vote share Oxford (West) (4973) vote share Gillians A. Lab 1,306 70.6 vote share Burrells W. Con 1,586 52.0 Wilson R. Con 543 29.4 Gibbs O. Ms. Lab 1,320 60.2 Smith K. Lab 1,465 48.0 Stanton-King R. Con 550 25.1 Turnout 34.0 41.3 Hannon J. Lib 323 14.7 Turnout 53.4 4.0 Oxford (Cherwell) (4851) Turnout 44.1 35.1 Watlington (2971) vote share vote share Simpson W. Con 1,112 46.6 Oxford (Wolvercote) (4715) Montgomery A. Con 570 40.7 Ward G. Lab 695 29.1 vote share Moseley B. Lab 337 24.1 Stanger F. Lib 579 24.3 Spokes A. Ms. Con 1,174 50.6 Sparrow R. Lib 320 22.8 Vaughan J. Ms. Lab 594 25.6 Keen R. Ind Con 174 12.4 Turnout 49.2 17.5 Davies I. Lib 552 23.8 Turnout 47.2 16.6 Oxford (Donnington) (3718) Turnout 49.2 25.0 vote share Witney (North) (3022) Williamson A. Lab 1,189 66.8 Oxford (Wood Farm) (4856) vote share Cave T. Con 592 33.2 vote share Redwood J. Con 668 44.4 Walsh R. Lab 1,101 56.4 Mulraney E. Lab 615 40.8 Turnout 47.9 33.5 Cantwell A. Con 637 32.6 Preston W. Ind 223 14.8 Squires G. Lib 213 10.9 Oxford (East) (5069) Turnout 49.8 3.5 vote share Turnout 40.2 23.8 Butler M. Ms. Lib 1,016 41.9 Witney (South) (5725) Dunbar P. Ms. Lab 721 29.7 Ploughley No. 1 (4747) vote share Kane F. Con 689 28.4 vote share Kitto H. Ind 1,212 54.2 Groves R. Lab 1,300 60.2 Cooper E. Lab 1,023 45.8 Turnout 47.9 12.2 Wyatt P. Ms. Con 859 39.8 Turnout 39.0 8.5 Oxford (Headlington) (5377) Turnout 45.5 20.4 vote share Witney Rural No.
Recommended publications
  • Cake and Cockhorse
    CAKE AND COCKHORSE BANBURY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Summer 2012 £2.50 Volume 18 Number 9 ISSN 6522-0823 BANBURY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Registered Charity No. 269581 Website: www.banburyhistory.org President The Lord Saye and Sele Chairman Dr Barrie Trinder, 5 Wagstaff Way, Olney, Bucks. MK46 5FD (tel. 01234 712009; email: <[email protected]>) Cake and Cockhorse Editorial Committee Editor: Jeremy Gibson, Harts Cottage, Church Hanborough, Witney, Oxon. OX29 8AB (tel. 01993 882982; email: <[email protected]>) Assistant editors: Deborah Hayter (commissioning), Beryl Hudson (proofs) Hon. Secretary: Hon. Treasurer: Simon Townsend, G.F. Griffiths, Banbury Museum, 39 Waller Drive, Spiceball Park Road, Banbury, Banbury OX16 2PQ Oxon. OX16 9NS; (tel. 01295 753781; email: (tel. 01295 263944; email: <[email protected]>) <[email protected]>). Publicity: Hon. Research Adviser: Deborah Hayter, Brian Little, Walnut House, 12 Longfellow Road, Charlton, Banbury, Banbury OX17 3DR Oxon. OX16 9LB; (tel. 01295 811176; email: (tel. 01295 264972). <[email protected]>) Other Committee Members Colin Cohen, Chris Day, Helen Forde, Beryl Hudson, Clare Jakeman Membership Secretary Mrs Margaret Little, c/o Banbury Museum, Spiceball Park Road, Banbury, Oxon. OX16 2PQ (email: <[email protected]>). Details of the Society's activities and publications will be found on the back cover. © 2012 Banbury Historical Society on behalf of its contributors. Cake and Cockhorse The magazine of the Banbury Historical Society, issued three times a year. Volume 18 Summer 2012 Number Nine Joyce Hoad, Swing in Banburyshire: ed. Barrie Trinder New light on the riots of 1830 286 John Dunleavy Maffiking at Banbury: Official and Unofficial 301 Deborah Hayter Snippets from the Archives: 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Cake and Cockhorse
    Cake and Cockhorse The magazine of the Banbury Historical Society, issued three times a year. Volume 16 Number Two Spring 2004 Thomas Ward Boss Reminiscences of Old Banbury (in 1903) 50 Book Reviews Nicholas Cooper The Lost Architectural Landscapes of Warwickshire: Vol. 1 — The South, Peter Bolton 78 Nicholas J. Allen Village Chapels: Some Aspects of rural Methodism in the East Cotswolds and South Midlands, 1800-2000, Pauline Ashridge 79 Brian Little Lecture Reports 80 Peter Gaunt The Cromwell Association at Banbury, 24 April 2004 83 Obituaries Brian Little Ted Clark ... ... ... 84 Barrie Trinder Professor Margaret Stacey ... 85 Banbury Historical Society Annual Report and Accounts, 2003 86 In our Summer 2003 issue (15.9) Barrie Trinder wrote about the various memoirs of Banbury in the last two centuries. With sixteen subjects he could only devote a paragraph to each. One that caught my eye was Thomas Ward Boss (born 1825), long-time librarian at the Mechanics' Institute. Then I realised I had a copy of the published version of his talk delivered one hundred and one years ago, in March 1903. Re-reading it, I found it quite absorbing, a wonderful complement to George Herbert's famous Shoemaker's Window, a reminiscence of Banbury in the 1830s and later. On the assumption that few are likely to track down copies in local libraries, it seems well worthwhile to reprint it here, from the original Cheney's version. There are a few insignificant misprints, but, especially in view of the sad demise of our oldest Banbury business, it is good to reprint a typical piece of their work.
    [Show full text]
  • Electoral Changes) Order 2015
