Oxhill, County Durham

Oxhill is a small village in the civil parish of Stanley, in County Durham, England.

It is located to the west of Stanley, on the bottom of the hill which leads up to New Kyo and Annfield Plain to its east.

Oxhill contains very little: a few households, a pub called The Ox (frequented by locals and occasional cyclists from the nearby C2C cycle path taking lunch - the pub used to be known for weekend live music as well as food) and the main nursery school for the Stanley area.

Oxhill used to be the site of a major level crossing, allowing access from the former nearby Stanhope and Tyne Railway line (this is now the basis of the eastern section of the C2C cycle path) to a shunting yard adjacent to nearby South Moor, where coal was loaded for transport to the River Tyne for export.

A small pond called Kyo Ox Pond or Kyo Tarn, 400 metres to the north of The Ox pub on the road to East Kyo and Harperley, was artificially created between the embankment of the Stanhope and Tyne Railway and adjoining hillside when it was converted to the C2C cycle path in the late 1980s (there is an old railway bridge just to the east).

Ox Inn , Oxhill, County Durham. Local pub catering for food and not as commonly as before COVID, live music.
The former Oxhill Chapel , now a private house, opposite the Ox Inn .
Kyo Ox Pond or Kyo Tarn , Oxhill, 400 m north of the Ox Inn .