Peterborough 1869-1871 Rebuild ALDERTON St

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Peterborough 1869-1871 Rebuild ALDERTON St Locality Church Name Parish County Diocese Date Grant reason ABTHORPE St. John the Baptist ABTHORPE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1869-1871 Rebuild ALDERTON St. Margaret ALDERTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1847-1848 Rebuild APETHORPE St. Leonard APETHORPE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1952-1955 Repairs ARNESBY St. Peter ARNESBY Leicestershire Peterborough 1865-1868 Reseating/Repairs ASHBY ST. LEDGERS St. Leodegarius ASHBY ST. LEDGERS Northamptonshire Peterborough 1959 Repairs ASHBY ST. LEDGERS St. Leodegarius ASHBY ST. LEDGERS Northamptonshire Peterborough 1966 Repairs ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH Holy Trinity ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH Leicestershire Peterborough 1866-1867 Enlargement/Gallery ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH St. Helen ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH Leicestershire Peterborough 1878-1880 Enlargement ASHBY-PARVA St. Peter ASHBY-PARVA Leicestershire Peterborough 1866-1867 Reseating/Repairs ASHLEY St. Mary the Virgin ASHLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1929-1930 Repairs ASHLEY St. Mary the Virgin ASHLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1930 Repairs ASTON FLAMVILLE St. Catherine ASTON FLAMVILLE Leicestershire Peterborough 1872-1874 Rebuild AYSTON St. Mary AYSTON Rutland Peterborough 1927-1930 Repairs BADBY St. Mary BADBY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1975-1976 Repairs BAINTON St. Mary BAINTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1953 Repairs BAINTON St. Mary BAINTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1976-1977 Repairs BARKESTONE St. Peter & St. Paul BARKESTONE Leicestershire Peterborough 1840-1841 Enlargement BARLESTONE St. Giles MARKET BOSWORTH Leicestershire Peterborough 1853-1855 Rebuild BARNACK St. John the Baptist BARNACK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1953-1954 Repairs BARNWELL St. Andrew BARNWELL Northamptonshire Peterborough 1935 Repairs BARNWELL St. Andrew BARNWELL Northamptonshire Peterborough 1959-1960 Repairs BARWELL St. Mary BARWELL Leicestershire Peterborough 1854 Reseating/Repairs BELTON St. John the Baptist BELTON Leicestershire Peterborough 1852-1853 Reseating/Repairs BELTON St. Peter BELTON Rutland Peterborough 1897-1898 Repairs BELTON St. Peter BELTON Rutland Peterborough 1965-1967 Repairs BILLESDON St. John the Baptist BILLESDON Leicestershire Peterborough 1862-1865 Enlargement BILLING, GREAT St. Andrew BILLING, GREAT Northamptonshire Peterborough 1946-1949 Repairs BIRSTALL St. James BIRSTALL Leicestershire Peterborough 1868-1870 Reseating/Repairs BISBROOKE St. John the Baptist BISBROOKE Rutland Peterborough 1970-1971 Repairs BLABY All Saints BLABY Leicestershire Peterborough 1846-1847 Reseating/Repairs BLACKFORDBY St. Margaret ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH Leicestershire Peterborough 1856-1858 Rebuild BLISWORTH St. John the Baptist BLISWORTH Northamptonshire Peterborough 1957-1960 Repairs BOTTESFORD St. Mary the Virgin BOTTESFORD Leicestershire Peterborough 1846-1849 Reseating/Repairs BOWDEN, GREAT St. Peter BOWDEN, GREAT Leicestershire Peterborough 1886-1887 Reseating/Repairs BOWDEN, LITTLE St. Nicholas BOWDEN, LITTLE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1900-1901 Reseating/Repairs BOZEAT St. Mary BOZEAT Northamptonshire Peterborough 1897-1898 Repairs BOZEAT St. Mary BOZEAT Northamptonshire Peterborough 1971-1974 Repairs BRACKLEY St. Peter BRACKLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1873 Reseating/Repairs BRAMPTON ASH St. Mary BRAMPTON ASH Northamptonshire Peterborough 1939 Repairs BRAMPTON ASH St. Mary BRAMPTON ASH Northamptonshire Peterborough 1951-1952 Repairs BRAUNSTON All Saints BRAUNSTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1842-1849 Rebuild BRAUNSTON All Saints BRAUNSTON Rutland Peterborough 