Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Newton Abbot, Devon
- Newton Aycliffe, Durham
- Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside
- Newton Stewart, Dumfries and Galloway
- Newton Ferrers, Devon
- Newton Poppleford, Devon
- Maiden Newton, Dorset
- Newton, Mid Glamorgan
- Newton-by-the-Sea, Northumberland
- Newton, West Glamorgan
- Newton, Suffolk
- Sturminster Newton, Dorset
- Newton-on-Ouse, Yorkshire
- Old Newton, Suffolk
- Newton St Cyres, Devon
- Newton, Lancashire (near Blackpool)
- Newton-in-Bowland, Lancashire (near Slaidburn)
- Newton under Roseberry, Cleveland
- Newton Valence, Hampshire
- Newton, Lancashire (near Kirkby Lonsdale)
- Buckland, Devon (near Newton Abbot)
- Newton, Lothian (near Queensferry)
- Newton, Cumbria
- Newton, Cheshire (near Chester)
- Newton, Hereford & Worcester (near Leominster)
- Newton, Shropshire (near Bridgnorth)
- Newton, West Midlands
- Newton, Northamptonshire
- Newton, Cambridgeshire (near Wisbech)
- Newton, Norfolk
- Newton, Grampian (near Elgin)
- Newton, Borders (near Jedburgh)
- Newton, Dumfries and Galloway (near Annan)
- Newton, Shropshire (near Ellesmere)
- Newton, Cheshire (near Frodsham)
- Newton, Hereford & Worcester (near Presteigne)
Photos
1,073 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
671 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 25 to 1.
Memories
218 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
A Happy Childhood
I lived in Jubilee Cottages in Nethercote with mum and dad. My dad, Charlie Wilson, collected milk from the farms in the area, his lorry being based at Swepstone Dairy. Mum, Florence, worked in the dairy making Stilton ...Read more
A memory of Newton Burgoland in 1955 by
Childhood
My memory of Little Kingshill: I went to live with my aunty and uncle Mr and Mrs Kitchener in Ashwell Farm Cottage. My uncle worked up on Ashwell Farm. I used to sit out in my pram eating a bowl of veg. I went to Little Kingshill ...Read more
A memory of Little Kingshill in 1951
Newcastle University
I attended the University from 1970 - 1973 studying Surveying and Mathematics with Messrs Carmody and Newton. I lived in Havelock Hall for two years, and was involved with the JRC committee that ran the social side of ...Read more
A memory of Newcastle upon Tyne in 1970 by
Childhood Memories
I was born in Hereford County Hospital in 1945 and together with my twin sister was bought back to Broad View, Llangrove where I lived with my Mum and Dad and older brother from 1945 until I got married in 1965. My Dad had lived ...Read more
A memory of Llangrove in 1950 by
Growing Up In Newton
I was born in the old cottage on the left, 175 High Street, in 1948, as June Glencross, my parents squatted there after the war, my dad became the local builder. In 1956 we moved up the road to the old congregational ...Read more
A memory of Newton-le-Willows in 1948 by
Fair Oak As It Was
My first day of school was September 1965 at Fair Oak Infants. It wasn't too bad the first day as my Mum was allowed to stay at the back of the classroom, but after that I was left on my own. I became very ...Read more
A memory of Fair Oak in 1965 by
1956
Summer 1956.... I am Armell, a "Frenchy, a "Frog", who will remember for ever my beautiful days with Mr and Mrs Cantrell, John and Jill, from Lower Kingswood. I was in "such a need" just after my father had passed over and ... so many ...Read more
A memory of Lower Kingswood in 1956
Tithby Or Tythby
I used to live in the village of TYTHBY, spelled with a Y and not an I. I did not even know that there was another village close by with a similar name. But I have checked on the computer and there it is, not too far away in the ...Read more
A memory of Tithby in 1944 by
Living In North Boarhunt 1965 1968
My parents moved to North Boarhunt in 1964/65. We lived at the top of Trampers Lane - sideways to what was then Doney's Garage. Our house was called "Tryfan". I went to Newton Primary School and have very fond ...Read more
A memory of North Boarhunt in 1965 by
Captions
108 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
Maiden Newton's mill is probably situated on the site of many earlier mill buildings.
Dorchester Road 1906 Maiden Newton makes a good centre for exploring the Dorset downs.
Not far from Maiden Newton, Frome Vau Church (as it should properly be called) is pastoral and peaceful, with wildfowl in its river and cattle grazing around pasture and orchard.
It was on the railway from Newton Abbot to Moretonhampstead, but the line closed to passengers on 28th February 1959.
The bar staff are in attendance, possibly waiting for customers after the Newton, Clifton and Salwick Field Day, very popular in the 1960s.
Of Hardhorn, Newton, and Staining, only the last name is mentioned in the Domesday Book.
As if one Compton Abbas was not enough, Dorset is fortunate enough to have two: one is near Maiden Newton and is usually known as West?
Architectural greats such as G E Street, Ernest Newton and later Oliver Hill worked on the school buildings, a classic collection of their kind.
Maiden Newton stands on the high road between Dorchester and Crewkerne, probably on a very old route between Dorset and Somerset.
Maiden Newton has been a much-appreciated centre for walking holidays in recent years, for many of the best villages and beauty spots on the Dorset downlands are within reach.
Another open area of Newton Abbot is Decoy, to the south of town.
After the railway reached Newton Abbot in 1846, it soon acquired a reputation as a Victorian railway town.
Standing at the head of the Teign estuary, Newton Abbot underwent a remarkable growth, tripling its size after the arrival of the railway in 1846.
In the part-Norman parish church of this large and attractive village the great Isaac Newton was baptised.
Newton Abbot market has changed a great deal in both character and appearance since this photograph was taken in the 1920s.
Maiden Newton makes a good centre for exploring the Dorset downs.
Newton Poppleford clusters for a mile along the highway from Exeter to Lyme Regis.
Taken on a bright day, this shows Newton Pool pictured from across the water.
The Chapel on the right has the polygonal war memorial shrine attached, designed by Ernest Newton (1920).
Here we see the impressive masonry-arched Newton Viaduct.
Maiden Newton's mill spent a number of years in the 20th century as a carpet factory, in the same way that many of Dorset's old mill buildings had to find new uses in the modern age.
This view from The King's Head at Newton-under-Roseberry shows the quarried face of Roseberry Topping, known affectionately as 'the Matterhorn of Cleveland', which stands at just over 1,000 feet above
At the foot of Roseberry Topping is the hamlet of Newton under Roseberry, and in this view we see the Kings Head Inn (extreme right).
Newton Poppleford takes its name from the round stones, or popples (like the pobbles of Budleigh Salterton), that abound in the area; it was a fording place over the Otter for centuries
Places (153)
Photos (1073)
Memories (218)
Books (1)
Maps (671)