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Newton Industrial Estate, Cumbria

Newton Industrial Estate maps

Historic maps of Newton Industrial Estate and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Newton Industrial Estate maps

Newton Industrial Estate map

Historic map of Newton Industrial Estate

Cumbria map

Illustrated Victorian map of Cumbria

Newton Industrial Estate map

Historic Map of any Newton Industrial Estate postcode

Newton Industrial Estate maps
View all Newton Industrial Estate maps

Newton Industrial Estate photos

We have no photos of Newton Industrial Estate, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Carlisle, Cummersdale

Newton Industrial Estate books

Displaying 3 of 26 books about Newton Industrial Estate and the local area.   View all Newton Industrial Estate books

A Taste of Cumbria and the Lake District
Paperback
£14

Cumbria Photographic Memories
Paperback
£14

Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories
Paperback
£13

Newton Industrial Estate books
View all 26 Newton Industrial Estate and Cumbria books

Memories of Newton Industrial Estate

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Add your memory of Newton Industrial Estate or of a photo of Newton Industrial Estate.

Cumbria memories

"Snowed In"

If my memory is correct it was the winter of 1940/41 when I was a teenager, working for a long distance transport company from the midlands. We had left Carlisle on our way south via Shap Fell when we were caught in a blizzard and the roads were impassable. Our lorries had to be left on Shap and somehow we got... [more]

Shared on 03 August 2009 by Douglas Robinson.

Barclays and Taylors of Tarraby Farm

My mother Gladys Taylor (nee Barclay) and father James Taylor married and lived at Tarraby Farm, Carlisle in 1927. My mother's parents were Alexander and Isabella Barclay, who lived and worked on the the farm. My grandfather was originally from Nigg, Aberdeenshire, where he was headmaster of Cove Bay public school, till approx 1918. My father was from Great Strickland, his... [more]

Shared on 12 March 2009 by Angela Green.

Early Childhood

After retiring from the RAF, my father was with Air Ministry Constabulary and we moved to Stanwix in 1938 when my father was posted to 4 MU. We lived in Knowe Park Avenue and I attended Stanwix School. My sister attended the Margaret Sewell School for Girls. I was five years old when we moved to Stanwix and... [more]

Shared on 07 August 2009 by Lorna Jennings.

That was home

My grandmother, Margaret Flint, was landlady of the Greyhound from sometime during WW2 until 1954. I lived there from 1944 until she retired. Being a publican meant grandmother was entitled to more than the normal rations in the immediate post war era since she was required to provide food to any traveller. Travellers were few and far between... [more]

Shared on 02 February 2008 by Bryan Flint.

Extracts From Newton Industrial Estate & Cumbria books

Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Newton Industrial Estate, inspired by Frith photos.

Barrow-in-Furness A History and Celebration

Chamber and the Queen's Hall with its stunning panels of stained glass on its western side. The three top windows feature Lord Frederick Charles Cavendish, the 7th Duke of Devonshire, and Lord Edward Cavendish. Below them are six rectangular windows depicting the genealogy of the Cavendish family. The Council Chamber, the setting for the formal meetings of the full Borough Council, is immediately off the Queen's Hall; this... [more]

Barrow-in-Furness A History and Celebration

Officially it is designated Her Majesty's Submarine Torpedo Boat No 1. Many at the Admiralty still considered the new- fangled machine a shameful and un-British device. Despite these early doubts, by the outbreak of the First World War Britain had the largest and most advanced submarine fleet in the world, and Vickers were responsible for building 69 of the 74 submarines in the Royal Navy. However, it was... [more]

Barrow-in-Furness A History and Celebration

The highly skilled workforce is still here; it is the scale of operations that has been reduced, as the industrial complexes in Barrow-in-Furness have slimmed down to remain competitive and efficient.

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