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Oxford Rewley Road railway station

1851 establishments in EnglandBuildings and structures in OxfordDisused railway stations in OxfordshireFormer London and North Western Railway stationsGrade II* listed railway stations
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1951Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1851Transport in OxfordUse British English from December 2016
Relocated Rewley Road Building 3
Relocated Rewley Road Building 3

Oxford Rewley Road railway station was a railway station serving the city of Oxford, England, located immediately to the north of what is now Frideswide Square on the site of the Saïd Business School, to the west of Rewley Road. It was the terminus of the Buckinghamshire Railway, which was worked, and later absorbed, by the London and North Western Railway (L&NWR). In 1923 it became part of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS), "Varsity Line" service from Cambridge via Bletchley and had features of significance in construction history.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Oxford Rewley Road railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Oxford Rewley Road railway station
Park End Street, Oxford City Centre

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Wikipedia: Oxford Rewley Road railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.75312 ° E -1.26983 °
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Address

WHSmith

Park End Street
OX1 1HS Oxford, City Centre
England, United Kingdom
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Relocated Rewley Road Building 3
Relocated Rewley Road Building 3
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Osney Cemetery
Osney Cemetery

Osney Cemetery (also known as Osney St Mary Cemetery) is a disused Church of England cemetery in Osney, west Oxford, England. Its entrance is in Osney Lane, which runs off the south end of Mill Street, south of Botley Road and near the site of Osney Abbey. It borders the Cherwell Valley Line railway a short distance south of Oxford railway station. The cemetery was established in Oxford in 1848, along with Holywell Cemetery and St Sepulchre's Cemetery, because central Oxford churchyards were becoming full. In 1855, new burials were forbidden at all Oxford city churches, apart from in existing vaults. Each of these three new parish cemeteries provided an extension to the churchyards for a specific group of nearby churches, with each church having its own area. Osney Cemetery covered the four ancient parishes of St Aldate's, St Ebbe’s, St Peter-le-Bailey, and St Thomas, and the new parish of Holy Trinity, which had been taken out of St Ebbe’s parish in 1845. The burials in Osney Cemetery are recorded in the parish register for each of these churches just as if they had taken place in its actual churchyard. From 1872 the dead of the new church of St Frideswide, whose parish had been taken out of that of St Thomas, were also buried in Osney Cemetery. Christ Church was still an extra-parochial non-royal peculiar (exempt from the jurisdiction of the diocese) when Osney Cemetery opened, but by 1901 it had been given space in the St Thomas's section of Osney Cemetery called "Christ Church portion”. The entrance to Osney Cemetery has a lych gate.The cemetery contains 26 Commonwealth war graves from the First World War and also one British soldier killed in the Second World War.The cemetery is now closed to new burials. It is still a large green space in central Oxford. In 2006 it was proposed to plant more native trees in the area.