    Draft Order laid before Parliament under section 59(9) of the Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009; draft to lie for forty days pursuant to section 6(1) of the Statutory Instruments Act 1946, during which period either House of Parliament may resolve that the Order be not made. DRAFT STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 2015 No. LOCAL GOVERNMENT, ENGLAND The Cherwell (Electoral Changes) Order 2015 Made - - - - Coming into force in accordance with article 1(2) and (3) Under section 58(4) of the Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009( a) (“the Act”) the Local Government Boundary Commission for England(b) (“the Commission”) published a report dated May 2015 stating its recommendations for changes to the electoral arrangements for the district of Cherwell. The Commission has decided to give effect to the recommendations. A draft of the instrument has been laid before Parliament and a period of forty days has expired and neither House has resolved that the instrument be not made. The Commission makes the following Order in exercise of the power conferred by section 59(1) of the Act: Citation and commencement 1. —(1) This Order may be cited as the Cherwell (Electoral Changes) Order 2015. (2) Except for article 6, this Order comes into force— (a) for the purpose of proceedings preliminary or relating to the election of councillors, on the day after it is made; (b) for all other purposes, on the ordinary day of election of councillors in 2016. (3) Article 6 comes into force— (a) for the purpose of proceedings preliminary or relating to the election of councillors, on 15th October 2018; (b) for all other purposes, on the ordinary day of election of councillors in 2019.
    [Show full text]
  • The Local Government Boundary Commission for England O
    SHEET 2, MAP 2 Proposed electoral division boundaries in Banbury B 4 M 3 1 2 0 4 4 0 0 A WARDINGTON CP REET MAIN ST D A THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOUNDARY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND O R ll e M w A r e H h Hanwell T C ELECTORAL REVIEW OF OXFORDSHIRE U BOURTON CP r e O iv S R Draft recommendationsCastle for electoral division boundaries PW dns Allot G in the County of Oxfordshire July 2011 Sheet 2 of 7 CROPREDY WARD KEY DISTRICT COUNCIL BOUNDARY This map is based upon Ordnance Survey material with the permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of PROPOSED ELECTORAL DIVISION BOUNDARY Cemetery the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office © Crown copyright. WARD BOUNDARY Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. The Local Government Boundary Commission for England GD100049926 2011. PARISH BOUNDARY PARISH WARD BOUNDARY H W BANBURY HARDWICK ED PROPOSED ELECTORAL DIVISION NAME A A R R D W W BANBURY CALTHORPE WARD WARD NAME I C I C K K BANBURY CP PARISH NAME R Scale : 1cm = 0.08000 km H O WROXTON AND HOOK NORTON ED I A L L BANBURY RUSCOTE PARISH WARD D PARISH WARD NAME (14) Grid Interval 1km HANWELL CP COINCIDENT BOUNDARIES ARE SHOWN AS THIN COLOURED LINES Hardwick Business SUPERIMPOSED OVER WIDER ONES. Park NORAL WAY DUKES MEADOW DRIVE Playing Field L A P S L al E an d C Y xfor O D R I V E Nature Reserve D GARDENS WAY A WINTER O R M A H T U O l S a Lake Golf Course n a C Hanwell Fields d R r iver Community School o C f he x rwe O ll Lake BANBURY HARDWICK WARD S D BANBURY HARDWICK N Grimsbury
    [Show full text]
  • Banbury Health and Wellbeing Profile Oxfordshire JSNA 2019
    Banbury Community profile of Health and Wellbeing evidence November 2019 Banbury Health and Wellbeing Profile Oxfordshire JSNA 2019 CONTENTS 1 Summary ............................................................................................................................. 3 2 Geographical area ............................................................................................................... 6 3 Population profile ...............................................................................................................10 3.1 Population by age ........................................................................................................10 3.2 Ethnicity .......................................................................................................................11 4 People living in Communal Establishments .......................................................................13 5 Deprivation and Children in poverty ...................................................................................14 6 Health and wellbeing ..........................................................................................................17 6.1 Health profiles for Banbury ..........................................................................................17 6.2 Provision of care ..........................................................................................................24 6.3 Health conditions .........................................................................................................25
    [Show full text]
  • Where Was Banbury Cross?
