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Funeral Live Streaming Services - Funeral Videographer

Live Funeral Streaming & Funeral Videography

Funeral Streaming, Funeral Videographer, Funeral Video, Funeral TV hire, funeral sound and funeral photography. Please visit our website for more info

Funeral Streaming Witney. We offer a  live streaming service for funerals in Cotswolds area including Castle Combe, Morten in Marsh, Broadway. Witney, Tetbury, Bourton on the Water and all of Oxfordshire and the surrounding towns and villages. If there is a Church there we have already live streamed there.

Funeral Streaming in Witney.

Because of our reputation for funeral streaming, Funeral Videography, Funeral Photography & Audio Visual Equipment such as large TVs as well as making tribute videos we are often asked to help by families and funeral directors in the Witney and Oxfordshire areas

We have live streamed & created funeral videos for many families and still work with many funeral directors in Witney and surrounding areas. Have you thought about a funeral tribute video made from photographs set to music ? We can make this for you and show it for funerals in Witney on our 75 inch TV and live mix it into the funeral stream

We are often the first call for funeral directors for Witney Oxforshire

If you and your family need services like ours in and around the Oxfordshire area and especially Witney please get in touch so we can see if we can help you.

Feel free to contact us direct so we can help with funeral streaming in Witney or visit our new website for more examples and more information


Funeral Streaming Witney Oxforshire

Witney Oxfordhire Funeral Streaming

Feel free to contact us direct daz4421@me.com or call or text 07766 754944

https://funeral-av.co.uk

Below is some information about Witney in Oxfordshire


Witney is a market town on the River Windrush in West Oxfordshire in the county of Oxfordshire, England. It is 12 miles (19 km) west of Oxford. The place-name "Witney" is derived from the Old English for "Witta's island".[3] The earliest known record of it is as Wyttannige in a Saxon charter of 969. The Domesday Book of 1086 records it as Witenie.

Notable buildings[edit]

Holy Trinity parish church, Woodgreen

The Butter Cross

Witney Town Hall

The Church of England parish church of St Mary the Virgin was originally Norman. The north porch and north aisle were added in this style late in the 12th century, and survived a major rebuilding in about 1243. In this rebuilding the present chancel, transepts, tower and spire were added and the nave was remodelled, all in the Early English style. In the 14th century a number of side chapels and some of the present windows were added in the Decorated style. In the 15th century the south transept was extended and the present west window of the nave were added in the Perpendicular style.[4] The tower has a peal of eight bells.[5] The tower of the church is 69 feet (21 metres) high, topped by a tall and slender spire, which brings the total height of the church to 154 feet (47 metres). [6]

Holy Trinity Church, Wood Green, was built in 1849 in a Gothic Revival rendition of Early English Gothic. St Mary the Virgin and Holy Trinity are now members of a single team parish.[7]

The Friends Meeting House in Wood Green was built in the 18th century. Since 1997 Quakers in Witney have met at the corn exchange.[8] The Methodist church in the High Street was built in 1850.[9] It is now one of five Methodist churches and chapels in Witney.[10] The Roman Catholic parish of Our Lady and Saint Hughwas founded in 1913.[11] It originally used a chapel in West End built in 1881[12] but now has its own modern building.[13] The old chapel in West End is now Elim Christian Fellowship.[14] Witney High Street still has several older buildings, which are protected by the Witney and Cogges conservation area.[15]

Witney Market began in the Middle Ages. Thursday is the traditional market day but there is also a market on Saturday. The buttercross in the market square is so called because people from neighbouring towns would gather there to buy butter and eggs. It was built in about 1600 and its clock was added in 1683.[12] Witney Town Hall, which is arcaded on the ground floor and has an assembly room on the first floor, was completed in 1786.[16] Witney has long been an important crossing over the River Windrush. The architect Thomas Wyatt rebuilt the bridge in Bridge Street in 1822.[17]

Witney Workhouse was on Razor Hill (now Tower Hill). It was designed by the architect George Wilkinsonand built in 1835–36. It had four wings radiating from an octagonal central building, similar to Chipping Norton workhouse, which also was built by Wilkinson. His younger brother William Wilkinson added a separate chapel to Witney Workhouse in 1860.[18][19] In the First World War the workhouse held prisoners of war. In 1940 the workhouse was converted into Crawford Collets[20] engineering factory under the direction of Leonard Frank Eve. The chapel was made the factory canteen. In 1979 Crawford Collets had the main buildings demolished and replaced with a modern factory, but preserved the entrance gate and former chapel. In 2004 the modern factory was demolished for redevelopment. The gate and chapel have again been preserved and the former chapel converted into offices.[21]


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Phone or text us on 07766 - 754944

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