
Newchurch
Contents
Kelly's Directory 1886 - Newchurch
"Newchurch is a village and parish, in the East Medina liberty and rural
deanery, Isle of Wight archdeaconry, and Winchester diocese, about 5 miles
south-east-by-east from Newport, and 6 miles south-west from Ryde, on the
southern bank of the river Yar, which flows into Brading Harbour. The Newport
Junction railway has a station here. Under the Newchurch Parish Act of 1866
(29 & 30 Vict. cap. cxi.) the ancient parish of Newchurch was divided into
the parishes of Newchurch, Ryde and Ventnor, for all civil and ecclesiastical
purposes. The church of All Saints, on the summit of a hill, is an ancient
cruciform structure of stone, in the Early English style of the eleventh
century, with a chancel, nave, aisles, and transepts, tower with small spire
and 6 bells, and contains an organ and several ancient monuments of the
Dillington and Bissett families. The church was reopened after restoration in
Dec. 1883; the high pews have been replaced, several windows have been opened
out; plaster has been removed from the roof, revealing the open timbers which
have been repaired, and oak stalls have been placed in the chancel. The
register dates from the year 1676. The living is a vicarage yearly value
£328 with residence, in the gift of Gerald Campbell Dicker esq. and held
since 1881 by the Rev. Alfred Cecil Dicker B.A. of Downing College, Cambridge.
Here is a Congregational chapel. £10 from charities is distributed
yearly, arising from various gifts. Ashey Down, partly in this parish and
partly in Ryde, is chalk and is one of the highest hills in the island on which
is an obelisk. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are owners of the manorial
rights. The principal landowners are Sir Sebastian Gassiott, Richard E.
Webster, Edward Carter and John Peter Gassiott esqrs. The soil is sand and
gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley & oats. The area is about 4,524
acres; rateable value, £10,535; the population in 1881 was 1,356." (From
Kelly's Directory of the Isle of Wight, 1886)
[Last updated: 4th August 2003 - Brian Pears]