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Newnhamvisitormap to Reinhill at The Hyde Newnham on Severn LINE Old Station Yard Guide for Visitors For more information about Newnham visit RAILWAY Newnham Allotments Earlybirds www.newnhamonsevern.co.uk Recycling WEST Toddler Group bins VIEW LANE Newnham Cricket & EAST Ground St. Peter's , HYDE VIEW C.E. Primary School Dean Forest Severn Farm on Gloucester Playground to LANE A48 Westbury Skateboard Minsterworth BMX Tennis & Netball Fish Courts Hut UNLAWATER Playing Field HYDE ROAD BANK CLIFF HYDE WHETSTONES LANE THE The STATION Vicarage ACACIA TERRACE CLOSE Toilets OAK HIGHFIELD Unlawater STATION House VILLAS The ROAD FREE Old PUBLIC Masonic Hall House SHEEN'S Mythe Car Terrace Bus Park MEADOW Smithyman Court Stop MEAD The STREET ORCHARD STATION Club HIGH KINGS RISE Mornington BEECHES Formerly Terrace ROAD ROAD The The George Drill Café Hall Langdons Nursery Cottonwood Bailey's HARRISON Old Chapel Stores Old Doctors Surgery STREET) Fabrics Wharf CLOSE & Upholstery BACK CLOSE (formerly RISE ALLSOPP Chemist ROAD QUEEN'S PENBY ACRE Veterinary Practice Rope ORCHARD CHURCH LAWN Walk STREET to Littledean The Black HIGH Hairdresser Clay Hill Potters, Pig The Grange Newnham Camphill Village Trust Armoury House Village Hall DEAN & Newnham Nab Hayden ROAD Community Cottages Lea Library Village Animal Pound SEVERN STREET SEVERN TERRACE Butcher Post Office Passage Beauty Salon House Newnham Wardrobe Joynes Meadow THE MERTONS Brightlands Apple Orchard St.Peters House Close The FerryFerry Riverdale (Ancient crossing) THE Apartments Casa Interiors (formerly GREEN Brightlands D School) A O R former H RC Victoria Hotel CHU The Nab Bus Post box Victoria Stop Garage Bus Peace Bus Stop Garden Stop Bus stop Churchyard Defibrillator Former castle ringwork nationally Viewing point important SevernSevern archaeological site Public seating StSt Peter's. Peter's Church Millennium Church Binoculars Castle House River Churchyard River About 100 metres Look out for Underhill Farm The Severn Bore , Pill , & RUDDLE Bullo Park to , Lydney A48 Collow Pill North Oaklands Blakeney © Mike Penny January 2018 Chepstow.
Recommended publications
  • 'Gold Status' Lydney Town Council Achieves
    branch line. branch country country typical a of pace relaxing the experience to can get off to explore the local area and get and area local the explore to off get can a chance chance a 5 stations so you you so stations 5 with Railway Heritage d an Steam ET 4 15 GL dney, y L Road, Forest tation, S chard or N days ected sel Open 845840 01594 and from railway building. railway from and later benefited from the growth of the ironworks into a tinplate factory factory tinplate a into ironworks the of growth the from benefited later trade of the Forest of Dean began to transform Lydney’s economy, which which economy, Lydney’s transform to began Dean of Forest the of trade 19th century the building of a tramroad and harbour to serve the coal coal the serve to harbour and tramroad a of building the century 19th Lydney’s harbour area was always strategically important and in the early early the in and important strategically always was area harbour Lydney’s of the 17th century and the reclamation of saltmarsh in the early 18th. early the in saltmarsh of reclamation the and century 17th the of establishment of ironworks at the start start the at ironworks of establishment Its owners also profited from the the from profited also owners Its deposits, and extensive woodland. woodland. extensive and deposits, resources, including fisheries, mineral mineral fisheries, including resources, free cafe, and local farm shop and deli. and shop farm local and cafe, free Picture framing and gift shop.
