Osney

Osney

Osney Island viewed from Osney Bridge
Osney
 Osney shown within Oxfordshire
OS grid referenceSP502060
Civil parishunparished
DistrictOxford
Shire countyOxfordshire
RegionSouth East
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town Oxford
Postcode district OX1
Dialling code 01865
Police Thames Valley
Fire Oxfordshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK ParliamentOxford West and Abingdon
WebsiteOxford City Council
List of places
UK
England
Oxfordshire

Coordinates: 51°45′07″N 1°16′26″W / 51.752°N 1.274°W / 51.752; -1.274

Osney or Osney Island (/ˈzni/; an earlier spelling of the name is Oseney) is a riverside community in the west of the city of Oxford, England. In modern times the name is applied to a community also known as Osney Town, located off the Botley Road, just west of the city's main railway station, on an island surrounded by the River Thames, Osney Ditch and another backwater connecting the Thames to Osney Ditch. Osney is part of the city council ward of Jericho and Osney.

Until the early twentieth century, the name was applied to a different island, between Castle Mill Stream and the main stream of the Thames, on which Osney Abbey and Osney Mill were established during the Middle Ages. The place plays a minor but significant role in The Miller's Tale in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales.[1]

History

The name "Osney" is Old English, and means either "island in the Ouse" (possibly an old name for the Thames)[2] or "Osa's Island".[3] Until the early twentieth century the name was applied to the island formed by two streams of the River Thames immediately west of the centre of Oxford, Castle Mill Stream and the stream which is now the main channel of the river.[4] To the north the island is bounded by a short channel between the River Thames and the Castle Mill Stream, the Sheepwash Channel, which separates it from Fiddler's Island.[5]

Osney Abbey was founded on the south part of the island in 1129, and Rewley Abbey was founded in the north of the island in 1280. Osney Mill was established by Osney Abbey on the west side of the island. The lands of both abbeys passed to Christ Church following the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1538.[6] The island formed part of St. Thomas's parish.

In 1790 the mill stream feeding Osney Mill on the west side of the island became the main navigation channel of the river, when Osney Lock was opened.[7]

Until the beginning of the 19th century, only the side of the island east of St Thomas's Church was developed. In the nineteenth century the island changed significantly. The Great Western Railway built its line across the island from north to south in 1850, with new bridges across the Thames at the south end of the island, and across the Sheepwash Channel to the north. A new railway station was opened on the island two years later. In 1851 the Buckinghamshire Railway opened its line from the north across Sheepwash Channel to its Rewley Road station next to the GWR station. To house railway workers Osney Town was laid out in 1851 by George P. Hester, on an island west of Osney leased by Hester from Christ Church. In the 1860s New Osney was developed around Mill Street, south of Botley Road between the railway and the river. The Cripley estate, north of Botley Road, was laid out in 1878.[8] Osney Cemetery was opened in 1848 in the south of the island.

Modern Osney

The name Osney is today usually applied to Osney Town. Most of Osney's two hundred-odd households live in nineteenth century terraced cottages built on Hester's original grid, although there are a number of newer buildings on Bridge and West Streets, as well as a few significantly larger houses scattered throughout the island.

The island presently has two public houses, The Punter and The Hollybush. A Working Men's Club and Institute Union affiliate, the West Oxford Democrats Club, also has premises on the island.

New Osney

The name Osney is no longer applied to the island which historically bore the name. The part of the island east of the railway is now usually called St Thomas. The name survives on the island in New Osney, Osney Lane, Osney Cemetery, Osney Mill and Osney Marina. Osney Bridge carries the Botley Road (A420) west from the historic Osney island. Osney Lock was constructed in the river in 1790, between the island then known as Osney and the island now known as Osney.

Osney Mead

View along the main Osney Mead road.

From 1961 an industrial estate, named Osney Mead in 1966, was developed on meadowland between Osney and Bulstake Stream, to the east of Ferry Hinksey Road.[9] The estate was initially intended to relocate badly sited existing local businesses.[10] Organisations based there include publishers Alden Mowbray, Holywell Press, and Oxford Community Church, the latter occupying a building on the estate formerly used by Oxford Instruments.

Newspaper House was designed by Arup Associates with mostly open plan Bürolandschaft offices and built 1970–72.[11] It is the Oxfordshire headquarters of Newsquest which publishes local tabloid newspapers including the weekly The Oxford Times and daily Oxford Mail.

References

  1. Canterbury Tales Miller's Tale, Chapter 4, line 88.
  2. Hibbert, C. (ed) (1988) Encyclopedia of Oxford Macmillan ISBN 0-333-48614-5, s.v. Osney
  3. Marriott, Paul (1977). Oxford Street Names Explained. ISBN 0-9505730-1-9.
  4. VCH vol.4 Outlying parts of the liberty
  5. "River Thames (Sheepwash Channel)". www.canalplan.org.uk. UK. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  6. VCH vol. 4 Sites and Remains of Religious Houses
  7. VCH vol. 4 Communications:Rivers and river navigation.
  8. VCH vol. 4 Modern Oxford: Development of the city
  9. Ann Spokes Symonds; Nigel Morgan (2010). The Origins of Oxford Street Names. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-899536-99-3.
  10. Modern Oxford: Economic History after 1918, Volume 4, Victoria County History.
  11. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, pages 334-335

Sources

External links

See also

Next island upstream River Thames Next island downstream
Fiddler's Island Osney Island Rose Isle
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