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Next Ness

Next Ness maps (2 available)

Old map of Next Ness

Next Ness books (7 available)

Next Ness memories

Be the first to add a memory of Next Ness.

You can also read memories of nearby places in Cumbria below.

Cumbria memories

Childrens names.

Newby Bridge, the Swan Hotel 1914

The children in the boat are Leslie (boy), Harry (his brother), Noel (his sister) Wren. His other sister Millie Wren is sitting on the riverbank. The other child is a neighbour. For many years Millie Wren was a teacher at Lightburn School, Ulverston.
A memory of Newby Bridge contributed by Jean Wren

Family connections.

Greenodd, Main Street 1921

The gentleman with the scythe over his shoulder was my grandfather. His name was Joseph Jackson, born in 1849 at Bootle in Cumberland. He spent most of his life as a tenant farmer, first at Canleton Farm near Egremont also in Cumberland. He then moved to Lane Ends Farm at Haverthwaite in what was then Lancashire owing to subsidence of the land due to iron ore mining from the nearby Florence Mine. He retired from farming in 1919 to Penny Bridge where he spent the rest of his life.
A memory of Greenodd contributed by Mr J Jackson

Great-grandparents marriage

Aspatria, the Church c1955

My great-grandparents Robert Close and Annie Head were married at this church on January 8th 1888.
A memory of Aspatria contributed by Ellen Neal

Hundredth Anniversary of Wordsworth's Death

Cockermouth, from the Park 1906

I was born in Bridge Street and went to Fairfield School, or "Fairfield Junior Mixed" as it was called when it became Co-Ed in about 1948. I remember the whole class having to walk up to Harris Park and stand round the fountain shown in the picture. Unfortunately we had to hold a daffodil during the walk and then recite Daffodils when we were round the fountain. I noticed when I was in Cockermouth a few weeks ago that the fountain has moved onto the Main Street  into the Memorial Garden opposite Wordsworth House. The Garden is on the site of my grandparents house and the Wordsworth tavern.
A memory of Cockermouth contributed by Joseph Douglas

Extracts From Next Ness & Cumbria books

Ambleside, Stock Ghyll Force 1886

The waterfalls of Stock Ghyll Force have been a major attraction to visitors to Ambleside for well over a century, but this is a very early photograph of them. The waters of Stock Ghyll rise just below the summit of the Kirkstone Pass, north of the town, and plunge through this wooded gorge before joining the River Rothay and eventually entering Windermere.
An extract from from"Cumbria Photographic Memories".

Kendal, St George's Church and the Weir 1891

St George’s Church and the Weir 1891. The twin Italianate towers of St George’s Church dominate this view of Kendal, across the River Kent and its weir. The river has always been important for Kendal, and powered many of the mills which wove the famous Kendal Green and other textiles from the Middle Ages onwards. It is perhaps best known now for the delicious Kendal Mint Cake.
An extract from from"Cumbria Photographic Memories".

Grange-Over-Sands, the Pier 1914

Canvas-sailed boats are tied up at the pier; this was the time when Grange was becoming a popular seaside resort, famed as an escape from industrial Lancashire and for its bracing air and equable climate.
An extract from from"Cumbria Photographic Memories".

Grange-Over-Sands, the Railway 1929

The coming of the railway to Grange-over-Sands in 1857 signalled the town’s rapid expansion as a seaside resort for visitors from the industrial mill towns of Lancashire. Here engine No 12501 steams along the front, past the town’s park, where the conical-roofed bandstand is prominent.
An extract from from"Cumbria Photographic Memories".

Greenodd, Main Street 1921

A local farmworker, dog at his feet and scythe over his shoulder, stands outside the Ship Inn as an early motor car (which looks suspiciously as if it has been superimposed) drives up the Main Street. The Ship Inn gives a clue to Greenodd’s former importance as a port at the mouth of the River Leven.
An extract from from"Cumbria Photographic Memories".