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Chalfont Road

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5-597: Chalfont Road is a road in Walton Manor , North Oxford , England . The road runs north–south between Frenchay Road to the north and Polstead Road to the south. To the west is Hayfield Road and to the east is Woodstock Road . The houses in Chalfont Road have been described as "small large house(s)" as opposed to the "large small house(s)" in the Southmoor Road area to the southwest. Houses in

10-560: A Fellow of Green College, Oxford , lived in Chalfont Road. The computer scientists and mathematicians Sir Tony Hoare , Dana Scott , and Robin Wilson also lived in Chalfont Road. Chalfont Road is mentioned in the books Forgotten Life by Brian Aldiss and Lost and Found by Valerie Mendes (step-mother of the director Sam Mendes ). 51°46′09″N 1°16′05″W  /  51.76923°N 1.26805°W  / 51.76923; -1.26805 This Oxfordshire location article

15-547: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This England road or road transport-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Walton Manor Walton Manor is a residential suburb in Oxford , England . It is north of Jericho and the Radcliffe Observatory Quarter and forms part of North Oxford . The street layout and many of the area's buildings date from

20-493: The mid-19th century. It was developed on land belonging to St John's College, Oxford . In 1975, Walton Manor was designated as a Conservation Area under the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 . The conservation area is bounded by Leckford Road on the north, Woodstock Road on the east, the properties fronting Observatory Street to the south, and Kingston Road and Walton Street to the west. The main road north–south through

25-480: The road were originally leased between 1890 and 1904 as part of the North Oxford estate of St John's College . The houses were nearly all designed by Harry Wilkinson Moore . The provision of a tram service from the centre of Oxford to St Margaret's Road in 1882 made it possible to expand the building of the estate further north to Chalfont Road and Frenchay Road. The psychiatrist Anthony Storr (1920–2001),

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