Newchurch, Isle Of Wight
Newchurch photos
Displaying 1 of 8 old photos of Newchurch. View all Newchurch photos
Newchurch maps
Historic maps of Newchurch and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Newchurch maps
Newchurch books
Displaying 3 of 3 books about Newchurch and the local area. View all Newchurch books
3 Newchurch photos appear in 1 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Newchurch
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Newchurch
.
Add your memory of Newchurch
or of a photo of Newchurch.
I wonder if any one remembers the cockney kid Fred, who moved into "The Elms" back in 55 at the wonderful age of 15, went to school in Sandown for almost a year until graduation, ended up with the Royal Mail until I eventually returned to London went on to Manchester and then the rest of the world in the oil... [more]
Shared on 06 March 2009
Isle Of Wight memories
Grandad's war days and our family hols
My grandfather was stationed on the island "During the War"and was very friendly with a family from Arreton called Hendy. The mother's name was Lil and the father was affectionally called"Tit" (because he was quite small). After the war, my gramps and all the family visited Aunt Lil and Uncle Tit quite frequently. Tit grew his own veg in a back... [more]
Shared on 04 March 2008
I lived in Arreton from birth until my marriage. My family consisted of Dad and Mum, my sister Gill, my paternal grandparents and a retired infant teacher Miss Muskett. She taught me at home before I began school at the village CE school where I remained from 1936-1942. Headmaster was Mr White known to us all as Skipper White. At school... [more]
Shared on 03 February 2007
It was 1969 and I had just come down from Manchester and was staying once more in my family home in Hatch End. My parents suggested that I took my younger brother away for a break following his "O" Levels so we set off for a youth hostelling trip to the Isle of Wight.
A ferry crossing from... [more]
Shared on 17 January 2010
Many of my childhood summer holidays were spent at Sandown. We usually stayed at Mrs. Woodnutt's hotel in Carter Street. Mr. Woodnutt hired out the deck chairs on Sandown Beach. He also kept ferrets and I was allowed to go and help him look after them. One of our family's favourite places was the miniature golf course pictured. It was called... [more]
Shared on 04 October 2006
Mr grandfather owned the old cement works in Quay Lane (this picture shows the large building with the tall chimney, centre of frame) and his men used to make concrete roofing tiles there. In the late 1950's the chimney became dangerous and they used expolsives to demolish it. I have some very poor photos of this. His building company was so... [more]
Shared on 29 January 2010
I was born in 1942 and brought up in Walthamstow in NE London. We were a working class family and Dad always managed to provide us with 2 weeks' holiday somewhere. How we came to holiday in Wroxall is still a bit of a mystery. Neither Mum nor Dad had ever been to the Isle of Wight before. In August 1952... [more]
Shared on 14 October 2009
At the bottom of the hill on the right I believe that tall building belonged to the local bakers. The low building next to it - this side of the bakers - is a thatched cottage where my grandmother lived. My mother grew up here. The cottage housed around 3/4 families but it has now been made into... [more]
Shared on 13 May 2007
Extracts From Newchurch & Isle Of Wight books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Newchurch, inspired by Frith photos.
Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album
Despite its name, Newchurch is one of the oldest parishes on the Isle of Wight, and once included Ryde and Ventnor within its bounds. The church dates back to the Norman Conquest, though it contains additions from most historic periods.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Isle of Wight Photographic Memories
Despite its name, Newchurch is one of the oldest parishes on the Isle of Wight, and once included Ryde and Ventnor within its bounds. The church dates back to the Norman Conquest, though it contains additions from most historic periods.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album
Newchurch was the home of Richard Forward, who served as its schoolmaster for 53 years. The epitaph on his gravestone, paid for by former pupils, reads: 'In yonder sacred pile his voice was wont to sound, And now his body rests beneath the hallowed ground. He taught the peasant boy to read and use the pen; His earthly toils are o'er; he's cry'd his last Amen'. ... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