1920-1929 Reseating BRAUNSTON All Saints BRAUNSTON Rutland Peterborough 1934-1935 Repairs BRAUNSTON All Saints BRAUNSTON Rutland Peterborough 1937-1938 Repairs BRAYBROOKE All Saints BRAYBROOKE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1933 Repairs BRAYBROOKE All Saints BRAYBROOKE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1967-1970 Repairs BRIGSTOCK St. Andrew BRIGSTOCK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1875-1877 Reseating/Repairs BRIXWORTH All Saints BRIXWORTH Northamptonshire Peterborough 1864-1866 Reseating/Repairs BRIXWORTH All Saints BRIXWORTH Northamptonshire Peterborough 1904-1906 Repairs BRIXWORTH All Saints BRIXWORTH Northamptonshire Peterborough 1964-1966 Repairs BROOKE St. Peter BROOKE Rutland Peterborough 1923-1930 Repairs BROOKE St. Peter BROOKE Rutland Peterborough 1957-1961 Repairs BROUGHTON St. Andrew BROUGHTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1854-1857 Reseating/Repairs BROUGHTON St. Andrew BROUGHTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1963 Repairs BROUGHTON St. Andrew BROUGHTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1972-1973 Repairs BROUGHTON ASTLEY St. Mary BROUGHTON ASTLEY Leicestershire Peterborough 1880-1882 Reseating/Repairs BRUNTINGTHORPE St. Mary BRUNTINGTHORPE Leicestershire Peterborough 1872-1873 Enlargement BUCKBY, LONG St. Laurence BUCKBY, LONG Northamptonshire Peterborough 1862-1864 Reseating/Repairs BUGBROOKE St. Michael & All Angels BUGBROOKE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1975-1977 Repairs BULWICK St. Nicholas BULWICK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1935-1936 Repairs BULWICK St. Nicholas BULWICK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1948-1951 Repairs BULWICK St. Nicholas BULWICK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1958-1964 Repairs BULWICK St. Nicholas BULWICK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1964-1967 Repairs BURBAGE St. Catherine BURBAGE Leicestershire Peterborough 1841-1843 Rebuild BYFIELD Holy Cross BYFIELD Northamptonshire Peterborough 1870-1871 Reseating/Repairs CALDECOTT St. John the Evangelist CALDECOTT Rutland Peterborough 1955-1956 Repairs CARLTON, EAST St. Peter CARLTON, EAST Northamptonshire Peterborough 1960-1963 Repairs CASTERTON, GREAT St. Peter & St.Paul CASTERTON, GREAT Rutland Peterborough 1924-1926 Repairs CASTERTON, GREAT St. Peter & St. Paul CASTERTON, GREAT Rutland Peterborough 1953-1954 Repairs CASTERTON, GREAT St. Peter & St.Paul CASTERTON, GREAT Rutland Peterborough 1956-1959 Repairs CASTERTON, GREAT St. Peter & St. Paul CASTERTON, GREAT Rutland Peterborough 1959 Repairs CASTERTON, GREAT St. Peter & St.Paul CASTERTON, GREAT Rutland Peterborough 1966-1967 Repairs CASTERTON, LITTLE All Saints CASTERTON, LITTLE Rutland Peterborough 1972-1973 Repairs CASTLE DONINGTON St. Edward the Martyr CASTLE DONINGTON Leicestershire Peterborough 1875-1877 Reseating/Repairs CASTOR St. Kyneburgha CASTOR Northamptonshire Peterborough 1848-1851 Reseating/Repairs CATTHORPE St. Thomas CATTHORPE Leicestershire Peterborough 1885-1886 Enlargement CHELVESTON St. John the Baptist CHELVESTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1971-1977 Repairs CHIPPING WARDEN St. Peter & St. Paul CHIPPING WARDEN Northamptonshire Peterborough 1902-1910 Reseating/Repairs CLAYBROOKE St. Peter CLAYBROOKE Leicestershire Peterborough 1876-1881 Reseating/Repairs CLIPSHAM St. Mary CLIPSHAM Rutland Peterborough 1956-1958 Repairs CLIPSHAM St. Mary CLIPSHAM Rutland Peterborough 1974-1976 Repairs COALVILLE Christ Church IBSTOCK Leicestershire Peterborough 1853-1854 Enlargement COGENHOE St. Peter COGENHOE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1868-1870 Enlargement COGENHOE St. Peter COGENHOE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1957-1958 Repairs COLD HIGHAM St. Luke COLD HIGHAM Northamptonshire Peterborough 1878-1881 Enlargement COLD HIGHAM St. Luke COLD HIGHAM Northamptonshire Peterborough 1956-1957 Repairs CORBY St. John the Baptist CORBY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1844-1845 