The Old Bank Hotel is a hotel located in the historic university city of Oxford, England. It is located on the south side of Oxford's High Street, where it was the first hotel in one hundred and thirty five years to be created in the city's heart.
Location
The Old Bank hotel and its restaurant Quod, is located at the end of Oxford's High street.
The complex offers a large area to park, access to which is possible via Merton Street and the Magpie Lane.
History
The main building of the Old Bank Hotel dates back to the 18th century, with number 93 not being erected until 1775 on a site owned by bankers John Parsons & William Fletcher called "George Hall". The five bays on the left were added in 1798. The corner of Magpie Lane was rebuilt by Stephen Salter in 1902 to imitate a sixteenth-century house. The building was separate from the bank until 1980 and was later a stationery shop run by Joseph Vincent. The buildings served as a bank (latterly as the main Oxford branch of Barclays Bank) from 1775 until 1998 when millionaire art collector Jeremy Mogford bought the building to renovate it into a hotel.
Facilities
The Georgian hotel has 42 rooms overlooking Oxford's towers and spires and is air-conditioned. The hotel has a number of 20th-century paintings, including Paddy Summerfieldâs âHandheldâ collection (commissioned for the hotel) and works by Stanley Spencer, Sandra Blow, Craigie Aitchison, Michael Ayrton, Roger Hilton, Harrington Mann and Henrietta Dubrey.
Quod Restaurant and Brasserie
Within the hotel is the Quod Restaurant and Bar. The restaurant is designed with stone floors, an oval zinc-topped bar and leather banquette seating. Quod's emphasis is on good quality seasonal produce, and an excellent atmosphere.
Quod Brasserie with its terrace and bar is the main part of the hotel, open all day serving simple Mediterranean food surrounded by an amazing collection of young British art. The hotel also offers private areas including The Gallery, Boardroom or Red Room.
Local Legend
Local legend tells of former resident Prudence Burcote, a Puritan maid whose unrequited love of a Cavalier resulted in her suicide. Although, according to Yurdan, her burial records held at University Church of St Mary the Virgin opposite make no mention of this. Nonetheless a Cornish couple who later took up residence of the house reported a sighting of a figure in a long brown dress with a white fichu along with an array of flickering electrics and misplaced objects which they linked to the legend. During the buildings later incarnation as a bank, staff continued to report the sound of mysterious footsteps and rustling skirts. Yurdan and Puttick, however, find no reports following the buildings conversion to a hotel.
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