Newton Reigny
Newton Reigny is a village and former civil parish, now in the parish of Catterlen, in Westmorland and Furness, in the English county of Cumbria, near the town of Penrith. In 1931 the parish had a population of 168.
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730 m
Penrith Rural District
Penrith was a rural district within the administrative county of Cumberland, England that existed from 1894 to 1974 with slight boundary changes in 1934.
The district largely corresponded to the ancient Leath Ward of Cumberland but excluding the parishes of Penrith and Alston with Garrigill. The area had been a rural sanitary district prior to the Local Government Act 1894. Penrith itself was covered by Penrith Urban District, which the Rural District surrounded on the west, north and east.
The council was based at offices known as Mansion House in Penrith which were used by its successor authority Eden District Council.
Within the district's boundaries was a small part of the Lake District National Park.
The district was abolished by the Local Government Act 1972 on 1 April 1974, being merged with other districts to form the Eden district.
At its demise in 1974 the district was divided into the civil parishes of:
Ainstable
Castle Sowerby
Catterlen (including Newton Reigny)
Culgaith (including Kirkland, Skirwirth and Blencarn)
Dacre
Glassonby (including Gamblesby)
Great Salkeld
Greystoke
Hesket (formerly Hesket-in-the-Forest and Plumpton parishes)
Hunsonby (formerly Hunsonby & Winskill and Little Salkeld parishes)
Hutton
Kirkoswald (formerly the parishes of Kirkoswald, Staffield and Renwick)
Langwathby (including Edenhall)
Lazonby
Matterdale
Mungrisdale
Ousby
Skelton
Threlkeld
The name Penrith Rural was resurrected as a new electoral division of Cumbria in the 1990s but does not include any of the area once administered by the Penrith RDC and does in fact cover an area of the ancient county of Westmorland.
953 m
Catterlen
Catterlen is a small village and civil parish 3 miles (4.8 km) north west of Penrith, Cumbria. At the 2001 census the civil parish had a population of 471, increasing to 605 at the 2011 Census.
The village is a linear one with the B5305 road dividing it into two. Junction 41 of the M6 motorway is at Catterlen.
The parish of Catterlen also includes the slightly more populous village of Newton Reigny which was a separate parish from 1866 to 1934, previous to 1866 both villages were part of a larger Newton Reigny Parish.
The large house and former pele tower known as Catterlen Hall is closer to Newton Reigny than Catterlen.
Within the parish is Newton Rigg College, which was part of the Yorkshire-based Askham Bryan College.
Catterlen is within the historic county of Cumberland, but it is not governed by the modern unitary authority of Cumberland, being instead part of the Westmorland and Furness unitary authority area.
1.4 km
Newton Rigg College
Newton Rigg College was an agricultural college near Penrith, Cumbria, England, founded in 1896 as the Cumberland and Westmorland Farm School. From 2011 it was part of Askham Bryan College, which in 2020 announced that it would close in 2021.
1.9 km
Blencow railway station
Blencow railway station was situated on the Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway between Penrith and Cockermouth in Cumberland (now in Cumbria), England. The station served the villages of Blencow (or Blencowe) and Newbiggin. The station opened to passenger traffic on 2 January 1865, and closed on 3 March 1952. It reopened temporarily on 2 July 1956 before closing permanently on 6 March 1972.
Although called Blencow the station was actually situated on the edge of Newbiggin and was over 2 miles (3.2 km) from Blencow. Possible alternative names for the station before it was opened were Newbiggin station and Dacre & Greystoke station
The station could not be named Newbiggin as there is another Newbiggin on the Carlisle – Settle Railway a few miles away.
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