Showing posts with label Christ Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christ Church. Show all posts

Friday, 3 January 2014

The Controversy of the Meadow Road

by OISE Oxford Tutor Kit Villiers



When the weather is good (it does sometimes happen even in the UK!) it's nice for workers, shoppers, students, etc., to take lunch outside, e.g. a nice sandwich in the park. Unfortunately
Oxford is a bit short of city centre parks or indeed open spaces of any kind within walking distance of Carfax.  

One of the nearest is Christ Church Meadow. This large water meadow, unspoilt since the 14th century, provides a welcome haven for office workers and tourists alike; although it's a bit short of benches and you have to watch out for geese droppings if you've time to venture as far as the river and plan to sit on the grass watching students training for Eights Week, it's still a wonderful way of getting away from the rush of the city for a few moments.

Astonishingly this oasis of relative peace was almost lost to us for ever some 50 years ago.

In those days the centre of Oxford, like most other towns along the A40, was a terrible traffic bottleneck. Cars choked the High - one of the most beautiful streets in Europe - and Cornmarket. With very few pedestrian crossings, you took your life in your hands even trying to cross the road; as for gazing in peace and quiet at the famous skyline - forget it.

The current solution is to ban cars from the city centre almost completely, as belatedly happened under the Oxford Transport Policy a few years ago. But, incredible as it seems now, the thinking of transport planners in the 50s and 60s was that the car was king: the aim of transport policy should be, they thought, to try to ensure that private cars, clearly the mode of transport of the future, should be enabled to travel as fast as possible, and blow the consequences.

The solution to the problem in the High was, they decided, to by-pass it completely by building a road from St Aldate's to St Clement's, i.e. right across Christ Church Meadow. Various versions of the scheme were put forward over a number of years, but they were all perfectly ghastly, and all based on the premise that the car was the best mode of transport to get around, even in an historic city like Oxford.

Fortunately the tide turned. Modern planners believe cities are to be lived in, and are not places that can simply be concreted over to speed up traffic. In fact the emphasis now is on slowing down the car by speed humps, etc. and encouraging people to walk, cycle or to use public transport - exactly the opposite of earlier days. In these changed circumstances the Meadow Road was doomed, and it finally bit the dust in around 1970, although there was a rearguard action for a time in favour of an alternative route through where the Four Pillars hotel now stands.

What is amazing now, looking back, is the power these planners had: Christ Church itself considered the scheme 'repugnant and offensive' and both the university and the Oxford Preservation Trust opposed the road, but despite this the scheme very nearly went ahead, such was the power of the car lobby and the general belief that the car represented modernity and everything else should bow down before it.

Good riddance, I say. Bench or no bench, rain or shine,  I'm off to feed the ducks, who quite possibly don't realise what a reprieve they had...

Thursday, 28 March 2013

The Queen visits Oxford

Today, the Queen and Prince Philip have attended the Royal Maundy Service at Christ Church Cathedral.  Her Majesty wore a vibrant cobalt blue outfit.  Crowds had gathered with Union Jacks to welcome the royals who travelled to Oxford by royal helicopter then chauffeured to the historic centre by royal limousine.

Her Majesty distributed Maundy money to 87 men and 87 women from Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Buckinghamshire to mark the Queen's 87 years of age.  The recipients are all pensioners and recommended by clergy and ministers, in recognition of service to the church and to the Oxford community.

The royal service is the first at the cathedral in St Aldate's since Charles I's reign in the 17th century.  Every year the Queen visits a cathedral to make the presentation on Maundy Thursday in a ceremony that dates back to the 13th century.  The Queen decided at the beginning of her reign that the service should take place at a different venue every year.  The Queen has distributed Maundy on all but four occasions since her coronation in 1952, but this is the first time she has done so in Oxford.

Following the service the royal party attended a reception at the Deanery and had lunch at Oriel College. They left Oxford by helicopter just before 3pm.  

One of OISE Oxford's treasured tutors, Stephen Smith, had a great advantage spot of the Queen entering Oriel College.  He was interviewed by the Oxford Mail about the royal occasion.  We all hope it will make next week's paper!

Royal Maundy Service Facts

  • Each recipient receives two purses, one red and one white
  • The red purse will contain a £5 coin and 50 pence coin commemorating the 60th anniversary of The Queen's Coronation
  • The white purse will contain uniquely minted Maundy Money. This takes the form of silver one, two, three and four penny pieces, the sum of which equals the number of years the Monarch has years of age.
  • This year there will be 87 pennies-worth distributed.
  • All the coins are newly minted this year.
Above the Queen in Oxford today

Sources:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-21954237
http://www.hellomagazine.com/royalty/2013032811826/queen-oxford-easter-service/