sunlight on an Oxford carbuncle
JR from the Radcliffe
Oxford science carbuncle
ugly science block
park convenience
Department of Education
Lady Margaret Hall
North Oxford window
early morning bus stop
St Anthony's Chapel
Cowley Road ladies
Cowley Road toilets
lamp in the churchyard
old vicarage in autumn
Regency Store
house with old windows
nice old windows
D'Overbroeck's College
Magdalen Street loos
underground loos
great Oxford tourist attraction
McAlpine Quad
noon mark sundial
Port Meadow in flood
market loos
Market Street toilets
Cafe Puccino's
crap sign fouling Mount Place
East Street houses
East Street houses
East Street houses
sunny windows on Walton Street
closed Borders
the slow erosion of Jericho
pattern brick houses
Tyndale corner
Circus Street
Maroc Deli
Cowley Road Methodist Church Centre
St Mary's Road terrace
Oxford Christmas lights
fiddler in Cornmarket Street
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The purchaser of the Observatory was Lord Nuffield, who presented it to the hospital authorities and in 1936 established the Nuffield Institute for Medical Research there. In 1979 the Institute moved to new premises in the grounds of the John Radcliffe Hospital, thus freeing the Observatory site for its new owner, Green College.
The Observatory was built at the suggestion of Dr Thomas Hornsby, the Savilian Professor of Astronomy, after he had used a room in the nearby Radcliffe Infirmary to observe the transit of Venus across the sun's disc in 1769. The transit was a notable event which helped to produce greatly improved measurements for nautical navigation.
Beneath the Tower itself are rooms at each of three levels: the ground floor is now the College dining room, the first floor, originally the library, is now used as the Common Room, and on the top floor is the magnificent octagonal observing room.
Now bereft of its instruments, the room nevertheless still contains some of the original furniture as well as a spiral staircase which leads to an upper gallery. From this gallery the Observer had access to the roof where meteorological observations were carried out. Large windows lead from the observing room onto the balcony, making it possible to wheel observing instruments outdoors."
www.gtc.ox.ac.uk/about/history/radcliffe-observatory
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