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A History of the County of Sussex
… in the southeast of the parish. The railway station (Newick and Chailey) is 1 miles north of the village on the … parish from Scaynes Hill and runs across it eastward to Newick and Maresfield, crossing the road from London to Lewes … elsewhere has a stag's head and crown. On a road from Newick which joins the Lewes road by an inn south of the old …
A History of the County of Somerset
… near the southern end of the village, by John and Richard Newick, brickmakers, and fired by furze cut in Crowcombe …
A History of the County of Sussex
… in 1750, 78 and from this date it follows the descent of Newick Place (q.v.), 79 the present owner being Mr. Gilbert E. Sclater of Newick. A chapel of Warningore is mentioned in 1287, 80 and …
A History of the County of Sussex
… 14th century, and seems a prototype of the later tower at Newick; it was built separately, then joined up to the …
A History of the County of Sussex
… Parishes Newick NEWICK Niwica (xi cent.); Niewica (xii cent.); Newik (xiii cent.); Newyke (xv cent.). The parish of Newick, to the north of Lewes, is bounded on the east by the … it reaches the height of 200 ft. for a short distance by Newick Rough. The parish covers an area of 1,930 acres. The …
A History of the County of Sussex
… OF BARCOMBE containing the parishes of Barcombe; Hamsey; Newick At the time of the Domesday Survey the hundred of … the subsidy of 1296, 2 but in 1316 Barcombe, Hamsey, and Newick were the three divisions, 3 and in 1327 and 1332 the … 4 corresponding with the 17th-century and present-day Newick, Barcombe, and Hamsey. 5 Two constables were chosen …
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