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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: NAN-NEW |
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NEWBURY , a market town and municipal borough in the Newbury parliamentary division of Berkshire, England, 53 M. W. by S. of Reading by the Great Western railway. Pop. (1901) 11,o61. It is beautifully situated in the narrow well-wooded valley of the Kennet, which is followed by the Kennet and Avon canal. The town has north and south communications by the Didcot, Newbury & Southampton railway (worked by the Great Western company), and is the terminus of the Lambourn Valley light railway. The church of St. Nicholas is a large Perpendicular building of the beginning of the 16th century. It is said to have been built mainly at the charge of John Winchcombe or Smalwoode (Jack of Newbury), an eminent clothier, who, according to the brass to his memory, died in February 1519. A few picturesque old buildings remain in the town, including part of Winchcombe's house
hall
corporation ) the profits of a fair on St Bartholomew's day (24th of August). Shaw House
Newbury (Neubiri, Neubiry) possibly owes its origin to the village
York
corporation . Newbury was a borough by prescription
Newbury early became a centre of the woollen industry, but at the beginning of the 17th century this was declining. John Kendrick (d. 1624) left a sum of money to benefit the clothing trade and to " set the poor on work," but the result was not what was expected. Elias Ashmole (d. 1628) says: " Newbury had lost most of its clothing trade, which the navigation of the river Kennet hither, now begun, will probably recover "; the trade, however, was already irrevocably lost. The Weavers' Company, which still exists, was incorporated in 16or. In the 18th century a considerable trade was done in corn and malt. Newbury castle, of which traces remained until the 17th century, is said to have been besieged by Stephen in 1152. Newbury was the scene of two battles during the Civil War, in the first of which (1643) Lord Falkland was killed. An important woollen market, established in 1862, is held annually on the first Wednesday in July. See W. Money, History of Newbury (1887) ; Victoria County History, Berks. End of Article: NEWBURY If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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