ALNMOUTH
View of Alnmouth and the estuary of the River Aln, from the west
'Alnmouth' is a village in the county of Northumberland, in the north-east of England. It is situated just off the main A1068 road (to Ashington), about four miles south-east of Alnwick.
Located at the mouth of the River Aln, the village has been an important trading port in Northumberland's past, mainly involved in the export of grain, and smuggling. The port declined after the river changed course in 1806. This incident also resulted in the original church being cut off from the rest of the village.
Today, Alnmouth is a popular tourist resort, served by Alnmouth railway station which is situated in Bilton, a mile outside Alnmouth. It is within the Northumberland Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Alnmouth is believed to have been the location of a great synod at which St. Cuthbert was elected Bishop of Lindisfarne in 684[1].
According to the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana, Alnmouth was taken and fortified by the French during the reign of Queen Elizabeth[2].
A comprehensive history of the village was written in 1851 by one Willian Dickson, entitled ''Four Chapters from the History of Alnmouth''.
The village was in 1860 selected as one of fourteen weather stations, and equipped with barometer by the Duke of Northumberland acting as president of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution[3]. The barometer and a chart of recent readings was kept on public display, to seek to provide fishermen with indications of likely weather patterns so as to assist in diminishing losses at sea. The barometer remains on display, in the window of a cottage facing on the main street, to this day.
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References
1. The Gentleman's Magazine, volume XXXVIII, 1852 page 500 from Google Book Search
2. Encyclopaedia Metropolitana, volume XIV, 1845 page 349 from Google Book Search
3. The Yearbook of Facts in Science and Art 1861, pp.267-268
John Wesley is reputed to have visited Alnmouth in 1742 and afterward's said about the village that it was "famous for all kinds of wickedness".
External links
★ Local history
★ Photos of Alnmouth
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