Archdeacon Newton

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Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox UK place

Archdeacon Newton is a hamlet and rural parish of several farms in the borough of Darlington and the ceremonial county of County Durham, in England. The population taken at the 2011 Census was less than 100. Details are maintained in the parish of Walworth. It is associated with an abandoned village site under pasture and farm buildings,<ref name="KeysVillage"/> and situated a short distance to the north-west of Darlington. The lost settlement was in existence by the early 15th century, and remained inhabited at least until the 1890s. There was a moated manor house at the southern end, part of which remains as the Old Hall, now a barn. At the north end of the site was the chapel, and in the middle were tofts and enclosures, with a ridge and furrow field and a trackway leading to the south-east. The site of the abandoned village is now a scheduled monument and the Old Hall is a listed building.

Geographical and political

File:Archdeacon Newton. - geograph.org.uk - 140962.jpg
Townend Farm

The underlying composition here is of glacial clay with pockets of gravel, sand, peat and alluvium, and patches of dolomite and carboniferous limestone.<ref name="MotorwayArchiveA1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref> This is a small hamlet incorporating Hall Farm, Garthorne Farm and Townend Farm on an approach road south of Newton Lane. It is the focus of the parish of Archdeacon Newton rural ward, and its councillor is Rosalind Tweddle.<ref name="DBCelection2007">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is situated on flat land Template:Convert to the north-west of the Branksome suburb of Darlington, and Template:Convert to the north-west of the A1 road. At Cockerton near the southern end of Newton Lane and Template:Convert to the south-east of the hamlet is its namesake, the Archdeacon pub; Michael Perry, Archdeacon of Durham, posed for the sign in 1980, although the sign has since been replaced.<ref name="NorthernEcho10oct02">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Demographics

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History

The hamlet apparently once contained a chapel;<ref name="KeysMoatedSite"/> it now a parish of Template:Convert,<ref>1856–1865 map, on Keys to the Past site Template:Webarchive</ref> although it was once part of Darlington parish.<ref name="KeysLocalHistory">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The area enclosed by Townend Farm and Archdeacon Newton's approach road to the west, Newton Lane to the north, and Hall Farm to the south contains the site of a medieval abandoned village, with visible earthworks in pasture at the northern end and farm buildings at the southern end of the site:<ref name="Pastscape1"/> this is a scheduled monument. The hamlet's name derives from the fact that in the Middle Ages the Archdeacon of Durham founded and built what is now the abandoned village.<ref name="KeysLocalHistory"/> An alternative theory says that the land was leased from the archdeacon.<ref name="NorthernEcho10oct02"/> Around 1800, Hilton "High Price" Middleton of Archdeacon Newton bred a great Durham Ox, and the now-defunct Newton Kyloe pub at Cockerton Green was named after it.<ref name="NorthernEcho10oct02"/> In 1894 the land was owned by the Church Commissioners and the population was 52;<ref name="UKgenealogyarchives1"/> down from its highest level of 72 in 1801, when pews were reserved for Archdeacon Newton people at St Cuthbert's in the centre of Darlington, and Methodist prayers were said in a farmhouse kitchen. This was before the nearer church of Holy Trinity, Darlington, was built in 1836.<ref name="GenukiDarlington">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The 1851 census shows residents with surnames of Brown and Geldart or Geldert.<ref name="UKgenealogyarchives1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Archaeological sites and finds

The manor of this village survives at Hall Farm as a farm building with some medieval features, and an adjacent farm building was probably once an early 16th-century house. Apart from these buildings, the abandoned village is indicated by earthworks of a medieval moated site and enclosures. There are also indications of three fish ponds, of which one is still a duck pond,<ref name="KeysVillage"/> and two contain rubbish; however it is now thought that there was originally a single fish pond. One of the supposed fish ponds is among the farm buildings and is overgrown.<ref name="Pastscape1"/> Prehistoric and Roman remains have not yet been found here, as there have been no excavations as of April 2010.<ref name="KeysLocalHistory"/>

Abandoned settlement

The area to the east of the Archdeacon Newton approach road, and to the south of Newton Lane, is the location of the medieval abandoned village and scheduled monument.<ref name="KeysMoatedSite"/> The manor and house were at the southern end of a settlement which had three farms and a row of cottages, indicated in the existing pasture by house platforms.<ref name="KeysMoatedSite"/> It is now thought that the buildings were tenant tofts attached to the manor, and not a nucleated village.<ref name="Pastscape1"/> Cobbled banks and ditches running east to west and situated towards the north end of the site identify the original enclosures of these tofts.<ref name="KeysVillage"/><ref name="Pastscape1"/> The banks are Template:Convert wide and Template:Convert high, and the ditches are Template:Convert wide and Template:Convert deep.<ref name="Pastscape1"/> There is an associated ridge and furrow field, and a Template:Convert wide trackway runs from halfway along the east side of the site, in a south-easterly direction, for Template:Convert as far as a modern fence.<ref name="Pastscape1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> An undated trench for electricity supply was dug at Hall Farm at the southern end of the hamlet's approach road, surveyed by an archaeological watching brief, but nothing of historical interest was found.<ref name="KeysWatchingBrief">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Old Hall and moated site

File:Archdeacon Newton 001.jpg
Hall Farm with Old Hall to its right

The Old Hall,<ref name="DBCWalksLeafletNo6">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> one of the farm buildings at the centre of Hall Farm, is a surviving medieval domestic building or manor house, probably dating from the 14th century and remodelled in the 16th and 17th century. It was burned and then re-roofed in the early 21st century, and no internal partitions survive.<ref name="KeysMedievalBuilding">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This is a two-storey listed building which was converted to a barn in the 19th century, has a Welsh slate roof and seven internal bays. It is built of squared and rubble masonry with ashlar dressing. The structure includes medieval and Tudor carved stone, including mullions and fireplaces.<ref name="KeysListedBuilding">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Buttresses, broken arches and fireplaces of the manor are still standing and are incorporated in the Old Hall.<ref name="KeysVillage">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is Template:Convert by Template:Convert, containing two Tudor fireplaces, with the remains of archways on the outside walls at each end.<ref name="Pastscape1"/>

The moated manor house stood at the southern end of the abandoned village site, where there are now farm buildings. In the 16th and 17th centuries the manor had a hall with parlour and chamber over the hall, a new chamber, a little chamber, a "lofte beneath the doors", a buttery, a kitchen and a stable. Depressions in the ground at the southern end of the site indicate the position of the original moat.<ref name="KeysMoatedSite">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Chapel

It is thought that the chapel was on the Template:Convert high triangular platform at the north end of the site and on the south side of Newton Lane.<ref name="KeysMoatedSite"/> There is a ditch along the south side of this feature.<ref name="Pastscape1"/> Evidence for the chapel exists in a licence given in 1414 to Robert Fisher, John Nicholson and John Deves to hold religious services in a chapel at Archdeacon Newton.<ref name="KeysLocalHistory"/>

Enclosure

Another enclosure has been identified by aerial photography Template:Convert north-west of the hamlet, and on the south side of Newton Lane.<ref name="KeysEnclosure">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

References

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