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Ningwood

Ningwood maps

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

Ningwood photos

We have no photos of Ningwood, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Shalfleet| Calbourne| Newtown| Mottistone| Yarmouth| Hanover| Brighstone| Freshwater| Freshwater Bay| Colwell Bay| Totland Bay| Shorwell| Carisbrooke| Newport| Alum Bay| Kingston| Keyhaven| Gurnard| Lymington| Cowes

Ningwood area books

Displaying 1 of 4 books about Ningwood and the local area.   View all books for this area

Memories of Ningwood

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Isle of Wight memories

Captain Macpherson

My late mother told me that she was related to Miss White, daughter of the Rev. Richard Walton White. His daughter left the manor and or land to Captain Macpherson in 1911. Although we have no claims on this family, we have no first names of Miss White or Captain Macpherson's nephew for our family tree. Any historical history and or photographs would be great.

Childhood Memories

My aunt and uncle ran the New Inn in the 1930s and 1940s, possibly before.
Their names were Patrick Huston and Annie Huston. Also living with them in the early 1940s were my grandmother, Mary Evans, and my Auntie Lou. I lived in Portsmouth and remember being sent by my parents at the outbreak of war in 1939 as they thought it would be safer for my brother and myself. However, after 3 or 4 days my mother came and took us back as she did not want us to be separated. I have seen a postcard on another site showing the fireplace uncovered at the New Inn by P F Huston, my uncle, and I remember sitting at this fireplace and listening to a speech by the King at the outbreak of war.

After my uncle became ill they gave up the pub and moved to Chapel Cottage, remaining there until my uncle died. I spent many happy holidays with them and used to spend lovely days... Read more

'Brooside'

I remember when my dad brought a run down derelict building across the road from the New Inn. As a child, a building site was a wonderful play ground. He restored it with oak beams and York stone floors, I only wish we still owned it, the tranquility of Shalfleet seems so desirable now compared to London, ahh, feet up in front of a large open log fire, or just to sit in that peaceful garden watching the fruit swell and ripen and as autumn approached, the bubbling brook that supported generations of water fowl and freshwater eels, a different world, a different lifetime.

Joy Arnold as A Child

I lived on the Isle of Wight from the early 1930s until roughly 1943.We lived at several different locations, Cranmore being one of them. I remember as a small child Mrs Jordan's shop. I also have vague memories of the old postman wearing his Victorian postman's uniform and also of Mr and Mrs Higginbottom. As I recall, Mr Higginbottom worked for an insurance company and was also a Sunday School teacher and taught myself and my two brothers Reg and Archie . Mr and Mrs Higginbottom took all three of us to Sunday School in their car. There were two elderly sisters who lived next door to us who kept angora rabbits for their fur, which they used to spin! I think of them as my guardian angels as they used to tell me to sing "There is a happy land" at the top of my voice when I went to fetch the milk from the farm nearby so that they knew that I was safe. ( I was only... Read more

Washing The Sheep

Winkle Street c1955
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My grandfather Jim Long, including my dad Les and brothers, plus helpers, walked the sheep from Westover Farm to Winkle Street to wash the sheep every year. It was a big event in the village - all the villagers and children. It was usual for one of the kids to fall in.

Our House!

The Village c1960
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Our house is the second left and I was about 8 when this was taken. The field in front of the houses is now the site of the Methodist Chapel.

Going to School

The Village c1960
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I walked past these houses every day to and from school from 1956 to 1959 when my family lived at Marsh Green.

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