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The Eagle and Child, nicknamed "the Bird and Baby", [1] is a pub in St Giles', Oxford, England, owned by the Ellison Institute of Technology [2] and previously operated by Mitchells & Butlers as a Nicholson's pub. [3] The pub had been part of an endowment belonging to University College since the 17th century.
Oxford Eagle: Oxford: Daily Pass Christian Gazebo Gazette: Pass Christian: Weekly Pearl News [10] Pearl: 2018 Monthly Clay Mansell Hyper-local, "good news" newspaper Pelahatchie News: Pelahatchie: Monthly Clay Mansell Hyper-local, "good news" newspaper Penny Pincher: Gulfport: Weekly Picayune Item: Picayune: 1904 Weekly Boone Newspapers
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The Eagle Ironworks was an ironworks owned by W. Lucy & Co. on the Oxford Canal in Jericho, Oxford, England. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] William Carter founded the works in 1812 [ 3 ] with a shop in the High Street [ 4 ] and moved it to its site beside the canal in 1825. [ 1 ]
The company's origins date back to 1812 when William Carter opened an ironmongery business in Oxford. [3] Carter began brass and iron foundry operations in Summertown, Oxford in 1821, which he expanded into the Jericho district of Oxford in 1825, building a large factory, the Eagle Ironworks, next to the strategically important Oxford to Birmingham canal. [3]
Soon after, Oxford also adopted the eagle as its mascot. [82] Today, Oxford's athletic teams are members of the Georgia Junior College Athletic Association and the National Junior College Athletic Association. Oxford College sponsors men's and women's soccer, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's tennis, and men's and women's golf ...
Under Fothergill's and his wife Kate's management, the Spread Eagle because a destination restaurant, attracting patrons from Oxford, London, and beyond, unusual in England in the 1920s and 1930s. Following the Spread Eagle, Fothergill managed the Royal Ascot Hotel and the Three Swans at Market Harborough . [ 6 ]
The Lamb & Flag Oxford pub sign. The Lamb had been operating since at least 1566, situated just south of St John's. [2] In 1613 [1] the college moved the pub to its current site (the old site is today the Dolphin Quadrangle). [2] Though owned by the college, this new site was somewhat further away from the college's main buildings.