River Thames at Wallingford
High Street cottages
Wallingford town garden
Past & Presents, Wallingford
Wallingford in bloom
Wallingford Town Hall
Wallingford Corn Exchange
Wallingford Market Place
Wallingford war memorial
town hall blooms
baby bollard
OX10 10 EIIR double post box
OX10 10 Royal Mail post box
The Old Post Office
Coach & Horses 2008
Church Lane alley
St Mary-le-More renovations
Wallingford bus stop
Branching Out in Wallingford
Wallingford signpost
town hall portico
Bean & Brew cafe
Greene King Dolphin
eyesore paint jobs on Iffley Road
vandalised ghost
Iffley Road demolition site
white house on Iffley Road
Iffley Road houses
past the Fir Tree pub
Iffley Road terrace
gable thingy
rounding the Cape
corner of Cowley Road
Kookaburra, Gloucester
Destiny - Harlow Mill
old Merton Street
botanical gardens buildings
ugly caravan-style windows
Yellow Paint Shop
Ballroom Emporium
Gloucester Green barbecue
Cybele
Sorrel II
Scruffy Fox narrowboat
Wendover narrowboat
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Nuneham Courtenay is an unusual village of small, mainly semi-detached, single storey, and very uniform cottages which line each side of the main road. The cottages are brick built with tiled roofs and dormers in the attic and shutters to the windows on the ground floor. The name 'Nuneham' means 'new village' and the 'Courtenay' part of the name comes from the Curtenay Family, who lived here in the thirteenth century.
The village was originally listed as 'Newham' in the Domesday Book. It was originally inside Nuneham Park and consisted of pretty white cottages scattered around a piece of water and shaded by a number of fine trees. However, in 1760 the whole village was rebuilt and relocated on the main road because the 1st Earl of Harcourt thought the existing medieval cottages spoiled the view from his new house and landscaped park.
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