    Where was Banbury Cross? By P. D. A. HARVEY HERE is nothing for which Banbury is more famous than for its Cross, and it is strange that it should still be possible to question the conclusions ofT any of the town's historians as to where this Cross stood. But between them there is agreement only that the town's principal cross or crosses had been destroyed by its inhabitants' puritan zeal in the early 17th century, so that Richard Corbet, writing between 1618 and 1621, saw only their bases , like old stumps of Trees'.' By the time historians tried to identify the site of the cross commemorated in one famous and several lesser nursery rbymes' all traces had vanished, so that written records formed the only evidence. The first to attempt the task was Alfred Beesley, whose History of Banbury was completed in I 84l.J He placed 'the principal Cross at Banbury ' unequivocally in the Horse Fair, but added that there were other crosses within the borough and mentions references to the 'Highe Crosse', the , Market Cross " the' Bread Cross ' and' the White Cross without Sugarford Bar'. In a footnote he identified the 17th-century Breadcross Street with the western part of High Street and suggested that the Bread Cross stood near its west end, concluding' It is quite possible that this was the same with the .. Banbury Cross" first mentioned'.. One result of Beesley'S argument was the location of the present cross, built in the Horse Fair in 1859.5 Another was an incident related by George Herbert in bis reminis­ cences of Banbury: when trees were being planted in the Horse Fair in 1885 the street's oldest inhabitant asked to be allowed to plant the one at the corner (presumably of Horse Fair and High Street), explaining 'I have always thought that was where the original Cross stood ' .6 A grant from the Univenity of Southampton towards the publication of thU paper is gratefully acknowledged.
    [Show full text]
  • (October 2014) Appendices Part 1 – Appendix 1-4
    Cherwell Local Plan Submission SA Addendum for Main Modifications (October 2014) Appendices Part 1 – Appendix 1-4 Planning & EIA LUC LONDON Offices also in: Land Use Consultants Ltd Registered in England Design 43 Chalton Street Bristol Registered number: 2549296 Landscape Planning London NW1 1JD Glasgow Registered Office: Landscape Management T 020 7383 5784 Edinburgh 43 Chalton Street Ecology F 020 7383 4798 London NW1 1JD LUC uses 100% recycled paper Mapping & Visualisation [email protected] FS 566056 EMS 566057 Contents Appendix 1 1 Consultation responses to SA Addendum Scoping Report (June 2014) 1 Appendix 2 60 Updated review of relevant plans and programmes 60 Appendix 3 130 Updated baseline information 130 Appendix 4 162 Appraisal matrix for the SA of the alternatives for the overall distribution of additional development 162 Appendix 1 Consultation responses to SA Addendum Scoping Report (June 2014) Appendix 1 1 October 2014 Consultation responses received in relation to the Scoping Report of the Sustainability Appraisal Addendum for Main Modifications to the Cherwell Submission Local Plan Consultee (Ref) Response How addressed in SA Addendum Whether the draft reasonableness criteria in Chapter 2 of the Scoping Report are appropriate and are suitable for identifying reasonable alternatives. Natural England (2014 As far as the natural environment is concerned they appear to be Noted. The SA will take an ‘objectives-led’ SASR_1) appropriate and suitable for identifying reasonable alternatives. Clearly approach to the assessment that will these crude screening criteria are inadequate for the actual assessment address the sustainability issues identified. which would need to consider that effects of the proposal, not simply its It is proposed to use the same SA location.