Reseating/Repairs COTTESMORE St. Nicholas COTTESMORE Rutland Peterborough 1930 Repairs COTTINGHAM St. Mary Magdalene COTTINGHAM Northamptonshire Peterborough 1878-1880 Reseating/Repairs COUNTESTHORPE St. Andrew COUNTESTHORPE Leicestershire Peterborough 1839-1842 Rebuild CRANOE St. Michael CRANOE Leicestershire Peterborough 1847-1849 Rebuild CRANSLEY St. Andrew CRANSLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1868-1870 Reseating/Repairs CRANSLEY St. Andrew CRANSLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1959-1961 Repairs CRICK St. Margaret CRICK Northamptonshire Peterborough 1838-1842 Reseating/Repairs CROUGHTON All Saints CROUGHTON Northamptonshire Peterborough 1914-1920 Repairs CROXTON, SOUTH St. John the Baptist CROXTON, SOUTH Leicestershire Peterborough 1895-1909 Reseating/Repairs DALLINGTON St. James DALLINGTON, St. Mary Northamptonshire Peterborough 1869-1871 New Church DALLINGTON St. Mary DALLINGTON, St. Mary Northamptonshire Peterborough 1880-1881 Reseating/Repairs DALLINGTON St. James DALLINGTON, St. James Northamptonshire Peterborough 1897-1901 Enlargement DALLINGTON St. Mary DALLINGTON, St. Mary Northamptonshire Peterborough 1947-1949 Repairs DALLINGTON St. James DALLINGTON, St. James Northamptonshire Peterborough 1966-1967 Repairs DAVENTRY St. James DAVENTRY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1838-1840 New Church DEANSHANGER Holy Trinity DEANSHANGER Northamptonshire Peterborough 1979 Repairs DEENE St. Peter DEENE Northamptonshire Peterborough 1868-1870 Enlargement DENFORD Holy Trinity DENFORD Northamptonshire Peterborough 1864-1865 Reseating/Repairs DENFORD Holy Trinity DENFORD Northamptonshire Peterborough 1873-1879 Repairs DENFORD Holy Trinity DENFORD Northamptonshire Peterborough 1925-1926 Repairs DENFORD Holy Trinity DENFORD Northamptonshire Peterborough 1935-1936 Repairs DENFORD Holy Trinity DENFORD Northamptonshire Peterborough 1964 Repairs DENSHANGER Holy Trinity DENSHANGER Northamptonshire Peterborough 1853-1855 New Church DENTON St. Margaret YARDLEY HASTINGS Northamptonshire Peterborough 1826-1828 Enlargement DINGLEY All Saints DINGLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1924-1926 Repairs DINGLEY All Saints DINGLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1934 Repairs DINGLEY All Saints DINGLEY Northamptonshire Peterborough 1963-1964 Repairs DISEWORTH St. Michael & All Angels DISEWORTH Leicestershire Peterborough
Recommended publications
  • Canoe Camping.Pdf
    Whilst there are opportunities to wild camp along the Nene and the commercial company Canoe 2 www.canoe2.co.uk can arrange camping for you as part of a package holiday, these are places that you can use to plan your own canoe-camping trip down the Nene. Being able to park a car securely or leave it securely while you paddle down to it are important to canoeists and some, but not all, venues provide this facility. If you are happy to leave a car in a car park then please also check out my list of parking spots with access to the river. Unless I become geographically challenged whilst writing, everything should be in a downstream order from Northampton. This list is only as good as the replies I’ve had to emails and phone calls so I’m grateful for those companies and individuals who took the time to do so. If you come across other venues please message me and we can share them with other paddlers. Lastly, paid up members of Friends of the River Nene may camp on some, but again, not all, of their moorings subject to some common sense condition such as not getting in the way of bigger craft, no fires, take rubbish away etc - none of these moorings have facilities or water supplies......check with the committee if unsure. ===================================================================== Billing Aquadrome I did not receive a reply from this company but it’s a very famous local venue which also makes the news regularly for flooding! The camping page of their website https://www.billingaquadrome.com/holidays/camping/ makes mention of riverside pitches.
