Rothbury Explained

Static Image Name:rothburycentre2.jpg
Static Image Caption:Rothbury town centre
Static Image 2 Name:Looking east along Town Foot, Rothbury - geograph.org.uk - 1382820.jpg
Static Image 2 Caption:Looking east along Town Foot
Country:England
Official Name:Rothbury
Coordinates:55.3097°N -1.9109°W
Population:2,107
Population Ref:(2011)
Civil Parish:Rothbury
Region:North East England
Post Town:MORPETH
Postcode District:NE65
Postcode Area:NE
Dial Code:01669
Os Grid Reference:NU056017

Rothbury is a market town and civil parish in Northumberland, England, on the River Coquet. It is 14miles north-west of Morpeth and 26miles north of Newcastle upon Tyne. At the 2011 census, it had a population of 2,107.[1]

Rothbury emerged as an important town because of its location at a crossroads over a ford on the River Coquet. Turnpike roads leading to Newcastle, Alnwick, Hexham and Morpeth allowed for an influx of families and the enlargement of the settlement during the Middle Ages. In 1291, Rothbury was chartered as a market town and became a centre for dealing in cattle and wool for the surrounding villages during the Early Modern Era. Later, Rothbury developed extensively in the Victorian era, due in large part to the railway and the industrialist Sir William Armstrong. Between 1862 and 1865, Armstrong built Cragside, a country house and "shooting box" (hunting lodge) just outside Rothbury, and extended it as a "fairy palace" between 1869 and 1900. The house and its estate are now owned by the National Trust and are open to the public, attracting many visitors to the area.

History

Prehistory and Ancient (Pre-500)

The area around Rothbury was populated during the prehistoric period, as evidenced by finds dating from the Mesolithic period and later, although all the known finds are from beyond the outer edges of the modern town.[2] Sites include a cairnfield, standing stone and cup-marked rock on Debdon Moor to the north of the town, a well-preserved circular cairn some 26feet in diameter,[3] a late Neolithic or Bronze Age standing stone,[3] and an extensive hillfort, covering an area 165mby125mm (541feetby410feetm) and associated cairnfield to the west of the town.[4] No evidence of the Roman period has been found, probably because the town was a considerable distance north beyond Hadrian's Wall.[5]

Saxons (500–1066)

Fragments from an Anglo-Saxon cross, possibly dating from the 9th century, are the only surviving relics pre-dating the Norman conquest. They were discovered in 1849, when part of the church was demolished, and in 1856. They are now in the town church and the University of Newcastle Museum.

Medieval (1066–1465)

The first documentary mention of Rothbury, according to a local history,[6] was in around the year 1100, as Routhebiria, or "Routha's town" ("Hrotha", according to Beckensall).[7] The village was retained as a Crown possession after the conquest, but in 1201 King John signed the Rothbury Town Charter and visited Rothbury four years later,[8] when the rights and privileges of the manor of Rothbury were given to Robert Fitz Roger, the baron of Warkworth. Edward I visited the town in 1291, when Fitz Roger obtained a charter to authorise the holding of a market every Thursday, and a three-day annual fair near St Matthew's Day, celebrated on 21 September.

Rothbury was not particularly significant at the time, with records from 1310 showing that it consisted of a house, a garden, a bakehouse and a watermill, all of which were leased to tenants. When the line of Fitz Roger died out, the town reverted to being a crown possession, but in 1334 Edward III gave it to Henry de Percy, who had been given the castle and baronry of Warkworth six years earlier. Despite the Scottish border wars, Rothbury rose in prosperity during the 14th century, and had become the town with the highest parochial value in Northumberland by 1535. Feuds still dominated local affairs, resulting in some parishioners failing to attend church because of them in the 16th century, and at other times, gathering in armed groups in separate parts of the building.

Rothbury became a relatively important town in Coquetdale, being a crossroads situated on a ford of the River Coquet, with turnpike roads leading to Newcastle upon Tyne, Alnwick, Hexham and Morpeth. After it was chartered as a market town in 1291, it became a centre for dealing in cattle and wool for the surrounding villages. A market cross was erected in 1722, but demolished in 1827. In the 1760s, according to Bishop Pococke, Rothbury also had a small craft industry, including hatters. At that time, the parish church's vicarage and living was in the gift of the Bishop of Carlisle, and worth £500 per year.

