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Jack 'Kid' Berg (1909–1991) – Lightweight Champion Boxer, known as the Whitechapel Windmill, born in Cable Street, by Noble Court. A blue plaque marks the site near where he lived. Norman Giller, prolific sportswriter, was born in Cable Street in 1940; his 100th book is an autobiography called The Kid from Cable Street
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On Cable Street, the Cycleway is segregated from other road traffic on a narrow, two-way cycle track. The track itself pre-dates the Cycle Superhighway, constructed as part of the London Cycle Network, [6] but C3 introduced wayfinding and blue surfacing to aid route-finding. The Superhighway runs the entire length of Cable Street, passing both ...
As the Oxford company opened its first line in 1881 this concession ended in 1902. Oxford Corporation had the option to either buy out and take over the tramway or renew the concession. A meeting in Oxford in May 1902 considered proposals for the corporation both to take over the tramways and to electrify them via a conduit in the road surface. [5]
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 17:01, 5 March 2008: 360 × 370 (204 KB): Willtron {{en|Small map of central Oxford. Original raster version was created from OpenStreetMap project data, collected by the community.}} *Created by Willtron {{CC-BY-SA 2.0}} {{Inkscape}} Category:Oxford [[Category:Maps of cities i
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St Aldate's, looking north towards Carfax, with the Town Hall on the east side of the street Map of Oxford by John Speed, 1605, showing city walls; south at top and "N" = Carfax. St Aldate's (/ ˈ ɔː l d eɪ t s /, like "all dates") is a street in central Oxford, England, [1] [2] named after Saint Aldate, but formerly known as Fish Street. [3]
Commissioned soon after the 40th anniversary of the battle, the Cable Street Mural is the collective work of four artists: David Binnington, Paul Butler, Desmond Rochfort, and Ray Walker. [42] A red plaque in Dock Street (just south of the Royal Mint Street, Leman Street, Cable Street, Dock Street junction) also commemorates the confrontation. [43]