    [Show full text]
  • Premises, Sites Etc Within 30 Miles of Harrington Museum Used for Military Purposes in the 20Th Century
    Premises, Sites etc within 30 miles of Harrington Museum used for Military Purposes in the 20th Century The following listing attempts to identify those premises and sites that were used for military purposes during the 20th Century. The listing is very much a works in progress document so if you are aware of any other sites or premises within 30 miles of Harrington, Northamptonshire, then we would very much appreciate receiving details of them. Similarly if you spot any errors, or have further information on those premises/sites that are listed then we would be pleased to hear from you. Please use the reporting sheets at the end of this document and send or email to the Carpetbagger Aviation Museum, Sunnyvale Farm, Harrington, Northampton, NN6 9PF, [email protected] We hope that you find this document of interest. Village/ Town Name of Location / Address Distance to Period used Use Premises Museum Abthorpe SP 646 464 34.8 km World War 2 ANTI AIRCRAFT SEARCHLIGHT BATTERY Northamptonshire The site of a World War II searchlight battery. The site is known to have had a generator and Nissen huts. It was probably constructed between 1939 and 1945 but the site had been destroyed by the time of the Defence of Britain survey. Ailsworth Manor House Cambridgeshire World War 2 HOME GUARD STORE A Company of the 2nd (Peterborough) Battalion Northamptonshire Home Guard used two rooms and a cellar for a company store at the Manor House at Ailsworth Alconbury RAF Alconbury TL 211 767 44.3 km 1938 - 1995 AIRFIELD Huntingdonshire It was previously named 'RAF Abbots Ripton' from 1938 to 9 September 1942 while under RAF Bomber Command control.
    [Show full text]
  • Cogenhoe and Whiston Village Booklet 2019
    Cogenhoe and Whiston Village Booklet 2019 Please retain this booklet for future use and leave it at the premises for the newcomers if you leave Cogenhoe Table of Contents A Short History of Cogenhoe and Whiston ................................................................ 3 The Two Parish Churches ......................................................................................... 8 St. Peter’s, Cogenhoe ............................................................................................ 8 St. Mary the Virgin, Whiston ................................................................................. 10 Other Local Churches .............................................................................................. 11 Local Village Organisations ..................................................................................... 12 Village Sports Clubs ................................................................................................ 14 Other Organisations ................................................................................................ 15 Local Councillors ..................................................................................................... 16 Medical Facilities ..................................................................................................... 17 Cogenhoe Village Facilities ..................................................................................... 18 Local Recycling Services ........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Earls Barton Conservation Area Character Appraisal
    EARLS BARTON CONSERVATION AREA CHARACTER APPRAISAL 1. ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT 1.1 Earls Barton lies 3½ miles south west of Wellingborough and 6½ miles east north east of Northampton, but set well back (at just over half a mile to the south) from the old road linking these two larger towns. 1.2 Settlement in the central part of Northamptonshire is mostly restricted to the margins of the main valleys of the Nene, Welland and Ise, often on hill tops and spurs well above the floodplains. In common with other villages on either side of the Nene such as Grendon, Cogenhoe, Wollaston and Billing, Earls Barton is perched on a spur of land projecting above the prevailing contours which rise from the river (42m AOD) across extensive ground terraces and then more steeply over outcrops of Upper Lias Clay to a flat-topped ridge of sand and limestone at approximately 100m AOD. (RCHME, 1979). An additional underlying factor in the genesis of the settlement pattern is the customary availability of springs between the 80 and 90 metre contours (AOD), and indeed much of the historic centre of Earls Barton lies within this range. 1.3 However, the village’s unique local topographical feature (with the possible exception of Wollaston castle mount on the other side of the Nene Valley), and clearly its historical raison d’être, is the Scheduled Ancient Monument know as Berry Mount.1 Whereas Victoria County History2 speculates that the landform is “apparently a mote castle”, the RCHME analysis of 1979 suggest that this may not be the case, pointing out that “the relationship between mound and ditch is unusual, especially on the east side where the ditch appears to be turning south- east on an alignment different from the curve of the mound.