Tudors and Stuarts (1465–1714)

Bernard Gilpin and the Border Reivers

Rothbury has had a turbulent and bloody history. In the 15th and 16th centuries the Coquet valley was a pillaging ground for bands of Reivers who attacked and burned the town with terrifying frequency. Hill farming has been a mainstay of the local economy for many generations. Names such as Armstrong, Charleton and Robson remain well represented in the farming community. Their forebears, members of the reiver 'clans', were in constant conflict with their Scots counterpart. The many fortified farms, known as bastle houses, are reminders of troubled times which lasted until the unification of the kingdoms of England and Scotland in 1603.

The theologian Bernard Gilpin, known as the 'Apostle of the North' for his work in northern England during this period, visited Rothbury. While he preached a sermon, two rival gangs were threatening each other; realising they might start fighting, Gilpin stood between them asking them to reconcile – they agreed as long as Gilpin stayed in their presence. On another occasion, Gilpin observed a glove hanging in the church and asked the sexton about it. He was told it was a challenge to anyone who removed it. Gilpin thus took the glove and put it in his pocket and carried on with his sermon, and no-one challenged him.[9] [6] A painting of this incident by artist William Bell Scott is housed at Wallington Hall.

Georgians (1714–1837)

Near the town's All Saints' Parish Church stands the doorway and site of the 17th-century Three Half Moons Inn, where the Jacobite rebel James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater stayed with his followers in 1715 prior to marching into a heavy defeat at the Battle of Preston in 1715.

On 16 June 1782, Methodist theologian John Wesley preached in Rothbury.

Victorians (1837–1901)

Cragside

See main article: Cragside. Although Rothbury is of ancient origin, it mainly developed during the Victorian era. A factor in this development was industrialist Sir William Armstrong, later Lord Armstrong of Cragside, who built the country house, and "shooting box" (hunting lodge), of Cragside, between 1862 and 1865, then extended it as a "fairy palace" between 1869 and 1900. The house and its estate are now in the possession of the National Trust and are open to the public.

1884 royal visit

Another factor in Rothbury's Victorian development was the arrival of the railway. Rothbury Station opened in 1870, bringing tourists on walking holidays to the surrounding hill country. This railway was most notably used by the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) and Princess Alexandra and their children (Albert Victor, 10, George later George V, 9, Louise, 7, Victoria, 6, Maud, 4), They arrived in Rothbury on 19 August 1884 and left on 22 August to visit Cragside and Lord Armstrong. Firework displays were held by Pain's of London.[10]

David Dippie Dixon

David Dippie Dixon was a historian from Rothbury. He previously worked in his father's draper's shop, William Dixon and Sons, set up in Coquetdale House. After William Dixon died, David Dippie Dixon and his brother John Turnbull Dixon renamed the shop Dixon Bros.

21st century

2006 royal visit

On 9 November 2006, Rothbury was visited by another Prince of Wales and future King, Edward VIII's 2nd Great Grandson, Prince Charles, who is now the King of the United Kingdom. Charles visited his wife Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, now Queen Consort. Charles visited to reopen the refurbished Rothbury village hall, Jubilee Hall, originally built in 1897 and named after the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, his 3rd Great Grandmother.[11] [12] [13] The royal couple also visited Rothbury Family Butchers, whose owner, Morris Adamson, said:[14]

"I talked to them for about 20 minutes about the business. It was almost surreal, staggering. They were both very well informed about the trade, and the Duchess really impressed me with her knowledge and enthusiasm. I put together for them a gift of Northumbrian lamb and specialist sausages and two days later they sent me a thank you letter from Clarence House saying how much they had enjoyed the visit and the meat. The Duchess told me in the shop that her son (Tom) was a food critic and she said she would recommend he should come up to see us in Rothbury to sample our speciality sausages. And Prince Charles congratulated us on keeping alive the traditions of the trade and providing meat that was sourced locally. He urged us to keep up the good work. It was amazing, really."

