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Newton, Norfolk

Coordinates: 52°32′10″N 1°44′31″E / 52.536°N 1.742°E / 52.536; 1.742 (approx.)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Newton was a village on the north-east coast of the English county of Suffolk. The village, which since 1974 would have been in Norfolk, is now lost to coastal erosion.

History

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Newton was located on the North Sea coast. It was named because, under the Anglo-Saxons, it was a new settlement compared with the neighbouring Corton, Hopton and Gorleston.[1] At the time of the Domesday Book in 1086, Newton had just one household, one freeman and half a plough team.[1][2] In Edward I's 1274 Hundred Rolls, Newton was included in the Lothingland Half Hundred.[3]

Newton was the same length as Hopton, north to south, but to the east of Hopton.[4] In the 14th century the northern entrance to the River Yare at Yarmouth started to silt up, causing a long sand spit to form, which ran south all the way to Gunton.[5] Seven cuts, or gaps, were put through the spit; one of these was put through in 1408 at Newton, and was known as the Newton Gap. The lane that connected Hopton with Newton was called Newton Gap Road; this is now called Beach Road.[5][6] Newton itself seems to have washed away in the 16th century.[7]

The remnant

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After most of Newton was lost, the remnant, which was a narrow strip, was attached to Corton in 1515.[8][9] Other remnants, an area called Newton Green and stone supported cross known as Newton Cross, were lost to erosion by 1891.[8] RAF Hopton, a Chain Home Low station, was located on that remnant.[10] The remnant was transferred from Corton to Hopton at the time of the county reorganisation in 1974, at which point Hopton was renamed Hopton-on-Sea, as it then gained a coastline.[11]

St Mary's Church

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The church at Newton was dedicated to St Mary. It was mentioned in deeds in the 14th century and last mentioned in 1526.[8][12] The building was partly lost to the sea in around 1350, some of the materials being salvaged for a new north aisle at St Margaret's Church, Hopton.[13] There are two requests in 16th-century wills to be buried in the churchyard at Newton[14] and the ruins of the church are recorded as having still been visible at an area called The Gate in 1791,[8][12] finally being lost in the 19th century.[9]

Sources

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Bibliography

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Clark, Malcolm (2016) "Hopton and Newton 1066 to 1275 and the Demise of Newton", in Barker, Darren, Hopton-on-Sea: Exploring the Past, pp.10–16. Great Yarmouth: Great Yarmouth Preservation Trust.

References

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  1. ^ a b Clark, p. 11.
  2. ^ Newton, Open Domesday. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  3. ^ Clark, p.13.
  4. ^ Clark, p.12.
  5. ^ a b Clark, p.14.
  6. ^ Ecclestone, AW (1971) Henry Manship's Great Yarmouth, pp.74, 77.
  7. ^ "Norfolk Heritage Explorer: Newton Deserted Medieval Village". Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d Monument record COR 073 - Church of St Mary; Newton; The Gate. Formerly recorded as COR Misc, Suffolk Heritage Explorer, Suffolk County Council. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  9. ^ a b "A Short History of Corton". Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  10. ^ Pratt, David, "RAF Hopton", in Barker, Darren, op. cit., pp.52–55.
  11. ^ Clapham, Lucy (1 April 2014). "The day six Suffolk villages moved into Norfolk – and it definitely wasn't an April Fools' joke". Eastern Daily Press. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  12. ^ a b Corton, Parish Histories, Suffolk Heritage Explorer, Suffolk County Council. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  13. ^ Chapman, Christopher (1985) 'Bleak and Lonely': Old St Margaret's Church, Hopton-on-Sea, Norfolk, p.1. Hopton-on-Sea: St Margaret's, Hopton.
  14. ^ Clark, p.16.

52°32′10″N 1°44′31″E / 52.536°N 1.742°E / 52.536; 1.742 (approx.)