1
Whinney Lane
Image: © Mick Garratt
Taken: 7 Oct 2007
0.10 miles
2
Lime Tree Road, New Ollerton
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 21 May 2013
0.15 miles
3
Church Circle
Estate road at New Ollerton
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 12 Feb 2011
0.19 miles
4
St.Paulinus' church
Neo-Romanesque estate church by Naylor, Sale & Woore in 1931
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 12 Feb 2011
0.19 miles
5
Church of St Paulinus, New Ollerton
Foundation stone in the east wall.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 1 Dec 2019
0.19 miles
6
Ollerton & Bevercotes Miners Welfare
Image: © Mick Garratt
Taken: 7 Oct 2007
0.19 miles
7
New Ollerton church
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 21 May 2013
0.19 miles
8
Church of St Paulinus, New Ollerton
South transept and porch.
Built in 1931 by the Butterley Company as part the first phase of the construction of New Ollerton as a mining town following the sinking of a new shaft in 1922, which led to a large influx of workers, particularly from the North East. The dedication to St Paulinus an early Northumbrian saint, reflects the north-east connection. It is built in an Italianate-romanesque idiom in bricks that were specially commissioned from the Butterley Company. Listed Grade II.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 1 Dec 2019
0.20 miles
9
Church of St Paulinus, New Ollerton
View from the south west.
Built in 1931 by the Butterley Company as part the first phase of the construction of New Ollerton as a mining town following the sinking of a new shaft in 1922, which led to a large influx of workers, particularly from the North East. The dedication to St Paulinus, an early Northumbrian saint, reflects the north-east connection. It is built in an Italianate-romanesque idiom using bricks that were specially commissioned from the Butterley Company. Listed Grade II.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 1 Dec 2019
0.20 miles
10
Church of St Paulinus, New Ollerton
West front.
Built in 1931 by the Butterley Company as part the first phase of the construction of New Ollerton as a mining town following the sinking of a new shaft in 1922, which led to a large influx of workers, particularly from the North East. The dedication to St Paulinus an early Northumbrian saint, reflects the north-east connection. It is built in an Italianate-romanesque idiom in bricks that were specially commissioned from the Butterley Company. Listed Grade II.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 1 Dec 2019
0.20 miles