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| Newark's imposing Georgian Town Hall was designed
by John Carr of York and built c.1774-6. |
Newark’s importance derives from its location at the intersection of
major communication routes: the River Trent, the Roman Fosse Way and
the Great North Road. Newark became a substantial inland port, particularly
for the wool trade, and later its position on main roads encouraged the
development of inns and hostelries to sustain the many travellers passing
through the town. The arrival of the railways in the 1840s gave further
stimulus to Newark’s economic growth.
The early history of Newark is stubbornly elusive. Remains of Roman
settlement have been identified at Northgate, near the road bridge over
the East Coast railway line and a considerable amount of Roman pottery
was found during the excavations at the castle during the 1990s. However,
the full size and character of the settlement remains unknown.
A large pagan Anglo-Saxon cemetery has been uncovered in Millgate and
a Christian cemetery dating from c.950 to c.1070 was discovered at the
castle. It has traditionally been assumed that the Saxon borough probably
occupied the area of the later Medieval town as defined by the defences
following the rectangle of streets (Lombard Street, Carter Gate and Appleton
Gate, Slaughter House Lane and the west side of Castle Gate). However,
excavations on the defences in the 1970s found no trace of Saxon activity
and the archaeologists concluded that the Saxon borough occupied a much
smaller area within the town.
Medieval Newark
Newerche is not referred to as a borough in Domesday Book but
56 burgesses, 42 villagers and 4 smallholders and 7 free men are listed;
the Bishop of Lincoln was lord of the manor. The name means ‘new work’ to
distinguish it from an unidentified defended site known as ‘The Aldwark’ in
1316. The ‘Aldwark’ could well be one of the Romano-British defended
settlements such as Thorpe or Brough or even the North Gate site in Newark
itself.
The first castle was built shortly after the Norman conquest, possibly
after the ‘Harrying of the North’ in the winter of 1068-9. Excavations
on the town rampart in Slaughter House Lane suggest that the rampart
is contemporary with the castle so the evidence points to Newark having
been developed as a planned town by the Normans, incorporating the existing
but smaller Saxon settlement within it.
Charters dating from the 1130s record Henry I’s permission to build
the castle, divert the King’s Highway (now Castle Gate), to build a bridge
over the Trent, and to establish a five-day fair “at the castle”. Bishop
Alexander founded the hospital of St. Leonard at the same time and it
is possible the defensive circuit was extended. A survey of 1225-31 reveals
that the town had by then extended beyond its defences, and suburbs had
grown up along all the roads approaching the town.
The borough was incorporated on 21st December, 1549. The
town had a population of around 2,700 and derived its wealth from trade
in wool, hides and leather, cloth manufacture, the traffic in coal and
other commodities on the River Trent and business brought by the growing
use of the Great North Road (a route developed during the middle ages
that crossed the Trent at Newark). It has also been argued that Newark
also benefited from its pre-Conquest soke: its court met every three
weeks which, with the twice-yearly wapentake court and weekly market, “helped
to build and maintain Newark’s importance”.
17th-18th centuries
The Civil War (1642-1646) was without doubt the most dramatic period
in Newark’s history. The town’s geographic location was again important
as it controlled the Trent crossing that linked York and the north with
London and King Charles’ headquarters at Oxford. The town stood solidly
behind the King and withstood three violent sieges in 1643, 1644 and
1646. The siege of 1646 lasted six months and, following Charles’ surrender
to the Scots at Southwell on 5th May, ended with the surrender
of the Royalist garrison.
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| A view of the Market Place in Newark by Edward
Eyre, c.1776. Work on the Town Hall had started in December 1773
but was
only two-thirds complete by the time this drawing was made. The original
can be seen in the art gallery at Newark Town Hall. |
By 1801 Newark had a population of 6,730 and was the county’s second
town. Road traffic between Scotland and the north and London used the
Great North Road so coaching inns such as the Ram and Saracen’s Head
were not short of business. The weekly market and six annual fairs underpinned
Newark’s wealth which was reflected by the rebuilding of the Market Place
in the 18th century with coaching inns, houses of leading
citizens and the splendid new Town Hall (1773) by John Carr. Georgian
Newark was considered to be elegant and well-built. It was also fashionable,
with a rich cultural life: a theatre was established in 1774 and a large
bowling green laid out in the castle grounds.
Industrial development
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| Victorian warehouses on the riverfront at Newark. |
River traffic grew in quantity during the 18th century but
it was not until the 1772 Act to improve the Trent that locks were built
at Newark thus ensuring it became a busy inland port with warehousing,
boat building and wharfages based around the Town Lock.
The two railway routes arrived in 1846 and 1852 and coach traffic dramatically
declined thereafter.
Principal industries in the late 19th century were malting
and brewing, engineering (in particular the manufacture of agricultural
machinery, boilers and industrial hardware), flour milling, tanning and
textiles. Newark’s prosperity during this period is embodied in the fine
Victorian buildings around the town: The Corn Exchange (1847-8), the
Gilstrap Free Library (1883) and the Ossington Coffee Palace (1882).
By the early 20th century Newark benefited from the establishment
of two engineering companies, Worthington-Simpson and Ransome and Marles.
The strong foothold in engineering and the arrival of new industrial
activities such as sugar-refining helped to lessen the effect of the
decline in malting and brewing.
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