    [Show full text]
  • GUNPOWDER, GARDENS and GHOST by MICHAEL HANSON
    ------- - ----------------------------------~-------------------------------------------- 104 COUNTRY LIFE--APRIL 2, 1987 THE ESTATE MARKET GUNPOWDER, GARDENS AND GHOST By MICHAEL HANSON (Left) 1-ASHBY ST LEDGERS, NEAR DAVENTRY, NOR­ THAMPTONSHIRE. The original stone hall added by Lutyens in 1909-10, seen here in a 1951 COUNTRY LIFE photograph, had a floor inserted in about 1968, and service rooms created at the lower level (Right) 2-THE UPPER LEVEL OF THE HALL TODAY. "The open timber roof now seems overwhelmingly heavy" and an upper dining room is superfluous N E of the most historic manor houses a brass to him and his wife in the chancel. In his fines imposed on him in 1601 for supporting in England, Ashby St Ledgers in will, made on the day he died, he instructed his the uprising of Robert, Earl of Essex, once O Northamptonshire, has just been wife to restore to its rightful owners all the land Elizabeth l's favourite, he was forced to sell placed on the market through the London he had wrongfully purchased, and divided the the Chastleton estate in Oxfordshire, which he office of Hampton and Sons. Not only does it rest of his property between their children. His had inherited from his grandmother in 1593. have links with the Gunpowder Plot, but it was estate was attainted by virtue of his treason, but Robert Catesby (whose wife had died at extensively altered and extended earlier this Henry VII reversed the attainder in favour of his Chastleton) moved to Ashby St Ledgers to live century by Sir Edwin Lutyens, who laid out the son George, and over the next century the with his widowed mother, whose husband had magnificent gardens (and once claimed that the family prospered.
    [Show full text]
  • Launde Priory 1
    21 MAY 2018 LAUNDE PRIORY 1 actswilliam2henry1.wordpress.com Release date Version notes Who Current version: H1-Launde-2018-1 21/5/2018 Original version DXC Previous versions: — — — — This text is made available through the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs License; additional terms may apply Authors for attribution statement: Charters of William II and Henry I Project David X Carpenter, Faculty of History, University of Oxford LAUNDE PRIORY Augustinian priory of St John the Baptist County of Leicestershire : Diocese of Lincoln Founded 1121 × c. 1125 Launde priory was one of the early Augustinian houses in England, established 1120 × c. 1125. According to a narrative concerning the early years of Holy Trinity priory in Aldgate, London, known only from fifteenth-century manuscripts, Bernard prior of Dunstaple, John prior of Launde (Landa), Geoffrey de Clinton, the (king’s) chamberlain (Gaufridus camerarius de Clinton), and others named, witnessed the gift of the Cnihtengild in London to Holy Trinity in that year. It is unsurprising that the priors of two recently founded Augustinian houses should witness a gift to Holy Trinity, thought to be the first Augustinian house in England. Their names were presumably taken from a contemporary deed or other record which has not been preserved (Hodgett, Cartulary of Holy Trinity, 168, no. 871; R. R. Sharpe, Calendar of Letter Books, C, 220). The king’s confirmation of the gift, 000, Regesta 1467, also witnessed by Geoffrey de Clinton, is apparently authentic and datable 1123 × 1127, so the narrative’s date of 1125 may well be accurate. Launde priory was founded at Loddington, ‘in cuius territorio abbatia fundata est’, according to Henry II’s general confirmation of 1155 × 1158 (H2/1456).
    [Show full text]
  • The Impact of the Clandestine Marriages Act: Three Case-Studies in Conformity
    University of Warwick institutional repository: http://go.warwick.ac.uk/wrap This paper is made available online in accordance with publisher policies. Please scroll down to view the document itself. Please refer to the repository record for this item and our policy information available from the repository home page for further information. To see the final version of this paper please visit the publisher’s website. Access to the published version may require a subscription. Author(s): REBECCA PROBERT and LIAM D'ARCY BROWN Article Title: The impact of the Clandestine Marriages Act: three case- studies in conformity Year of publication: 2008 Link to published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0268416008006759 Publisher statement: None Continuity and Change 23 (2), 2008, 309–330. f 2008 Cambridge University Press doi:10.1017/S0268416008006759 Printed in the United Kingdom The impact of the Clandestine Marriages Act: three case-studies in conformity REBECCA PROBERT* AND LIAM D’ARCY BROWN# ABSTRACT. This article examines the extent of compliance with the Clandestine Marriages Act 1753 through three parish studies. It demonstrates that the vast majority of the sample cohort of parents whose children were baptized in church, and indeed of couples living together, had married in church as required by the 1753 Act, and shows how the proportion of marriages traced rises as more information about the parties becomes available. Through a study of settlement examinations, the article posits an explanation of why some marriages have not been traced, and argues that researchers should be cautious in inferring non-compliance from the absence of a record in a specific parish.
