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Lea Newbold

Cheshire West and ChesterCheshire geography stubsFormer civil parishes in Cheshire
Lea Newbold Lea Hall Farm geograph.org.uk 220728
Lea Newbold Lea Hall Farm geograph.org.uk 220728

Lea Newbold is a former civil parish, now in the parish of Aldford and Saighton, in the Borough of Cheshire West and Chester and ceremonial county of Cheshire in England. In 2001 it has a population of 8. The civil parish was abolished in 2015 to form Aldford and Saighton.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lea Newbold (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lea Newbold
Lea Lane, Chester Aldford and Saighton

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.125 ° E -2.85 °
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Address

Lea Lane

Lea Lane
CH3 6JQ Chester, Aldford and Saighton
England, United Kingdom
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Lea Newbold Lea Hall Farm geograph.org.uk 220728
Lea Newbold Lea Hall Farm geograph.org.uk 220728
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Nearby Places

Aldford Castle
Aldford Castle

Aldford Castle is a motte and bailey castle in the village of Aldford in Cheshire. The motte is to the north of St John's Church, and the church stands on the site of an infilled bailey ditch.The origin and dates of construction of the castle are uncertain. It is thought that it was initially an earth-and-timber construction, possibly built by Robert de Alford in the mid-12th century, in the time of Henry II. However, archaeological evidence of the date is lacking and it may have been significantly earlier, as there are some sources who claim that the castle had been built much earlier, as its command was handed over to Robertus, one of the descendants de Bigod in 1160. One of the earliest written records establishes that it was in the possession of Richard de Alford in the early 13th century and, after his death in 1213, of the family of John de Aderne who likely married de Alford's daughter Margaret. Archaeological findings show that it was rebuilt in stone as a shell keep castle in the 13th century. The purpose of the castle appears to have been as a defensive fortification against the hostile Welsh tribes. There is some debate as to whether the castle, the lands and the title were hereditary or granted due to military service. Some sources even suggest that, up until 1224, the owners had to pay for the lease of the castle.Today fragments of the stonework around the bailey and significant earthworks survive, four miles from Chester where the tributary stream joins the River Dee at an angle. The castle appears to have been triangular, shaped like a harp, with the keep in the northwestern corner of the triangle. Where the keep used to be is now a mound overlooking the River Dee, which the locals call Blobb Hill. The site is a Scheduled Monument.