
Northwood
Contents
Kelly's Directory 1886 - Northwood
"Northwood is a parish on the west bank of the Medina, and includes within its
boundaries the town of West Cowes, in the liberty and rural deanery of West
Medina, archdeaconry of the Isle of Wight and Winchester diocese, from 2.5 to 5
miles north of Newport. St. John the Baptist, the parish church of Northwood,
which is situated about midway between Cowes and Newport, is a very ancient
stone edifice, in the Early Norman style, and consists of chancel, nave, and
aisles: the church was thoroughly restored, re-seated and a handsome tower,
with spire, built in 1864: here are five stained windows; in the south side of
the church is a beautiful window, representing John the Baptist, in memory of
the Rev. S. Seaman. The register dates from the year 1544. The living is a
chapelry, annexed to Carisbrooke, joint yearly value £1,162 and 53 acres
of glebe, in the gift of Queen's College, Oxford, and held since 1858 by the
Rev. Edward Boucher James M.A. of Queen's College, Oxford; the Rev. Charles
Edward Seaman M.A. of Corpus Christi, Cambridge is the resident officiating
curate. There is a small Wesleyan chapel. Mann's and Smith's charities of
about £30 yearly are for apprenticing. Parkhurst prison is part of this
parish. PALLANCE GATE, formerly ex-parochial, is now incorporated with
Northwood. Edward G. Ward esq. is lord of the manor and the principal
landowner. The soil is loamy; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
corn, and some land is in pasture. The area, including West Cowes, is 4,865
acres of land and 417 of water and foreshore; rateable value, including West
Cowes, £33,967; the population in 1881 was 8,484, of which 358 are in
Parkhurst prison, and 7,072 in West Cowes." (From Kelly's Directory of the
Isle of Wight, 1886)
[Last updated: 4th August 2003 - Brian Pears]