"Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it." – Mary Oliver

Oxford Day 2: Queens College, St Mary’s Church, History of Science Museum

Wednesday 30th April 2025

Today I booked a tour of Christ Church College at 10 am, then my plan was to potter around a few of the other Oxford sites. The college tour is led by a porter and includes the Great Hall and Tom Quad. The Great Hall is stunning. The dining hall in the Harry Potter films was modelled on it and they used the stairs in filming. Breakfast and lunch are served buffet style for the college. Dinner has two sittings, the first at 6:15 pm and the second at 7:15 pm. If you go to the late sitting you need to wear formal academic dress. At the entrance to the Christ Church Cathedral we were handed off to the verger for a guided tour of the cathedral before exploring the cloisters independently.

Meadow Building Christ Church College. This is where you enter for the tours.
The Great Hall.
High Table
Fireplace Great Hall
Alice in Wonderland windows. Lewis Carroll (real name Charles Dodgson) was a mathematics tutor at the college. The dean of Christ Church’s daughter Alice Liddell inspired the stories.
Tom Quad. Stay off the grass!
Christ Church Cathedral

After the tour I walked to the University Church of St Mary primarily to climb the tower. The view is spectacular. Afterwards I had a look around the church and attended the short Communion Service at 12:15 pm.

University Church of St Mary
Radcliffe Camera from St Marys Tower
All Souls College
Looking out towards Christ Church Cathedral

My friend who took me on a tour the previous day pointed me towards the website that lists goings on in Oxford. I decided to go to the lunchtime organ recital in the chapel at Queens College. I used to play the electronic organ and I enjoy a good pipe organ too, and bonus—I got to see inside the gates of another college. Queens College was updated in the 18th century with much of its medieval buildings replaced.

Queens College
Queens College Chapel

By the end of the recital it was getting late for lunch and I was hungry. I headed to the covered market. I had my heart set on a pie from Pieminister, but when I arrived they were sold out of most flavours. I asked and they had some warming in the oven that would be ready in about 15 minutes. I decided to wait, but I was starving so I popped over to Ben’s Cookies and bought a couple. I ate half of one and kept the rest for later.

Covered Market
Beef pie with mashed potato and gravy. It was good. However, they didn’t have any mushy peas left.

Feeling better, I popped across to the History of Science Museum. When I arrived they said that a tour would be happening at 3:30 pm which was 10 minutes away so I decided to hang around and join that. I turned out that I was the only taker, so I had the guide all to myself which was great. In the basement of the building was Oxford’s first scientific laboratory where students were taught chemistry. The museum has a wonderful collection of Islamic time pieces, historic scientific equipment. It’s a small museum but I found it fascinating.

Astrolobe

My next stop was Blackwell’s Bookshop. I’d been inside with my friend on our tour the previous day but now I had time to settle in and peruse the shelves. From the outside it looks like your standard small bookshelf, go inside though and it stretches back in to the distance and then you head downstairs and it’s a whole new world of books.

Standard High St Book Shop
It’s bigger than it looks
Heading downstairs, it’s much bigger than our local library.
They also have a separate store across the street for SF, Fantasy and graphic novels. I thought my Star Wars loving daughter would get a kick out of this sign.

By this time it was almost 6:05 pm which is when Evensong starts at Christ Church Cathedral. I found this service a lot better than Evensong at St Paul’s. We had the full order of service for a start, along with the psalms for the evening. It was also more intimate.

I sat about here, but I took this photo when I visited earlier in the day.

Afterwards I stopped at Marks and Spenser and picked up two small salads for dinner—after the pie I needed my greens.

Daily steps: 16,809


Comments

6 responses to “Oxford Day 2: Queens College, St Mary’s Church, History of Science Museum”

  1. I loved reading this post. Such a storied past!
    And I had no idea Lewis Carroll…wasn’t his name!!! What an interesting factoid to learn this Tuesday morning.

    1. I never knew that either.

  2. Thank you, Melissa, for another insightful travel post about Oxford. Very much enjoyed the photos and the explanations.

    1. Thanks Daria.

  3. I live vigorously through your travel posts. You have such an amazing way to travel and experience things. Thank you for sharing it so detailed.

    I had now idea Lewis Carroll was a mathematics tutor. Or that he was actually named differently.

    1. I hope the recaps will be helpful to other people. They will also help me when I put some photobooks together.