Crime & Safety
Oxfordshire: Top 10 blue plaques to visit across the county
The Oxford Blue Plaque Scheme celebrates everything from the invention of modern medicines to famous authors of the region.
There are hundreds of blue plaques for tourists and residents alike to find in Oxfordshire.
We have compiled a list of the top 10.
303 Woodstock Road with the blue plaque (Image: Stephanie Jenkins)
Baroness Lucy Faithfull
The baroness became the first blue plaque commemorated in 2026 this month, with a plaque adorning her home on Woodstock Road in Oxford, from 1958 until her passing in 1996.
The baroness was a social worker and champion of children’s rights. She was appointed by Oxford City Council in 1958 as one of the first children’s officers created by the Children Act of 1948, earning her nickname of ‘Mother to hundreds’.
(Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
H.H Asquith
Henry Herbert Asquith was honoured with a blue plaque in 2012.
The Prime Minister from 1908 to 1916 lived in Sutton Courtenay from 1912 until his passing in 1928, and is buried in the churchyard of All Saints.
The former leader of the liberal party was also 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith.
His government introduced ground-breaking welfare and constitutional advances, including the first ever old age state pension and the principle of national insurance contributions
(Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
Iffley Road Track
The plaque was unveiled at the Oxford University Sports Ground on Iffley Road in May 2004 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the first sub-four minute mile ran.
Roger Bannister broke the four minute mile (Image: Bannister Miles)
Athlete Roger Bannister broke the record in May 1954 on the Iffley Road track running for the Amateur Athletics Association against Oxford University.
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Former Hitchman brewery, West Street, Chipping Norton (Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
Revd Edward Stone
Revd Edward Stone was honoured with a blue plaque in 2003 in memory of his work discovering salicylic acid, the active ingredient in aspirin.
The plaque in Chipping Norton was unveiled where he previously lived at Hitchman Brewery, West Street.
(Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
Oxford Park and Ride
In commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the first park and ride, the Oxford Civic Society unveiled the plaque in 2019.
Redbridge Park and Ride car park with a dedicated bus service opened in December 1973.
There had been earlier experiments in Oxford itself and in Nottingham and Leicester but the Redbridge Park and Ride was the first in the UK to be successfully sustained from its inception until the present day.
The plaque to commemorate the first treatment (Image: Oxford Blue Plaques Board)
Penicillin
A plaque unveiled in 2018 at the former outpatient building of the Radcliffe Infirmary is in celebration of the discovery and use of penicillin.
Now the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences University of Oxford, the building was the place where the first antibiotic was used to treat infection in 1941.
This followed the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming in 1928, and work performed by Howard Florey and a team of scientists at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology to make it a viable treatment.
A related blue plaque ceremony was held on the same day at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology.
Tolkien lived with his family at 22 Northmoor Road from 1926 to 1930 and at 20 Northmoor Road (above) from 1930 to 1947. (Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
J. R. R. Tolkein
The infamous author of Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit was educated at Exeter College, Oxford.
He returned to Oxford after service in the First World War, during which he wrote his first stories.
His blue plaque was unveiled by his daughter in 2002 at their former family home at 20 Northmoor Road.
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(Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
Dame Agatha Christie
The ‘queen of crime’ famed for 66 detective novels was commemorated alongside her husband, archaeologist Sir Max Mallowan at their former home in Wallingford.
The plaque was unveiled by her grandson in 2010 at Winterbrook House, which is believed to have inspired the fictional village of St Mary Mead in her famed Miss Marple stories.
12 King Edward Street, where Ivy lived with her parents from 1887 to 1904 (Image: Oxford Blue Plaque Board)
Ivy Williams
The first woman to be called to the Bar of England and Wales had a plaque unveiled in her memory in 2020.
The plaque, at her former home on King Edward Street in the city, celebrates her role as a champion for women’s role in education.
C.S Lewis’s former home in Oxford with the blue plaque (Image: Oxford Blue Plaques Board)
C.S. Lewis
Famous author of the Chronicles of Narnia, Lewis was celebrated with a blue plaque in 2008.
The plaque is placed at his former home at The Kilns, in Lewis Close, Headington Quarry where he lived during his time as a fellow at Oxford University and even during his time as a professor at Cambridge University.