    [Show full text]
  • Barrowden School Was Built in 1862 by the Marquess of Exeter
    Barrowden School was built in 1862 by the Marquess of Exeter. Within a year up to 120 pupils were attending. The school was extended in 1872 with the addition of an infants room. The first report by the Head in 1872 was hardly complimentary: ‘The intelligence of the Upper classes requires much cultivation.’ In 1880 the Inspector is scathing and considers that the spelling throughout the school might be better. In 1895 Mr Brittiff Tidd and his wife Agnes were appointed as Headmaster and Mistress. Their eight years of service Barrowden School, now a private house ’greatly improved the village school, and the discipline (and) efficiency.’ Following their departure in 1903, standards declined almost overnight. However by 1905 the Inspector was able to report ‘a decided improvement in the tone, discipline and efficiency of the school.’ In 1973 the children of junior school age were moved to North Luffenham Primary School. For several years, the building continued to be run as an Infant School for three and four year olds. Grantham Journal, 9 May 1903 Bisbrooke (later Bisbrooke and Glaston) School opened in 1872 in the grounds of Bisbrooke Hall. The school could accommodate 64 seniors and 24 infants. A constant concern was over the number of pupils attending as funding was dependent on this. Frequently the attendance officer would be called in to see the parents of absent pupils. Often the reason was illness: ‘A few of the children have been away with blister pox’ (May 1892). ‘Coughing among the children is, at times, most distressing’ (Feb 1901). The School in around 1911 ‘2 or 3 cases of ringworm’ (June 1903).
    [Show full text]
  • Warmington Neighbourhood Plan
    Warmington Neighbourhood Plan Made by resolution of East Northamptonshire Council on 17th December 2019 1 WNP Made Version Version 1.00 17th December 2019 2 WNP Made Version Version 1.00 17th December 2019 Map 1​ - Warmington Designated Neighbourhood Area @Crown copyright and database rights [2016] Ordnance Survey 100055940 Warmington Parish Council (Licensee) Licence number 100053727 ​ 3 WNP Made Version Version 1.00 17th December 2019 Contents 1. Introduction 2. The Parish of Warmington 3. Vision and Objectives 4. Development Planning - community engagement 5. Housing Development - how many and where 6. Built Environment - design 7. Natural Environment 8. Community Facilities 9. Traffic and Transport 10. Economic Development 11. Infrastructure and Developer Contributions Appendix 1: Aspirations Appendix 2: Design Code List of maps: Map 1​ - Warmington Designated Neighbourhood Area Map 2 ​- Warmington, as shown on an estate map of 1621 (courtesy of Oundle School). Map 3​ - Flood Risk Areas Map 4​ - Possible Housing Development Sites Map 5 -​ Village Boundary Map 6 - ​Quiet Lane and Local Green Spaces Map 7​ - Other Local Spaces Map 8​ - Community Facilities 4 WNP Made Version Version 1.00 17th December 2019 1. Introduction The parish of Warmington lies in the Nene Valley, in north-east Northamptonshire. 1.1. Development in Warmington is managed by the Local Planning Authority using policies laid out in the Local Plan. These policies are locally focussed implementations of strategic policies from the adopted Local Plan (North Northamptonshire Joint Core Strategy 2011-2031) and national policies. This Warmington Neighbourhood Plan (WNP) sets out policies that reflect the local identity of Warmington and its community.
