Newton Ogle

Newton Ogle (1726-1804[1]) was a Church of England clergyman and member of the landowning Ogle family. The son of Nathaniel Ogle and Elizabeth Newton, he served as a prebendary of Durham Cathedral and from 1788 to 1804 as Dean of Winchester.[2] His wife Susanna Thomas (whom he married in 1757) was daughter of John Thomas, Bishop of Winchester.[3][4]

In 1762 he inherited Kirkley Hall from his brother Dr Nathaniel Ogle - he bought up most of the land lying between Blagdon and Milbourne and between Ponteland and Morpeth, developed the Hall on its present site, built a new eastern archway and also added an obelisk nearby to mark the centenary of the Glorious Revolution. On his death in 1804, the Hall was inherited by his sons Nathaniel and the Reverend John Saville Ogle.[5]

References

  1. Dodds, M.H.,(1926). A History of Northumberland. The Parishes of Ovingham, Stamfordham & Ponteland. (Vol. 12, pp.493-509. Northumberland County History Committee.
  2. 'Deans', in Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857: Volume 3, Canterbury, Rochester and Winchester Dioceses, ed. Joyce M Horn (London, 1974), pp. 83-86
  3. Letters to Gilbert White of Selborne, page viii
  4. thepeerage.com - Newton Ogle
  5. http://www.kirkleyhall.co.uk/media/26493/kirkleyhallhistory.pdf
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