1
Kwik Fit in Sleaford Road, Newark-on-Trent
The building was originally a bus garage.
Image: © Chris
Taken: 2 Mar 2014
0.07 miles
2
Cliff Nook Lane, Newark on Trent, Notts.
This Christadelphian Hall has been added onto a small cottage. Apparently there has been a Christadelphian ecclesia in Newark since 1850. A noticeboard near the entrance informs passers-by that several services are held here each Sunday.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 5 Nov 2017
0.07 miles
3
Cliff Nook Lane, Newark on Trent, Notts.
This Christadelphian Hall has been added onto a small cottage. Apparently there has been a Christadelphian ecclesia in Newark since 1850. A noticeboard near the entrance informs passers-by that several services are held here each Sunday.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 5 Nov 2017
0.08 miles
4
Benchmark on wall at side of #42 Wellington Road
Ordnance Survey cut mark benchmark described on the Bench Mark Database at http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm24255
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 1 May 2016
0.08 miles
5
Kwik Fit on Sleaford Road
Image: © Andrew Abbott
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.08 miles
6
Appleton Gate, Newark on Trent, Notts.
A boarded up house on Appleton Gate, en route to the town centre. It may be in use by an adjoining builder's merchant's yard as a storage facility?
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 5 Nov 2017
0.09 miles
7
Houses of Wellington Road at Sleaford Road junction
There is an OS benchmark
Image on the brick wall near the gate which gives access to the rear of #42 Wellington Road
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 1 May 2016
0.09 miles
8
Appleton Gate, Newark on Trent
Image: © Andrew Abbott
Taken: 28 Jul 2010
0.10 miles
9
Line of Civil War defences, Friary Gardens, Newark
The defences were constructed between 1642 and 1646 and overlay the precinct wall of the Newark Friary https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1016020
Image: © Jonathan Thacker
Taken: 26 Oct 2021
0.10 miles
10
Friary Park, Sleaford Road, Newark, Notts.
With Sleaford Road beyond the stone wall on the photographer's right, and looking in the direction of Queen's road (towards the town centre), these are remains of ramparts and ditches that formed part the north-eastern corner of Newark's Civil War town defences (1642-46). Where the ground slopes upwards to meet the wall it has been suggested that the height of these earthwork defences could have measured between 8-12 metres.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 1 Feb 2015
0.10 miles