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Newport Pagnell is identified by the City Council (in local planning documents) as one of the three "Key Settlements" in the Milton Keynes UA outside of the 1967 "designated area" of the New Town, [29] with the town's complementary Neighbourhood Plan, adopted in June 2021, allocating a total of 1,400 homes for the town between 2016 and 2031.
Newport Pagnell Urban District was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972, becoming part of the Borough of Milton Keynes on 1 April 1974. Initially, no successor parish was created for the former urban district, and it was instead governed directly by Milton Keynes Borough Council. The Newport Pagnell civil parish was re-established in ...
The constituency was one of two covering the Borough of Milton Keynes.It covered the remaining parts of the 1967 designated area of Milton Keynes not in the Milton Keynes South West constituency, as well as the older settlement of Newport Pagnell and the more rural parts of the borough, around Hanslope and Olney.
The Newport Pagnell Rural Sanitary District was administered from Newport Pagnell Union Workhouse, which had been built in 1836 at 1 London Road in Newport Pagnell. [2] Under the Local Government Act 1894, rural sanitary districts became rural districts from 28 December 1894. The Newport Pagnell Rural District Council held its first meeting on ...
Newport Pagnell North and Hanslope; Newport Pagnell South; Olney; Stantonbury; Wolverton; Woughton and Fishermead (part) The City Council ward boundaries do not necessarily coincide with the town and parish council areas. Of these wards, Newport Pagnell North and Hanslope, and Olney are more rural. The remainder are more urban. [9]
Pages in category "Newport Pagnell" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The chancel measures internally 37 ft 0 in × 18 ft 6 in (11.28 m × 5.64 m) and the north vestries, organ chamber and nave is 94 ft × 25 ft (28.7 m × 7.6 m). [2] "The east wall of the nave, which is 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) thick, probably incorporates the remains of the central tower of an early cruciform church, but all other parts of the ...
Newport Pagnell Services was the one of the first two service stations to be opened in the UK, when both it and Watford Gap opened for fuel (only) on 2 November 1959. [citation needed] It was the first to open catering facilities: the northbound café opened on Monday 15 August 1960, [11] and the southbound restaurant followed on 17 September 1960.