    [Show full text]
  • Title First Name Last Name Address 1 Address 2 Address 3 Address 4
    Title First name Last name Address 1 Address 2 Address 3 Address 4 Address 5 21 Manor Coventry Rd Market LE16 9BP Walk Harborough Ground Floor Three High St Market LE16 7AF Suite Crowns Harborough Yard Harold Wilson 23 Barratt Attenborough Nottingham NG9 6AD House Lane 44b High Old Village Corby NN17 1UU Street Albion House 17 Town St Duffield Derbyshire DE56 4EH Mr Chris Heaton- 78 St Georges Northampto NN2 6JF Harris MP Avenue n Ms Andrea Leadsom MP 78 St. Northampto NN2 6JF George's n Avenue Mr David Mackintosh White Lodge 42 Billing Northampton NN1 5DA MP Road Mr Michael Ellis MP 78 St George's Northampto NN2 6JF Avenue n Showsley Towcester Northampton NN12 7NR Lodge shire Wootton Curtlee Hill Wootton NN4 6ED Community & Sports Centre Grange Park Community Grange Park NN4 5TZ Parish Office Centre School Lane 33 Friars Delapre Northampton NN4 8PY Avemue 417 Weedon Northampto NN5 4EX Road n 3 Quinton Quinton Northampton NN7 2EF Green shire Cottages 3 Quinton Quinton Northampton NN7 2EF Green shire Cottages 9 Bradden Greens Northampton NN12 8BY Way Norton shire The Estate Courteenhal Northampton NN7 2QD Office l 1 Meadow Tiffield Northampton NN12 8AP Rise Hunsbury Overslade East Northampton NN4 0RZ Library Close Hunsbury shire 31b Hartwell Roade Northampton NN7 2NU Road The Paddocks Baker Street Gayton NN7 3EZ Parish Office Bugbrooke Camp Close Bugbrooke NN7 3RW Community Centre 52 Meadow Little Northampton NN7 1AH Lane Houghton 1 Title First name Last name Address 1 Address 2 Address 3 Address 4 Address 5 Greenglades West Northampton
    [Show full text]
  • Rutland Record Number
    Number Two ----·---·- --- -·-----·----·- -- ·---···---·---·---- --- --------------------------------·------------------·---------- ------ - ----·--- -=====--====-------- - ----~'--=,-----=~-----_-·_--- - ---·-· -----·------=--~-------=--==-=-- --------=-=============-=====---- ----------·-------------------·--·--·--·- ---- -·-· -- --- - --------- -------- ------------------- ---------------------------- ----- - ----- - -- -- --------------------------------------------------·--- ------------------------------ OKEHA.M' CASTLE The Rutland Record Society was formed in May 1979. Its object is to advise the education of the public in the history of the Ancient County of Rutland, in particular by collecting, preserving, printing and publishing historical records relating to that County, making such records accessible for research purposes to anyone following a particular line of historical study, and stimulating interest generally in the history of that County. PATRON Col. T.C.S. Haywood, O.B.E., J.P. H.M. Lieutenant for the County of Leicestershire with special responsibility for Rutland PRESIDENT G.H. Boyle, Esq., Bisbrooke Hall, Uppingham CHAIRMAN Prince Yuri Galitzine, Quaintree Hall, Braunston, Oakham VICE-CHAIRMAN Miss J. Spencer, The Orchard, Braunston, Oakham HONORARY SECRETARIES B. Matthews, Esq., Colley Hill, Lyddington, Uppingham M.E. Baines, Esq., 14 Main Street, Ridlington, Uppingham HONORARY TREASURER The Manager, Midland Bank Limited, 28 High Street, Oakham HONORARY SOLICITOR J.B. Ervin, Esq., McKinnell, Ervin & Mitchell, 1 &
    [Show full text]
  • Local Government Boundary Commission for England Report No.199 LOCAL GOVERNMENT
    Local Government Boundary Commission For England Report No.199 LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOUNDARY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND REPORT ' NO. 199. PW To the Et Hon Merlyn Rees, HP Secretory of State for the Home Department PROPOSALS KOH FUTURE ELECTORAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE DISTRICT OF RUTLAND IN THE COUNTY OF LEICESTERSHIRE 1* We, the Local Government Boundary Commission for England, having carried out our initial review of the electoral arrangements for the district of Rutland, in . accordance with the requirements of section 63 oft and Schedule 9 to, the Local Government Act, 19?2, present our proposals for the future electoral arrangements for that District. 2* In accordance with the procedure laid down in section 60(1) and (2) of the 1972 Act, notice was given on 31 December 1971*- that we were to undertake this review* This was incorporated in a consultation letter addressed to Rutland Idutrict Council, copies of which were circulated to the Leicestershire County Council, Parish Councils and Parish Meetings, the member of Parliament for the constituency concerned and the headquarters of the main political parties. Copies were also sent to the editors of local newspapers circulating in the area and of the local government press* Notices inserted in the local press announced the start of the review and invited comments from members of the public and from interested bodies* 3* Rutland District Council were invited to prepare a draft scheme of representa- tion for our consideration. When doing so, they were asked to observe the rules laid down in Schedule 11 to the Local Government Act 1972 and the guidelines which we set out in our Report No 6 about the proposed size of the Council and the proposed number of councillors for each ward.
    [Show full text]