Oxford, Mississippi | |
---|---|
— City — | |
University of Mississippi, a.k.a. "Ole Miss". | |
Nickname(s): The Oak | |
Location of Oxford, Mississippi | |
Coordinates: 34°21′35″N 89°31′34″W / 34.35972°N 89.52611°WCoordinates: 34°21′35″N 89°31′34″W / 34.35972°N 89.52611°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Mississippi |
County | Lafayette |
Government | |
• Mayor | George "Pat" Patterson (D) |
Area | |
• Total | 10.0 sq mi (25.8 km2) |
• Land | 10.0 sq mi (25.8 km2) |
• Water | 0.0 sq mi (0.0 km2) |
Elevation | 505 ft (154 m) |
Population (2010) | |
• Total | 18,916 |
• Density | 1,179.1/sq mi (455.3/km2) |
Time zone | Central (CST) (UTC-6) |
• Summer (DST) | CDT (UTC-5) |
ZIP code | 38655 |
Area code(s) | 662 |
FIPS code | 28-54840 |
GNIS feature ID | 0691644 |
Oxford is a city in, and the county seat of, [1] Lafayette County, Mississippi. Founded in 1837, it was named after the British university city of Oxford in hopes of having the state university located there, which it did successfully attract.
As of the 2010 US Census, the population is 18,916. Oxford is the home of the University of Mississippi, founded in 1848, also commonly known as "Ole Miss."
Oxford has been named by USA Today as one of the top six college towns in the nation. It is included in The Best 100 Small Towns in America. Lafayette County consistently leads the state rankings in the lowest unemployment rate per quarter. Oxford City Schools are ranked as "Star" schools, the highest ranking available, and Lafayette County school systems are consistently ranked as "5-star" systems.
Contents |
Oxford and Lafayette County were formed from lands ceded by the Chickasaw in the treaty of Pontotoc Creek in 1832. The county was organized in 1836, and in 1837 three pioneers -- John Martin, John Chisom, and John Craig -- purchased land from Hoka, a female Chickasaw landowner, as a site for the town.[2] They named it Oxford, intending to promote it as a center of learning in the Old Southwest. In 1841, the Mississippi legislature selected Oxford as the site of the state university, which opened in 1848.
During the American Civil War, Oxford suffered invasion by federal troops under Generals Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman in 1862; in 1864 Major General Andrew Jackson Smith burned the buildings in the town square, including the county courthouse. In the postwar Reconstruction Era, the town recovered slowly, aided by federal judge Robert Andrews Hill, who secured funds to build a new courthouse in 1872. During this period many African American freedmen moved from farms into town and established a neighborhood known as "Freedmen Town", where they built houses, businesses, churches and schools, eagerly embracing education. They exercised all the rights of citizenship.[3] Even after Mississippi disfranchised most African Americans in the Constitution of 1890, they continued to build their lives in the face of discrimination.
During the Civil Rights Movement, Oxford gained national attention in 1962 as a combination of the governor and University of Mississippi officials attempted to prevent James Meredith, an African American, from integrating the University of Mississippi after he won a federal court case for admittance. Meredith began his quest for admission in January 1961, after watching John F. Kennedy's inaugural speech. Meredith sent a letter to the Registrar of The University of Mississippi requesting a catalog and an application for admission. University officials responded promptly with the materials and invited Meredith to apply. When officials learned from Meredith that he was African-American, his application was immediately rejected without comment,[clarification needed] and Meredith's legal battles with the University began. Meredith was finally admitted in the summer of 1962 by a federal court in New Orleans, and made preparations to begin his studies in the fall of 1962. President John F. Kennedy, after secret telephone negotiations with Democratic Governor Ross Barnett, ordered United States Marshals to protect Meredith. Meredith traveled to Oxford under armed guard to register in late September 1962, and riots broke out in protest of his admittance. Thousands of armed "volunteers" flowed into the Oxford area to prevent Meredith's admittance. During the rioting, late on the evening of September 30, 1962, two men, a French journalist sent to cover the events, and a Lafayette County resident, Ray Gunter, were killed by stray bullets. During the riots by segregationists, cars were burned, federal marshals were pelted with rocks, bricks, small arms fire and university property was damaged. The Mississippi Highway Patrol, on campus to supposedly provide security for the University and for Meredith, stood by passively while the riots were taking place.