Governance

Politics

Parish council

The Parish Council meets on the second Wednesday of each month (apart from August) with meetings commencing at 7 pm in the Dovecote Room, Jubilee Institute.[15]

County Council

Rothbury is served by the Northumberland County Council and represented by Councillor Steven Bridgett, first elected in 2008 as a Liberal Democrat and re-elected in 2013, 2017 and 2021 as an Independent.[16]

Parliament

Rothbury is in the parliamentary constituency of Berwick-upon-Tweed. The current representative is Anne-Marie Trevelyan of the Conservatives, who has been the local MP since 2015.  

From 1973 until 2015, Rothbury's MP was Alan Beith, a member of the Liberal Democrats since 1988 and the Liberal Party prior to its merger with the Social Democratic Party; he is currently a member of the House of Lords.

European Union

Prior to Britain's withdrawal from the European Union, Rothbury was in the European Parliament constituency of North East England, represented predominantly by the Labour party.

Public services

Police

Rothbury is served by Northumbria Police and has a single police station, housed, since May 2019, in a building owned by the Northumberland National Park.[17]

Fire

Rothbury has a fire station. The fire station is staffed by on-call firefighters: they do not work at the fire station full-time but are paid to spend time on call to respond to emergencies. The station has a four by four fire engine. The building and its facilities are shared with Sure Start.[18]

Healthcare

See main article: Rothbury Community Hospital.

Rothbury is served by a doctor's surgery[19] and a hospital, Rothbury Community Hospital. The original facility was built as a private home known as Coquet House in 1872. It was converted into the Coquetdale Cottage Hospital in 1905. A maternity ward was added, as a lasting memorial to soldiers who died in the Second World War in 1946. It joined the National Health Service in 1948 and the adjoining Hawthorn Cottage was acquired in 1956. After Hawthorn Cottage had been converted into a physiotherapy department, it was officially re-opened by Jimmy Savile in 1990. After the old hospital became dilapidated, modern facilities were built in Whitton Bank Road and opened in 2007, by local GP, Dr. Angus Armstrong, and his son, TV presenter, Alexander Armstrong. The new hospital closed to inpatients in September 2016 and in June 2019 the trust advised that a group was working on proposals for the future of remaining services at the hospital. The closure caused controversy and a local protest was established called Save Rothbury Cottage Hospital. Rothbury's (Conservative) MP, Anne-Marie Trevelyan condemned the closure to inpatients in Parliament on 9 March 2017.

Geography

Rothbury is located in Northumberland, England, on the River Coquet, it is 13.5miles northwest of Morpeth and 26miles of Newcastle upon Tyne. It is located on the edge of the Northumberland National Park.[20] Rothbury has two Zone 6 B roads going through it: West to East is the B6341, Rothbury's main street, Front Street, is part of this B road;[21] The second B road is the B6342, its starting point is in Rothbury, and is connected to the B6341, it is part of Rothbury's Bridge Street before going over the River Coquet on the Rothbury Bridge and going South for 23.4miles connecting to the A68 (Dere Street) at the hamlet of Colwell.[22]  Rothbury also has the B6344 on the eastern edge, it is connected to the B6341 and goes southeast for 5.6miles passing through the hamlet of Pauperhaugh and connecting to the A697 at the hamlet of Weldon Bridge.[23]

Demography

Ethnicity

Ethnic Group2011[24]
Number%
White: Total208699.0
White: English/ Welsh/ Scottish/ Northern Irish/British206898.1
White: Irish40.2
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller10.0
White: Other white130.6
Asian or Asian British: Total90.4
Asian or Asian British

Chinese

70.3
Asian or Asian British

Indian

10.0
Asian or Asian British: Asian Other10.0
Black or Black British30.1
Other10.0
Total2107100.0
Note: An ethnic group that is not on the table means that no one from that ethnic group was recorded being present in Rothbury at the time of the census.

Religion

Religion2011
Number%
All usual residents2,107100.0
Has religion1,48070.2
Christian1,46669.6
Buddhist20.1
Muslim20.1
Other religion100.5
No religion47722.6
Religion not stated1507.1
Note: A religion that is not on the table means that no practitioner of that religion was recorded being present in Rothbury at the time of the census.

