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Cornmarket Derby
Cornmarket may be: * Cornmarket Group Financial Services Ltd, Ireland * Cornmarket Press, the original name of the Haymarket Group when it started in the 1950s * Cornmarket Street, a shopping street in central Oxford, England * Corn exchange A corn exchange is a building where merchants trade grains. The word "corn" in British English denotes all cereal grains, such as wheat and barley; in the United States these buildings were called grain exchange. Such trade was common in towns ...
(as corn market), a building where farmers and merchants historically traded cereal grains. {{disambig ...
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Cornmarket Group Financial Services Ltd
Cornmarket Group Financial Services Ltd is an investment and insurance brokerage company based in Ireland. Over the years, Cornmarket expanded their product range to provide financial services and car insurance, income protection, retirement planning, home and health insurance to teachers, nurses, and other public sector employees. Formerly Woodchester Brokers, it was founded in 1972 as Savings & Investments Ltd. It was acquired by Irish Life and Permanent in 1999. The head office is in Dublin, Ireland. The company is names for the area of Dublin in which the original offices were located in Dublin 8 close to the old Corn Exchange, Dublin, Corn Exchange. References External links Cornmarket Group Financial Services Ltd website
Financial services companies based in Dublin (city) Financial services companies established in 1972 Irish companies established in 1972 {{finance-stub ...
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Cornmarket Press
Haymarket Media Group is a privately held media company headquartered in London. It has publications in the consumer, business and customer sectors, both print and online. It operates exhibitions allied to its own publications, and previously on behalf of organisations such as the BBC. The company expanded outside the UK in 1999. History Haymarket began in the 1950s, under the name Cornmarket Press. Clive Labovitch and Michael Heseltine – later a Cabinet minister under Margaret Thatcher and Deputy Prime Minister under John Major – who had met at university, started out with the 1957 ''Directory of Opportunities for Graduates'', and in 1959 relaunched ''Man About Town'', which was to become an influential (if unprofitable) men's consumer magazine. The company failed in its relaunch of the British news weekly ''Topic'', the title closing at the end of 1962, within three months of the takeover. The partners split in 1965, with Heseltine renaming his half of the business Haymarke ...
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Cornmarket Street
Cornmarket Street (colloquially referred to as Cornmarket or historically The Corn) is a major shopping street and pedestrian precinct in Oxford, England that runs north to south between Magdalen Street and Carfax Tower. To the east is the Golden Cross arcade of small jewellery and craft shops in a courtyard, leading to the Covered Market. To the west is the indoor Clarendon Shopping Centre that connects in an L-shape to Queen Street. Cornmarket was semi-pedestrianised and made a limited-access street in 1999. Cycling is allowed 6pm to 10am. In 2002, it was voted Britain's second worst street in a poll of listeners to the ''Today'' programme. The rating was largely due to a failed attempt to repave the street in 2001. The granite setts, which had been laid extensively, cracked and the contractor went into liquidation. In 2003, it was repaved again and new benches installed, amidst reports of budgetary problems. History of shops 26–28 Cornmarket on the corner of Ship Stree ...
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