Order was restored to the campus with the early morning arrival of the U. S. Army. Although President John F. Kennedy had mobilized the Army and ordered them onto the campus early on the evening of the riot, poor communication delayed their arrival in force until the following morning (Monday, October 1). Meredith enrolled that morning without incident and attended for the rest of the school year, graduating in August 1963 with a degree in history. During his time at the University, Meredith lived in Baxter Hall, which is now the telecommunications center for the university. A plaque has been placed inside the front entrance to Baxter Hall which recounts Meredith's time spent there. As recounted in Meredith's book Three Years in Mississippi, students on the floor right above Meredith's room tried to keep him awake all night by bouncing a basketball on the floor, he was constantly insulted with racial slurs whenever he left his room or the building, anonymous notes and letters were delivered to his mailbox on a daily basis, and unlike most first-year college students, he lived in a suite of several rooms. Two United States Marshals were with him 24 hours a day, with another contingent of marshals escorting him to class and elsewhere on campus.
More than 3000 journalists came to Oxford on September 26, 2008 to cover the first presidential debate of 2008, which was held at the University of Mississippi.[4]
Oxford is located at 34°21′35″N 89°31′34″W / 34.35972°N 89.52611°W (34.359837, -89.526242).[5]
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 10.0 square miles (26 km2), of which, 10.0 square miles (26 km2) of it is land and 0.10% is water.
The land is hilly in places but is generally level. To the west is the Mississippi Delta. It is within one hundred miles of Memphis, Tennessee.
Oxford is located at the confluence of highways from eight directions: Mississippi highway 6 (now co-signed with US-278) runs west to Batesville and east to Pontotoc; highway 7 runs north to Holly Springs and south to Water Valley. Highway 30 goes northeast to New Albany; highway 334 ("Old Highway 6") southeast to Toccopola; Taylor Road southwest to Taylor, and highway 314 ("Old Sardis Road") northwest, formerly to Sardis but now to the Clear Creek Recreation Area on Sardis Lake.
The streets in the downtown area follow a grid pattern with two naming conventions. Many of the north-south streets are numbered from west to east, beginning at the old railroad depot, with numbers from four to nineteen. The place of "Twelfth Street," however, is taken by North and South Lamar Boulevard (formerly North and South Streets). The east-west avenues are named for the U.S. presidents in chronological order from north to south, from Washington to Cleveland; here again, there are gaps: John Quincy Adams would be indistinguishable from John Adams; "Polk Avenue" is replaced by University Avenue, and "Arthur Avenue" is lacking.
As of the census[6] of 2009, there were 16,706 people, with 7,368 households residing in the city. The racial makeup of the city was 72.3% White, 21.8% African American, 0.3% Native American, 3.3% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, and 1.1% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 2.5% of the population. The average household size was 2.35.
In the city the population was spread out with 5.1% under the age of 5, 14.8% from 5 to 17, and 10.5% who were 65 years of age or older. Females comprised 49.3% of the population.
The median income for a household in the city was $38,872, and the average household income was $64,643. The per capita income for the city was $29,195.[7] About 12% of families and 32.3% of the population were below the poverty line.
The City of Oxford is served by the Oxford School District and by two private schools, Oxford University School and Regents School. Regents is located just outside the city limits in the College Hill community. It is the home of the main campus of the University of Mississippi, known as "Ole Miss", and of the Lafayette-Yalobusha Center of Northwest Mississippi Community College.
The Baptist Memorial Hospital - North Mississippi, located in Oxford provides comprehensive health care services for Oxford and the surrounding area, supported by a growing number of physicians, clinics and support facilities. The North Mississippi Regional Center, a state-licensed Intermediate Care Facility for the Mentally Retarded, is located in Oxford.
Oxford is home to the National Center for Natural Products Research at the University of Mississippi's School of Pharmacy. The Center is the only facility in the United States that is federally licensed to cultivate marijuana for scientific research, and for distribution to patients who are allowed marijuana for medical purposes.
University-Oxford Airport serves the Lafayette-Oxford-University area. While no airline service is available, the airport can become quite busy during sporting events at the University of Mississippi.
Mississippi Central Railroad provides freight rail service to the Lafayette County Industrial Park in Oxford.
