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Manchester is a city in St. Louis County, Missouri, United States. The population was 18,333 at the 2020 census. [4] History. Manchester in 1911.
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Oxford is an unincorporated community in southwest Worth County, Missouri, United States. Oxford is located on Missouri Route U approximately eight miles southwest of Grant City and five miles west of Worth. Parnell in adjacent Nodaway County is about four miles to the west. The Grand River flows past one mile west of the community. [2]
Oxford Road: Late 18th century [9] Harvester House: Peter Street, Manchester: A34: Portland Street: Early 19th century: Watts Warehouse: Princess Street: Late 18th century: A 3-lane partially one-way street heading out of Manchester city centre: The Athenaeum & Asia House: Quay Street: Early 18th century [10] Home of ITV Granada Television ...
1849 Map of Oxford Street (Whitworth Street was built 50 years later replacing Bond Street and Whitworth Street West follows the line of Gloucester Street) [2]Wilmslow Road, Oxford Road and Oxford Street are part of an 18th-century route from Manchester to Oxford, and from there to Southampton, which can be traced on modern maps by locating roads which are called (or used to be called) the A34.
The Kimpton Clocktower Hotel is a historic commercial building, now a hotel, at the corner of Oxford Street and Whitworth Street in Manchester, England. The building was originally constructed in segments from 1891 to 1932 as the Refuge Assurance Building.
Grand Central is a rock/metal pub and music venue at 80 Oxford Street, near Oxford Road railway station and opposite The Principal Manchester hotel in Manchester, England. It is a four storey building (including cellar) which is typical of buildings that were originally houses in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. [ 1 ]
The Paramount Theatre on Oxford Street opened on 6 October 1930, [2] showing The Love Parade, and featuring a variety show on stage. [3] The theatre was built for the Paramount Film Company of America, and was designed by Frank Verity and S. Beverley (now known as Verity & Beverley [3]), who had also built the Plaza Theatre in London. [4]