Walton Well Road

To the south are modern residential apartments on the site of the Eagle Ironworks, St Sepulchre's Cemetery and beyond that Juxon Street.

[8] The fountain was designed by the architect Harry Wilkinson Moore and carved in Portland stone by McCulloch of London.

The final section into central Oxford was ceremonially opened on 1 January 1790; it needed a bridge to be built over it to maintain the link to Port Meadow.

[12] On the south side of the street for many years was the historic Eagle Ironworks (aka Lucy's), first established on this site by the Oxford Canal in 1825.

[1] These include nine carved panels by the local sculptor Samuel Grafton, based in Cowley Road, Oxford, on aspects of the biblical story of the prophet Elijah in the Old Testament.

During the early 20th century, the poet and short story writer A. E. Coppard (1878–1957) had a clerical post at the Eagle Ironworks in Walton Well Road, as recounted in his autobiography It's Me, O Lord!

[20] Around 2000, The Waterways estate was built on the site of the British Motor Corporation's former Osberton Radiator Factory immediately to the north of Walton Well Road.

Looking east along Walton Well Road from the canal bridge.
The "Elijah terrace" [ 1 ] houses on the south side of Walton Well Road.
View east along Walton Well Road close to the junction with Southmoor Road and Longworth Road .
Former fountain on Walton Well Road.
View of the Cherwell Valley line railway north from Walton Well Road.