Newton-le-Willows

the history of our local area

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Tumuli at Winwick, 1860
Written by Steven Dowd   
By John Eobson, M.D. (This report was read 5th March, 1860. at Warrington Museum to a meeting of the Historical Society)

In the Ordnance Survey, as first published on the inch scale, about half a mile to the east of Winwick Church, we find a couple of tumuli, one on each side of a bye-lane; but in the later and larger map a single tumulus is marked, through the centre of which the road seems to have been cut.

  
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The Battle of Winwick Pass, 19 Aug 1648
Written by Steven Dowd   
On the southern boundary of the township of Newton, a wooded valley branches off east-wards from the Wigan-Warrington road. The northern side of the valley, known locally as Red Bank, formed the boundary of old Newton Park Estate, and was marked by a high man-made bank with a hedge running along it. On the opposite side of the valley, which is about 100 yards wide, stands a natural steep-sided sandstone bank, which in-places is between twenty and thirty feet high, In the year 1648 this was also probably topped by a hedge.
The valley and surrounding fields are the site of the English Civil War "Battle of Winwick Pass"

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Sankey Viaduct and Embankment
Written by Steven Dowd   
Although the Stockton & Darling-ton Railway was the first public railway on which locomotives were used, the Liverpool & Manchester Railway was the first in the accepted sense of the word today. The scheme for a railway between the great port of Liverpool and the thriving cotton-manufacturing town of Manchester, was first entertained as a practical proposition in 1821, when a preliminary survey of the proposed line was made. The company was formed in 1824, and George Stephenson was appointed Chief Engineer in 1826.
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Tommy Burns jump off the 9 Arches?
Written by Steven Dowd   
Tommy Burns was a young Widnes man who had been causing no end of a sensation up and down the country by his high diving feats. He laid no claims to being a great) swimmer but he had cer?tainly perfected the art of diving. Height never daunted him, he always gave a per?fect performance and did not demand very deep water for he had no sooner cut the water than he was swimming on the surface
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Vulcan to Warrington: The Roman Road
Written by Steven Dowd   
Image
This is an account of the investigation in 1928 of the Roman Road which runs through Newton le Willows, and concerns the section between the Vulcan Village and Wilderspool, Warrington
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St Peter's Mission & All Saints Church, Crow Lane
Written by Steven Dowd   

St. Peter's Mission
& All Saints Church

In 1891 the need of services at the Earlestown end of the parish became urgent, so the Rev. H. Monk and his assistant-curate, the Rev. F. W. Johnstone, issued the following notice:

 
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