Newlands, Northumberland
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Newlands is a hamlet and former civil parish, now in the parish of
Shotley Low Quarter Shotley is a village and civil parish south-east of Ipswich in the English county of Suffolk. It is in the Babergh district and gives its name to the Shotley peninsula between the Rivers Stour and Orwell. The parish includes the village of ...
, in the county of Northumberland, England. It is north of Ebchester and south of Whittonstall on the B6309, which follows the route of the ancient Roman road of Watling Street. It is situated north of the River Derwent (forming a border between ''County Durham'' and Northumberland). The nearest large settlement is
Consett Consett is a town in County Durham, England, about south-west of Newcastle upon Tyne. It had a population of 27,394 in 2001 and an estimate of 25,812 in 2019. History Consett sits high on the edge of the Pennines. Its' name originates in the ...
to the south west. In 1951 the parish had a population of 71. The hamlet consists mainly of a group of closely located farmhouses on a road called ''Fine Lane'', west of and coming off the B6309. The derelict ''Marley Tiles'' factory sits on the B6309 itself, currently subject to a planing application for 109 homes. A second batch of houses and rental shalets known as ''Newlands Lodges'' sit at the point where the B6309 crosses the River Derwent and climbs ''Chare Bank'' into Ebchester where it meets and crosses the A694. Veering south west off ''Fine Lane'' and past local landmark, the ''Swinging Cat'' microbar, is a footpath running parallel to then crossing a stream known as ''Small Burn''. Two waterfalls can be found on this stream. The first is hidden in the trees at the top of a gorge on the edge of Newlands (note this can be dangerous to access when the stream is in flood). The second can be found a further 150 m further on where the footpath crosses Small Burn over a stone bridge. The path crosses a further stream called ''Mere Burn'' with another small waterfall, before turning south then running south west adjacent to the ''River Derwent'' towards Shotley Bridge. For this reason, the path is known locally as ''The Way of the Waterfalls''. Both streams join the River Derwent.


History

The name "Newlands" means 'New land'. The originals of the hamlet possibly date back to the granting of 314 acres of land in 1200 by Hugh de Baliol in about 1200 "to be assarted (cleared of trees), cultivated, built upon and enclosed" on the Ebchester road. Another 200 acres were added later Newlands was formerly a township in the parish of Bywell St. Peter, from 1866 Newlands was a civil parish in its own right, on 1 April 1955 the parish was abolished and merged with Shotley Low Quarter.


References

{{Reflist Hamlets in Northumberland Former civil parishes in Northumberland