    [Show full text]
  • Oxfordshire Record Office NM4 BANBURY METHODIST CIRCUIT 1 These Records Relate to the Wesleyan, Primitive and United Methodist C
    Oxfordshire Record Office NM4 BANBURY METHODIST CIRCUIT These records relate to the Wesleyan, Primitive and 1791-2006 United Methodist Circuits covering North Oxfordshire and parts of Warwickshire and Northamptonshire. The records include registers of baptisms and marriages, minute books, Sunday School admission and attendance registers, account books, title deeds, financial and publicity papers, and documents re sale of chapels. The catalogue is arranged in thefollowing sections: NM4/A: Banbury Wesleyan Circuit NM4/B: Banbury Primitive Circuit NM4/C: Banbury United Circuit (Post-1932) NM4/1: Adderbury Chapel NM4/2: Banbury Wesleyan Chapel NM4/2A: Banbury Wesleyan Day Schools NM4/3: Banbury Primitive Chapel NM4/4: Bloxham Chapel NM4/5: Lower Boddington Chapel NM4/6: Great Bourton Chapel NM4/7: Little Bourton Chapel NM4/8: Chipping Warden Chapel NM4/9: Claydon Chapel NM4/10: Cropredy Chapel NM4/11: Epwell Chapel NM4/12: Eydon Chapel NM4/13: Farthinghoe Chapel NM4/14: Grimsbury Chapel NM4/15: Hanwell Chapel NM4/16: Horley Chapel NM4/17: Hornton Chapel NM4/18: Kings Sutton Chapel NM4/19: Middleton Cheney Chapel NM4/20: Mollington Chapel NM4/21: Shenington Chapel NM4/22: Shotteswell Chapel NM4/23: Shutford Chapel NM4/24: Sulgrave Chapel NM4/25: Tadmarton Chapel NM4/26: Wardington Chapel NM4/27: Warmington Chapel NM4/28: Wroxton Chapel They were deposited in five stages: in August 1977 (accession 1444), March 1984 (accession 2245), July 1994 (accession 3846), December 1997(accession 4309) and February 1998 (accession 4323). 1 Oxfordshire Record Office NM4 BANBURY METHODIST CIRCUIT Further records were deposited as Acc 4555 in August 1999, Acc 4561 in August 1999, Acc 4880 in July 2001, Acc 4923 in November 2001, Acc 5122 in April 2003 and Acc 5916 in December 2009.
    [Show full text]
  • 1861, but That Number Emphasises the Scale and Significance of the Migration of More Than a Hundred Workers in the Other Direction
    1861, but that number emphasises the scale and significance of the migration of more than a hundred workers in the other direction. The census of 1851 reveals the previous homes of some of the more recent migrants to Coventry. Two weavers from Shutford, probably brothers, had moved during the 1850s to houses in the same part of Luckhurst Lane, Foleshill. Thomas Griffin's wife and two-year-old daughter were born at Foleshill, but the couple had apparently returned to Shutford for the birth of a child who was seven months old in April 1861. Henry Griffin and his wife similarly moved from Shutford after their youngest child was born in 1851. Henry Randle, from Bloxham, spent census night in 1851 in the village with his widowed father, a farm labourer, but he and his Bloxham-born wife probably moved to Stoke between 1843 and 1855 since their 26-year-old daughter, by 1861 a silk weaver, was a native of Bloxham, but her brothers, the eldest of whom was 18, had all been born at Stoke. William Jackman, not then married, was living alone in Adderbury in 1851, one of many plush makers of that name in the parish. Another, the James Jackman living in the House in the Hollow on Foleshill Road in 1861, was probably the widower living a few doors from George Herbert in High Street, Banbury, ten years earlier. William Hitchman, of Freeth Street, Coventry, had been living in Calthorpe Street in 1851 when his place of birth was then recorded as King's Sutton, although the Coventry enumerator recorded it as Adderbury.