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  • The Festival Players Theatre Company Press Release
    The Festival Players Theatre Company Press Release FESTIVAL PLAYERS SERVE UP AN ALL-MALE “AS YOU LIKE IT” AT CULZEAN CASTLE - 60-date UK tour travels from village greens to castles of celebrity and royalty – - AYRSHIRE : Culzean Castle (NTS), Maybole, Tuesday, June 26, 7.15pm - Tickets: 01655 884455 If you go down to the woods today – you could be in for a big surprise! For the Festival Players, one of Britain’s top touring theatre companies, is marking its 22nd year with a pacy performance that will certainly keep audiences guessing. This year they have chosen to perform Shakespeare’s pastoral romantic comedy As You Like It – one of Shakespeare’s greatest crowd pleasers. Set in the Forest of Arden all kinds of antics are going on – from amorous advances to clowning, disguise and gender reversals! And the Players will be giving audiences even more of a conundrum - by fielding an all male cast! The Gloucestershire-based Festival Players will tour the UK with an exclusively male cast between May 31 and August 27, stopping at the spectacular Italianate Culzean Castle & Country Park on June 26 – one of many National Trust for Scotland properties at which they perform this summer Touchstone & Audrey Rosalind/|Ganymede, Celia/Aliena, Orlando Phebe & Silvius Rosalind, Duke Frederick, Celia The Players, who set out to deliver high class open-air (and occasionally indoor) theatre and make Shakespeare accessible to all, will stage more than 60 performances of the famous play across England, Scotland and Wales – at English country houses, abbeys, parks and village greens to wonderful Welsh gardens like Aberglasney and dramatic Scottish castles including, for the first time, the royal residence of Balmoral.
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  • Newnham on Severn
    to Reinhill at The Hyde Newnham on Severn LINE Old Station Yard Guide for Visitors Recycling bins RAILWAY Allotments Newnham Earlybirds WEST Toddler Group VIEW LANE Newnham & EAST St. Peter's HYDE VIEW C.E. Primary School Dean Forest Farm Severn Cricket Ground on Gloucester, Playground to A48 Westbury Skateboard Minsterworth BMX Fish Tennis & Netball LANE Courts Hut Playing Field HYDE The Vicarage ROAD BANK WHETSTONES CLIFF UNLAWATER HYDE LANE THE STATION TERRACE ACACIA Toilets OAK CLOSE HIGHFIELD Unlawater STATION The House VILLAS FREE ROAD Old Masonic Hall PUBLIC SHEEN'S House Car Mythe Car Terrace Bus Park MEADOW Park Smithyman Court Stop MEAD The Town The STREET ORCHARD STATION Railway Clock Club HIGH KINGS RISE Inn Mornington BEECHES Terrace ROAD ROAD The The George Drill Café Bus Hall Stop Langdons Nursery Cottonwood Bailey's Stores HARRISON Old Chapel Doctors Surgery Old Fabrics Wharf CLOSE & Upholstery St. Peter's Church CLOSE Charity Shop RISE ALLSOPP Chemist STREET QUEEN'S PENBY BACK ACRE Veterinary Practice Rope ORCHARD LAWN Walk STREET to Littledean HIGH Hairdresser Clay Hill Potters, Newnham The Grange House Camphill Village Trust DEAN The Ship Inn Nab Hayden ROAD Cottages Lea W.I. Armoury Hut Village Village Hall & Animal Library Pound SEVERN STREET SEVERN TERRACE Butcher Post Office Passage Beauty Salon House Newnham Wardrobe Joynes Meadow THE MERTONS Brightlands Apple Orchard Antiques, Gifts & China St.Peters House Close The FerryFerry Riverdale (Ancient crossing) THE Apartments (formerly GREEN Brightlands D School) A O R former H Victoria Hotel RC CHU The Nab Post box Bus Victoria Stop Garage Bus Peace Bus Bus stop Stop Garden Stop Public telephone Former castle Churchyard ringwork Viewing point nationally important archaeological Public seating site StSt.
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  • Gloucestershire Village & Community Agents
    Helping older people in Gloucestershire feel more independent, secure, and have a better quality of life May 2014 Gloucestershire Village & Community Agents Managed by GRCC Jointly funded by Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group www.villageagents.org.uk Helping older people in Gloucestershire feel more independent, secure, and have a better quality of life Gloucestershire Village & Community Agents Managed by GRCC Jointly funded by Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group Gloucestershire Village and Key objectives: To give older people easy Community Agents is aimed 3 access to a wide range of primarily at the over 50s but also To help older people in information that will enable them offers assistance to vulnerable 1 Gloucestershire feel more to make informed choices about people in the county. independent, secure, cared for, their present and future needs. and have a better quality of life. The agents provide information To engage older people to To promote local services and support to help people stay 4 enable them to influence and groups, enabling the independent, expand their social 2 future planning and provision. Agent to provide a client with a activities, gain access to a wide community-based solution To provide support to range of services and keep where appropriate. people over the age of 18 involved with their local 5 who are affected by cancer. communities. Partner agencies ² Gloucestershire County Council’s Adult Social Care Helpdesk ² Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group ² Gloucestershire Rural Community
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  • Medieval Fish Weirs on the Mid-Tidal Reaches of the Severn River (Ashleworth-Arlingham)
    GLEVENSIS 42 2009 MEDIEVAL FISH WEIRS ON THE MID-TIDAL REACHES OF THE SEVERN RIVER (ASHLEWORTH-ARLINGHAM) Terry Moore-Scott INTRODUCTION in and around Gloucester, together with the archaeological evidence that has started to become It is not always appreciated how important a food- available (albeit not from this particular area), has not source fish was in medieval times.This was especially been addressed under one cover. This article is so because the church forbade the eating of meat therefore an attempt to draw together available during the 6 weeks of Lent and on all Fridays, as well information on the subject into a single overview. It as on other important festivals during the church year. looks at terminology encountered in the record, weir In coastal areas sea fish were caught and fishing was construction and regulation over the centuries and at a major activity near large rivers, pools and lakes. the archaeological evidence and ends with a summary Fishponds were created for breeding or as stock of weir-related information for each river-side parish ponds holding fish until they were needed. The studied. Severn in particular was a rich source of fish, notably salmon, lamprey, lampern, eels and shad (a kind of RELEVANT TERMINOLOGY herring). Various methods were employed for catching fish including basket traps, nets and Weir: From O.E. wera, in this context meaning a spearing. But on the river, no less important was the fixed structure of timber stakes and wattle hedging use made of constructed fish weirs (or "fixed engines" projecting out into or across a river to catch fish.
