Oxford News
Popular folk festival run by volunteers returns to Oxford
They needn’t have worried – despite some initial hiccups, it has become a popular annual event, attracting dozens of performers and delighting hundreds of fans.
This year will be no exception as the still volunteer-led and not-for-profit spectacle hits the city next weekend with music, dancing, colour and the jingling of bells.
READ MORE: Oxford Folk Festival pictures
There will be a full programme of indoor concerts and ceilidhs, and musicians, bands, choirs and dancers performing all around the city.
The historic Covered Market remains the hub of the festival, with performances from noon on Friday (April 10) to the evening of Sunday (April 12).
Shoppers, browsers and tourists will be regaled with all kinds of entertainment – a varied programme of folk music, from ancient to modern.
A free evening concert, which has become a tradition of the festival, will be held at the Market on Saturday at 7.30pm, with music from the Abingdon-based Ock Street Band.
A folk fan at Oxford Folk Festival in 2024 (Image: Ed Nix)
Organisers are particularly pleased to be welcoming Aisling, a folk band from Leiden, Oxford’s twin city in Holland.
They will perform at a song and dance evening with the Oxford Folk Dancers at St Matthew’s Church in Marlborough Road, off Abingdon Road, on Friday at 7.30pm, with a ploughman’s supper included.
The six-strong Dutch group will also appear at the North Parade market, the Covered Market and, appropriately, in Leiden Square in the Westgate Centre.
Other festival venues include Broad Street, Bonn Square, St Giles, Radcliffe Square and Oxford Castle, while indoor performances will be held at the Norrington Room in Blackwells, the Old Fire Station, the Westgate library, the Weston Library at the Bodleian and Modern Art Oxford.
As one of the organisers says: “There is plenty on offer to lift the spirits of everyone.” Full details at oxfordfolkfest.org.uk
Oxford News
Man found dead after major police response at Culham Lock
The incident occurred on Monday, April 6, when police were called at about 4.35am to Tollgate Road in Culham, Abingdon.
Culham Lock car park on the River Thames was cordoned off for most of the day on Monday, with a heavy police presence.
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Manned police cordons were set up around all entry and exit points to the car park, and eyewitnesses say at least four police cars or vans remained there for most of the day, causing serious concern among locals.
Police vehicles and a blue tent were on the scene in Culham Lock car park (Image: Contributed)
Thames Valley Police have now confirmed that a man in his 50s was pronounced dead on the scene.
A spokesperson for the force said: “We were called at around 4.35am on Monday, April 6, to Tollgate Road in Abingdon, following reports of a concern for welfare.
“Emergency services attended but sadly a man aged in his 50s was pronounced deceased at the scene.
“His death is being treated as unexplained, but not suspicious, and a file will be prepared for the coroner.
“His family have been informed and are being supported.”
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One woman who lives in Culham but did not want to be named said it was ‘frightening’ to see such a large police incident in what is usually a ‘quiet’ village.
She saw what was happening in Culham Lock car park at about 3.30pm on Monday, and said: “The incident seemed to be located in the back half of the car park on the left side.
Culham Lock on the River Thames (Image: Rod Allday / Wikimedia Commons)
“There seemed to be a lot of locals stood around staring and the lock keeper was stood with his hands on his head.”
She also reported seeing a recovery van retrieving a black four-by-four from the scene. It is not yet known if this is related to the incident.
Thames Valley Police was approached for comment the morning after the incident, but failed to provide a statement until today (Wednesday, April 8), leaving people ‘worried’.
The eyewitness added: “Not knowing the nature of the incident leaves local people worried, it is such a beautiful public area we use and walk around everyday and now it is making us not want to go down there out of fear of what might occurred.
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“It has been extremely distressing to my younger sister who couldn’t sleep last night due to being worried and having full sight of what happened.
“When I was walking down, there was full visibility of the scene and police stood around.
“While I understand it is another day on the job for them, it was very distressing to locals who of course rarely if ever experience something like this in somewhere like Culham.”
Oxford News
South Moreton Primary School delivers strong performance
South Moreton Primary School was described by inspectors as a place where ‘pupils enjoy learning and their time together’.
The school was awarded a ‘strong standard’ judgment in each of the seven areas that Ofsted review.
Cheryl Sánchez, headteacher at South Moreton Primary School, said: “This report is a moment of huge pride for our whole school community. We are absolutely thrilled.
“Our school is built on a strong ethos of community and inclusion, and it’s wonderful to see the inspectors also see the warmth and positivity that runs through everything we do.”
The Ofsted report commended pupils as ‘confident, articulate and curious,’ noting that they benefit from ‘rich opportunities to experience the world’.
Early years provision was described as a ‘joyful and harmonious space,’ where children develop strong foundations in reading, writing, mathematics and communication.
Inspectors also highlighted the inclusive nature of the school’s curriculum and routines, as well as the professional curiosity and focus demonstrated by school leaders.
The school is part of the Oxford Diocesan Schools Trust.
Sharon Mullins, CEO of the trust, said: “Achieving a strong standard is something that any school should take huge pride in – but to do it in every judgement area is quite a rare achievement under this new framework so far.
“We don’t do what we do for our children because of Ofsted, but it is lovely that the relentless effort of the team at South Moreton have been recognised by them.”
Oxford News
Liam Gallagher has Roman temple next door to £4.2m Cotswolds mansion
The Oasis singer was rumoured to have bought a mansion near Cirencester in December last year, having previously rented it for £19,000 a month ahead of the band’s comeback tour.
During the summer, it was reported that Mr Gallagher and his fiancée, Debbie Gwyther, had been phoning around high-end estate agents to buy a new mansion in the Cotswolds.
Mr Gallagher himself confirmed earlier this year that he’s purchased Dockem House in the village of Coates over the Oxfordshire border.
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Now, The Sun has reported that the musician’s new pad is next door to a Roman temple and that he’s a fan of history, making it a perfect match.
The five-acre estate is near Hailey Wood Camp, which dates back to 100AD, and has been buried since the 1980s.
Historic England said that the complex is rare and that only “a number of temple complexes [in the UK] have similar double-ditch enclosed areas”.
The Sun added: “Seven lead ‘curse tablets’, which Romans used to ask the Gods to jinx an enemy, were reportedly found there.
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“Previous owner, World War I hero Major William Daubney, was the first to identify Hailey Wood Camp, an underground temple complex dating between 100AD and 400AD.
“The complex is centred on a square enclosure with other smaller buildings scattered around it and has been buried since the 1980s after the site was plundered for ‘coins and other metal objects’.”
A fan of history, Mr Gallagher was recently asked by a fan on the social media site X what the first thing he does on holiday.
The singer responded: “I unpack and hang up all my clothes in alphabetical order, then I go find out some local history, then I get on the p**s.”
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