    [Show full text]
  • FAST Swim Offer and Outline
    Discount offers reduced membership Families Active, Sporting Together An exciting new family programme is making it easier for families to enjoy sports and leisure together. Called FAST, the programme is aimed at families in the Neithrop, Ruscote, Hardwick and Grimsbury wards of Banbury. The programme will also have referral routes through Sanctuary Housing, GPs and OCC Family unit. FAST is being delivered by partnership including Cherwell District Council, Centre For Sustainable Healthcare, Sanctuary Housing and Oxfordshire County Council and is being funded by a grant from Sport England. tastersessions The offer includes: a FREE 12-week after school programme for families locally-based FAST activity sessions FAST family discounted membership and offers for families at Woodgreen and Spiceball leisure centres taster sessions and reduced membership fees at local sports clubs resource packs and equipment to help families continue their favourite activities in their own time And much more! For more information please visit www.cherwell.gov.uk/info/3/leisure-and-culture or contact [email protected] Programme is available for Neithrop, Ruscote, Hardwick and Grimsbury wards – Check website for details Families Active, Sporting Together An exciting new family programme is making it easier for families to enjoy sports and leisure together. Woodgreen summer swim save offer for families The programme is aimed at families in the Neithrop, Ruscote, £10 Hardwick and Grimsbury wards of Banbury. To see if you are eligible
    [Show full text]
  • North Cherwell
    North Cherwell CTA (Conservation Target Area) Description: Following the River Cherwell valley, the North Cherwell CTA benefits from a concentration of Floodplain Grazing Marsh and Lowland Meadow priority habitats and is important for notable species, especially breeding Curlew and a good range of other birds and other wildlife typical of these habitats. Lowland Mixed Deciduous Woodland, River, Pond, Reedbed and Hedgerow habitats are also represented. Notable hydrological features include a relatively natural stretch of the River Cherwell below Williamscot, as well as the recently constructed Banbury Flood Relief Scheme (with associated Borrow Pit) and the Oxford Canal. The riparian corridor provided by the River Cherwell provides all important connectivity between the priority habitats north and south of Banbury. The CTA includes one SSSI (Neithrop Fields Cutting). Joint Character Area: NCA 95: Northamptonshire Uplands Landscape Types: River Meadowlands Geology: Bedrock is Charmouth Mudstone Formation (183-199 million years ago in the Jurassic period), overlain with alluvium across the floodplain. Valley sides are Dyrrham Formation – siltstone and mudstone interbedded. Topography: Lowland river valley set in gently rolling countryside. Area of CTA: 692 ha Biodiversity: • Breeding Curlew are of high conservation importance as part of the Upper Thames river valleys population of about 50 pairs - which is one of the three largest surviving lowland populations in England. • Willow Tit have persisted in Grimsbury Woodland, one of the few remaining Oxfordshire sites. • Barn Owl, Skylark, Tree Sparrow, Reed Bunting and Yellow Wagtail breed, mostly within in the northern section. • Grimsbury Reservoir attracts a wide variety of birds over the year, including rare migrants, with 127 species recorded in 2018.
    [Show full text]
  • Oxfordshire. Banbury
    DIRECTORY.] OXFORDSHIRE. BANBURY. 25 Warwick Road sub-Office.-.A. W. .Askew, sub-post­ Councillors. master.-Open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. week days §William Denchfield tWilliam Lake only. Letters dispatched at 8.30 a.m. 12.20 & 2, 3, §Edward Humphrey Durran tWilliam Palmar 5.30, 6.30 & 7·45 p.m §Percy Spencer Edmunds tWilliam Lampet Whitehorn Pillar & Wall Letter Boxes Cleared §Alfred Benjamin :Field tH ubert Bartlett §William George 1\Ianwaring tJoseph John Chard Bridge Street piHar box, 5.15 & 8.30 a.m.; 12.20, 2, 3, §Henry Richard Webb tWilliam Robert Cooper 5·45, 6.30 .& 7· 45 p.m. ; sundays, 5.15 p.m. ; G. W. tWilliam James Bloxham !Lewis Wycherley Stone Railway Station wall box, 5· 15 & 8.30 a. m. ; 12:2o, t Arthur Fairfax tWilliam Tom Wakelin 2, 3, 5·45, 6.30 & 7·45 p.m. Grimsbury wall box, tJohn Hyde !John Wilks 5.15 & 8.30 a.m.; 12.20, 2, 3, 5·35, 6.30 & 7·45 p.m.; sundays, 5.15 p.m. Market Place pillar- box, 5.50 Marked thus § retire in 1895· Marked thus t retire in 1896. & 8.30 a.m.; 12.20, 2, 3, 5·45• 6.30 & 7·45 p.m. Broughton Terrace pillar box, s.xs & 8.30 a.m.; Marked thus + retire in 1897. 12.20, 2, 3, 6, 6.30 & 7·45 p.m. Neithrop wall box, Marked thus * retire in 1898. 5.15 & 8.30 a.m.; 12.20, 2, 5·45, 6.30 & 7·45 E'.ective Auditors, Henry Page & George Watson p.m.; sundays, 5.15 p.m.
    [Show full text]