Two cottages here in the 1650s were replaced in the early 18th century by a single farmstead, where malting was carried out long before the establi
The blocked doorway left of centre shows that No. 18 was once a pair of cottages, erected probably in the mid 17th century.
No. 55 probably has 16th-century origins, and shows evidence of timber framing.
This further row of probably 17th-century cottages has also been repeatedly altered, re-divided, and recombined. No.
The street continues with a further line of 17th-century rubble cottages, whose 19th-century occupants included labourers, a groom and gardener, an
This site formerly included two cottages, shown in 1920s photographs.
Burford saw an early Baptist presence.
In the 19th century this long range comprised two pairs of cottages.
Most of the present house is late 17th-century, built probably by the chandler Thomas Parsons who owned and lived in it in 1708.
Several houses at Witney Street's north-west end (before the modern cul-de-sac of Sylvester Close) began as outbuildings for premises on High Stree