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  • A48 Main Road Alvington Parish
    A48 Main Road Alvington Parish Appendix 8 Printable Version – (Double sided/duplex) September 2018 A48 Main Road – overview The A48 passes through the centre of Alvington, to the North for Gloucester and to the South for Chepstow, Newport and Cardiff. The A48 has very old origins, it was first thought to have been Roman, but this has never been proven. There is considerable Roman evidence in the area, thus there should be roads somewhere and hence it is easy to assume the A48 could have been Roman. There are however references to 1145 when the Bishop of Hereford granted Alvington Manor to Llanthony Priory, he mentioned the recent devastation of land and dispersal of the inhabitants and it is possible that the ordered plan of the village, with a series of long home closes, (houses with long gardens or orchards), extending North West and South East from the main Gloucester to Chepstow road, was created after the grant. This arrangement still exists today thus making it impossible to widen the A48 or the footpaths through the village. Until the first Severn and Wye Bridge crossing was opened in 1966, the A48 was part of the main route between London and South Wales. For a while the volume of traffic was greatly reduced, however the volume has increased with time. Possible reasons: 1. In 1966 not every household had a car, now 50 years later it is not uncommon for a household to have four cars. 2. Tolls on the Severn Bridge used to be split both ways but were changed to West bound only entry into Wales, hence a large number of HGV type vehicles now avoid the tolls by driving down the A48 to South Wales.
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  • Welcome to Minsterworth Leaflet
    THE VILLAGER A monthly booklet giving up-to-date information on local events, delivered free to every household. Regular features include Gardening by the Severn, Minsterworth Creatives, Gloucestershire Viewpoints and Local Walks; see www.minsterworthvillagehall.org/the-villager-magazine.html for live links. Editor –Paula Ruffley [email protected] 751226 PARISH (CHURCH) MAGAZINE Published monthly by the Westbury Benefice, which includes Minsterworth, WELCOME Westbury, Rodley, Flaxley & Northwood Green. Church service information, details of events in the benefice, clergy, PCC officers and churchwardens. Available in the church or £3 per year Contact - Bev Robinson 750247 TO Editor – Yvonne Jones [email protected] 762052 Churchwardens for Minsterworth Ms Joanna Stait 750128 Mrs Anne Cowdrey 751295 MINSTERWORTH FLOODING After exceptionally heavy rain, and particularly high tides, some properties in Minsterworth are at risk from flooding. If you think that you are at risk, you are strongly advised to visit the Environment Agency’s website and register for flood alerts to be automatically sent to you by telephone. We hope that the information inside will be helpful to you Up to date flood warnings for Minsterworth are available on 0345 988 1188, as you settle into the village and get to know neighbours the code for Minsterworth being 05241311. and local services Further advice concerning local areas at risk, local provision of sandbags, etc, can be obtained from Cathy Thomas, the Parish Council Flood warden, on 04152 750701 or 07546 497203 Minsterworth Neighbourhood Watch This information has been put together by Neighbour Watch provides email alerts of crimes in the area, fraud scams and means of keeping safe.