See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Lafayette County, Mississippi[8]
|
Oxford is a type of woven dress shirt fabric, employed to make a particular casual-to-formal cloth in Oxford shirts.
The Oxford weave has a basketweave structure and a lustrous aspect making it a popular fabric for a dress shirt.
Varieties in the cloth are the plain Oxford, the Pinpoint Oxford and the more formal Royal Oxford. While these first two are more often paired with casual shirt designs like a button-down collar, the third type is a more versatile weave that can be paired with either business or sporty dress codes.
Oxford is a residential town located in western New Haven County, Connecticut, United States. The population was 12,683 at the 2010 Census. Oxford is the 26th wealthiest town in Connecticut by median household income. Distinct settled areas in the town include Oxford Center, Quaker Farms, and Riverside. Oxford belongs to the Naugatuck Valley Economic Development Region and the Central Naugatuck Valley Planning Area, and the Bridgeport–Stamford–Norwalk Metropolitan Statistical Area. Some of Oxford's unofficial nicknames, used often by the town's residents, are: O-Town, Oxhood, and The Miami of the Naugatuck Valley. A little-known fact about Oxford is that international rap superstar Aubrey "Drake" Graham actually hails from the town-- when he references "The Six" in some of his songs, he is actually referring to Oxford. "The Six" refers to the first two digits of the town's ZIP code, 06478.
In the 18th century, farmers herded livestock through Oxford from as far away as Litchfield on the way to the port of New Haven. In the 19th century, the town lost population as farmers moved to work in better-paying factories.
RADIO STATION |
GENRE |
LOCATION |
---|---|---|
Retro Soul Radio London | R&B | UK |
Energy FM DJ Mixes Non-Stop | Dance | UK |
RadioFish | Country,Oldies,60s | UK |
Radio Wivenhoe | Varied | UK |
Scanner: VHF Marine Radio | Public | UK |
RAT Radio | Varied | UK |
Gem 106 | Varied | UK |
BBC York | Varied | UK |
Skyline Gold | 60s,Soft Rock,Rock,Oldies,Easy,Country,Classic Rock,80s,70s | UK |
BBC Hindi - Tees Minute | News Updates,Indian | UK |
BBC Radio 1 | Pop | UK |
Free Radio Herefordshire & Worcestershire | Pop,Top 40 | UK |
Miskin Radio | Pop | UK |
EKR - WDJ Retro | Rock,Adult Contemporary,Soft Rock | UK |
RollinRadio | Electronica | UK |
Hard House UK | Dance | UK |
My Social Radio | Top 40 | UK |
Flight FM | Electronica | UK |
Remarkable Radio | Oldies | UK |
80s And More | 80s | UK |
Sunshine Gold | Oldies | UK |
House FM | Dance,Electronica,Jungle | UK |
Jemm Two | Indie Rock | UK |
Rickhits | Pop | UK |
Dance Music 24/7 - EHM Productions | 90s,Dance,Electronica | UK |
Hope FM 90.1 | Christian Contemporary | UK |
Phoenix Radio | Rock,Classic Rock | UK |
Gold FM Radio | Rock,90s,80s,Adult Contemporary,Pop | UK |
87.7 Black Cat Radio | Oldies,Pop | UK |
Radyo 90 | Sports,Folk,Pop | UK |
Chester Talking Newspaper Flintshire Edition | News | UK |
URN | College | UK |
Sauce FM | Dance | UK |
Anfield FM | Sports | UK |
Sky News | News | UK |
Citybeat 96.7FM | Adult Contemporary | UK |
BBC Hindi - Din Bhar | News Updates,Indian | UK |
RWSfm | Varied | UK |
BBC Surrey | Varied | UK |
106 Jack FM Oxfordshire | Adult Contemporary | UK |
Bradley Stoke Radio | Varied | UK |
Energy FM Old School Classics | Dance | UK |
Deddington OnAir | Rock,Pop | UK |
Summer Time Radio | 90s,Dance,Electronica | UK |
Stomp Radio | R&B | UK |
Stress Factor | Dance,Electronica | UK |
Total Biker FM | Rock,Punk | UK |
BBC Manchester | Varied,News | UK |
BrooklynFM | Rock,Classic Rock | UK |
FRED Film Ch9 Romanian | Talk | UK |
Fantasy radio | Varied | UK |