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Newton Stacey

Hamlet in Hampshire, England


Hamlet in Hampshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
typeHamlet
static_imageNewton Stacey Ford, on the River Dever (geograph 5890792).jpg
static_image_captionNewton Stacey Ford, on the River Dever
coordinates
official_nameNewton Stacey
shire_districtTest Valley
shire_countyHampshire
regionSouth East England
constituency_westminsterRomsey and Southampton North
post_townSTOCKBRIDGE
postcode_districtSO20
postcode_areaSO
dial_code01264
os_grid_referenceSU4108940407

Newton Stacey is a hamlet in the Barton Stacey civil parish in the Test Valley district of Hampshire, England. Its nearest town is Stockbridge, which lies approximately 4.5 miles (7.3 km) south-west from the hamlet.

History

Close to Newton Stacey is a grass-grown track, said to be a disused part of the Roman road from Winchester to Cirencester, which runs northwards past Bransbury Common. This road divides between Barton Stacey and Newton Stacey, and close to it are six tumuli, one of which is long.

Newton Stacey was named Niwetone in the ancient hundred of Bertun (i.e. the hundred of Barton), in the Domesday Book in 1086.

The hundred of Barton was granted by King John to Rogo de Sacy or Stacey in September 1199, remained a possession of his son Emery who paid his knights fees for Bertune Sacy in 1206, and afterwards remained in the possession of the lords of the manor of Barton Stacey, hence referred to as the hundred of Barton Stacey. In the same decades, the hamlet of Newton began to be called Newton Stacey.

The hundred court was held in Barton Stacey until the late 19th century when other governmental divisions assumed local jurisdiction.

In 1614 the Puritan, Revd Stephen Bachiler, moved from nearby Wherwell to Newton Stacey where he lived until shortly before setting sail for America. Bachiler founded the town of Hampton in present-day New Hampshire. A number of Newton Stacey residents, influenced by Bachiler's zealous preaching, settled in the new world.

Since 1 April 1974 the hamlet of Newton Stacey has been within the shire district of Test Valley, due to a merger of the boroughs of Andover and Romsey, along with Andover Rural District and Romsey and Stockbridge Rural District.

The twentieth century's technological advances led to increasing population mobility, road development and development in the larger cities, so Newton Stacey stayed relatively small yet the population has an increased standard of living.

In October 2012 a man and his two children were found dead in a car at a lane within the locality.

Notes

References

  1. [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/hants/vol4/pp417-422 British History Online: Barton Stacey Parish], accessed June 2017
  2. [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/hants/vol4/pp415-416 British History Online: Barton Stacey Hundred], accessed June 2017
  3. [http://opendomesday.org/place/SU4140/newton-stacey/ Open Domesday Online: Newton (Stacey)], accessed June 2017
  4. [https://www.bartonstaceyfete.co.uk/?page_id=860 Barton Stacey Fete 2017], accessed June 2017.
  5. The Revd Stephen Bachiler Notorious Inconformist of Newton Stacey by Mark Bailey, Barton Stacey History Group, 2016
  6. [http://uk.news.yahoo.com/man-two-children-found-dead-122155660.html Yahoo News]
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