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  • Newnham on Severn War Memorial, Gloucestershire
    NEWNHAM ON SEVERN – WAR MEMORIAL GLOUCESTERSHIRE Compiled with additional information by kind permission of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Located in the main street of Newnham town The Roll of Honour which is in the parish church list the same names In honoured memory of the men of Newnham who fell in the Great War 1914-1919 ARMITAGE Gorge Geoffrey Allen, Flight Sub Lieutenant, Royal Navy Air died 11th December 1915 aged 22. Son of Henry Allen and Katharine Henrietta of The Nab, Newnham on Severn. Buried at St Peter churchyard, Newnham on Severn ATKINSON Frederick Batty, 2nd Lieutenant, 87th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery died 25th September 1918 aged 19. Born at Knaresborough, Yorks. Son of Jackson A. and Blanche Myra Atkinson (nee Cruttwell), of Broadoak House, Newnham, Glos. Buried at Le Touret Military Cemetery, Richebourg- L’Avoue, France BARLING William Bingham, 2nd Lieutenant, 6th Worcestershire Regiment, died 12th March 1915 aged 24 Commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres, Belgium BROBYN Stephen, Corporal Shoeing Smith, 89062, 46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery died 2nd December 1918. Son of Robertl and Elizabeth of Newnham. Buried at Cairo War Memorial, Cemetery, Egypt BURTON John, Gunner 159286, 119th Seige Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery killed in action 10th December 1917 aged 40. Son of Henry Burton, of Tidenham, Chepstow, Mon.; husband of Sarah Ann Burton, of 6, Wellington Terrace, Ruddle, Newnham Native of Hewelsfield, Glos and enlisted at Newnham. Buried at Ypres Reservoir Cemetery, Belgium CAUDLE Herbert George, Sapper 48372, 82nd Field Coy, Royal Engineers, died 18th November 1916 aged 25. Son of William and Ellen of 2, Severn Street, Newnham.
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  • Chestnut Cottage, Popes Hill, Newnham-On-Severn, Glos GL14 1LE
    Chestnut Cottage, Popes Hill, Newnham-on-Severn, Glos GL14 1LE ● A delightful rural cottage set in grounds extending to about 1.62 acres For Sale by Public Auction By direction of the Executors of the late Mrs C D Jones The Orchard extends to approximately 1.42 acres. The Orchard requires grubbing in part to create open pasture for Chestnut Cottage, Popes Hill, Newnham- animals / horses or to be replanted with productive fruit on-Severn, Glos GL14 1LE trees. There is a legal right of way to the property across the Littledean 2 miles ● Newnham on Severn 3 miles adjoining land dated 5th September 1989 for a single ● Gloucester 12 miles ● Cheltenham 20 miles dwelling only (coloured orange). (distances approximate) Fixtures and Fittings Chestnut Cottage is a detached cottage situated in an idyllic Only those mentioned in these sales particulars are included rural location, within the Forest of Dean in the hamlet of in the sale. All others, such as curtains, light fittings, garden Popes Hill, enjoying far reaching views over the River ornaments, etc., are specifically excluded but may be Severn and May Hill to the North. available by separate negotiation. The condition of the equipment is not guaranteed, and no warranty or The villages of both Littledean and Newnham on Severn are serviceability can be given by the vendor. within 3 miles and offer a range of local amenities including local shops, post office, pubs and primary schools. The City ServicesServices of Gloucester is within easy travelling distance being only 12 Mains electricity, mains water and private drainage.
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  • Gloucestershire
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  • Pisces Booklet
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  • Keynote - Settlement Hierarchy
    Keynote - Settlement Hierarchy Forest of Dean District Council: July 2011 (Core Document 15) Contents 1 Introduction 3 2 Regional Context 4 3 Local Context 5 4 Why is a Settlement Hierarchy needed? 7 4.1 The purpose of a Settlement Hierarchy 7 4.2 What are Settlements? 7 4.3 The role of the planning system 7 4.4 The Current Situation 8 5 National Policy 9 6 Methodology 10 6.1 Baseline 10 6.2 Settlement Services Table 11 7 Results 14 7.1 Settlement Hierarchy Map 14 7.2 Market Towns 16 7.2.1 Lydney 18 7.2.2 Cinderford 19 7.2.3 Coleford 20 7.2.4 Newent 22 7.3 Other Settlements 23 8 Conclusion 27 9 Appendix A: Policy Background 28 10 Appendix B: Comparative Matrix of Services & Facilities in the Forest of Dean Settlements 30 Forest of Dean District Council: July 2011 (Core Document 15) Keynote - Settlement Hierarchy Introduction 1 1 Introduction 1.1 The Local Development Framework (LDF) must carefully consider the way in which the settlements in the District relate one to another. The policies in the Core Strategy use these relationships and the general hierarchy of settlements. 1.2 The role of this paper is therefore to; Explain the role of national policy in the hierarchy Provide background evidence for a settlement hierarchy as used in the LDF 1.3 An understanding of the settlement hierarchy is important as the Local Development Framework (LDF) must set out a clear order of preference for the location of development. This needs to be robust, not just for the short term in the context of limited or no housing supply, but in the longer term when development requirements change.
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