The below information has been adapted from a very interesting website on the history of Headington. For more information about the history of Boundary Brook or Headington, please see http://www.headington.org.uk/history/index.htm .
In 1889, Boundary Brook marked the eastern boundary of the City of Oxford, and was the boundary separating Oxford from three neighbouring villages: Headington, Cowley and Iffley. Three of the boundary stones set up in 1892 are still in existence today; two of these are in Headington and the third is in Cowley (on Barracks lane). Boundary Brook marked the eastern boundary for 40 years, until 1929, at which point Headington, Cowley and Iffley were brought into the city boundary of Oxford and became suburbs of Oxford.
Boundary Brook starts just south of the present Cuckoo lane, and runs south down Headley Way. These days it starts underground, but up until the 1930s it was in the open, with steam engines refilling their water from it. The brook crosses the road at the point marked by the boundary stone, the point at which Headington and London Roads meet (hence the change in name here). The brook then continues underground, under the back gardens of residential houses to the east of Valentia Road, crossing Old Road half-way between Valentia Road and Highfield Avenue, finally surfacing after a short bend to the east. Interestingly the brook was piped underground for this section (alongside Valentia road) in the 1980s for health and safety reasons.
After surfacing, the brook runs south in-between Oxford University’s Old Road Campus and Mileway Gardens, passing underneath Roosevelt Drive. This part of the brook is currently part of the “Boundary Brook Wildlife Corridor”. The brook continues south past the Churchill Hospital and then turns south-east running along the edge of Southfields golf course. After meeting Lye Stream it makes a sharp south-west turn into Cowley, running down and under Barracks Lane. The brook then goes underground again near Marsh Lane, resurfacing on the south-west side of Cowley Road. Boundary Brook then continues towards “Boundary Brook Nature Park” by running under Rymer’s Lane and along the north boundary of Florence Park to Iffley Road. After passing the Boundary Brook Nature Reserve, the brook makes its final journey to the River Thames, reaching it just south of Donnington Bridge.
This cache will take you alongside the Boundary Brook close to the Old Road Campus of the University of Oxford. You are looking for a magnetic micro. The closest parking is on Demesne Furze where there are a few 2 hour free parks in between the resident permit parks, or on Old Road, near South Park, with a short walk via several marked access footpath points. Please approach the cache on the public trail running between Old Road and Roosevelt Drive. We attempted to get as accurate coordinates as possible but with the tree cover, this may be variable.
Please take care if with geo-kids near the stream, which has quite slippery banks at this point.