Newnham
Newnham or Newnham on Severn is a town in west Gloucestershire, England. It lies in the Royal Woodland of Dean, on the west bank of the River Severn, approximately 10 miles south-west of Gloucester and three miles southeast of Cinderford. It gets on the A48 road in between Gloucester and also Chepstow, Monmouthshire, Wales. The village has a parish council. A parish church was developed in the 14th century (although there had actually been a chapel of ease since 1018), and in 1366 a new church building was improved the high ground of the town as the old one faced disintegration from the river. The new building has itself been harmed by a gunpowder surge in 1644 during the English Civil War as well as a fire in 1881, yet is still in operation. As a result of Newnham's location on the Severn, the Old Romans developed three roads via the place, where they forded the river. The Anglo-Saxons established a long-term negotiation, the Normans constructed a motte-and-bailey stronghold for protection, and in middle ages times it became a significant port with web links around Great Britain as well as Ireland. In 1171, Henry II of England presented an intrusion of Ireland from Newnham. One account declared that he set sail with 400 ships as well as 5,000 men, which suggests its significance as a port. For a while Newnham was the most successful Gloucestershire community west of the Severn. Its duty as a port and also trading hub decreased, nevertheless, rapidly with the 1827 opening of the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal. In 1810, an early effort at a Severn passage started building and construction simply southern of Newnham. Job was abandoned after flooding in 1812. The civil parish becomes part of Newnham as well as Westbury electoral ward. This ward begins in the north at Westbury-on-Severn and after that adheres to the River Severn to Newnham. The overall population of the ward taken at the 2011 census was 3,088.