Landmarks

Rothbury's Anglican parish church building – All Saints' Church – dates from circa 1850, largely replacing but in parts incorporating the fabric of a former Saxon edifice, including the chancel, the east wall of the south transept and the chancel arch. The church has a font with a stem or pedestal using a section of the Anglo-Saxon cross shaft, showing what is reputed to be the earliest carved representation in Great Britain of the Ascension of Christ.[25]

The Anglo-Saxon cross is not to be confused with the market cross near the church, the current version of which was erected in 1902 and is known as "St Armstrong's Cross" as it was paid for by Lady Armstrong, widow of Lord Armstrong of Cragside.[26] Until 1965, Rothbury was the location of a racecourse, which had operated intermittently since April 1759, but seldom staged more than one meeting per year. The course was affected by flooding in the 1960s, and the last meeting was on 10 April 1965. The site is now used by Rothbury Golf Club.[27]

Half a mile to the south, Whitton Tower is an exceptionally well-preserved 14th-century pele tower.[28]

Lordenshaw Hill has an important concentration of rock carvings, amounting to over 100 panels in an area of less than 620 acres. Carved panels include cup-marked boulders and complex panels. Other archaeological sites in this area include an Iron Age enclosure and an Early Bronze Age cairn.[29]

Transport

Former railway station

The town was the terminus of a branch line from Scotsgap railway station on the North British Railway line from Morpeth to Reedsmouth. The line opened on 1 November 1870, the last passenger trains ran on 15 September 1952 and the line closed completely on 9 November 1963. station was located to the south of the River Coquet, and the site has been reused as an industrial estate, where the only obvious remains are one wall of the engine shed, which has become part of an engineering workshop.[30] The old Station Hotel still stands near the site, but is now known as The Coquetvale Hotel. It was built in the 1870s by William Armstrong, as a suitable place for visitors to his house at Cragside to be accommodated.[31]

Bus services

The town is now served by an Arriva North East bus service X14 which runs via Longframlington, Longhorsley, Morpeth and continues to Newcastle upon Tyne, the nearest city. This runs every two hours during the day, hourly at peak morning and evening periods.

Education

Rothbury has two schools:

Rothbury is in the catchment area for The King Edward VI School, Morpeth, also run by The Three Rivers Learning Trust.

Culture and community

Music

Rothbury Traditional Music Festival

Rothbury holds the annual Rothbury Traditional music festival. It consists music concerts as well as competitions within the genre of folk music, mainly being that of traditional Northumberland folk music,.[38] In 2013, the festival was featured on Northumberland born TV Presenter and actor Robson Green's documentary series Tales from Northumberland with Robson Green (Season one, Episode five).[39] In 2019, TV presenter and singer Alexander Armstrong, who was born in Rothbury, was made patron of the festival,[40] in 2021 Armstrong announced the return of the Music Festival from an erupting Icelandic volcano in a video posted on the Facebook page of the Festival after it was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[41] Notable music acts that have performed at the festival include:

2015:[42]

2019:[43] [44]

2021:[45]

Rothbury Hills

Rothbury has a tune about it called "Rothbury Hills," written by Jack Armstrong in 1944.[46] It has been performed by Kathryn Tickell on her 2009 album "Northumberland Collection", and Alexander Armstrong wrote and sang some lyrics to it on his 2015 album "A Year of Songs".

Rothbury Highland Pipe Band

Rothbury has its own pipe band, called the Rothbury Highland Pipe Band. The band was established on 1 June 1920, then being named the Rothbury Kilted Pipe Band. The tartan chosen for their kilts was taken from the army regiment the Seaforth Highlanders, as during World War One some of their soldiers were stationed in Coquetdale and developed friendships with the local people. They reformed in the 1950s, being renamed the Rothbury Highland Pipe Band. The band has appeared on the TV show The White Heather Club.[47] [48] [49]

Football

Rothbury has its own football club: Rothbury FC; the club is in Division One of the Northern Football Alliance, which is on level 11 of the National League System.[50] [51]

Folklore

In Rothbury folklore Simonside Hills overlooking Rothbury has a mythical creature called a deaugar or duergar (Norse for 'dwarf). It is said that the creature lures people at night by its lantern light towards bogs or cliffs to kill them.[52] The deaugar has entered into Rothbury's popular culture: in 2021 local musician and poet James Tait wrote a debut children's book called The World of Lightness: A Story of the Duergar of Simonside;[53] [54] an annual 10-mile winter nighttime trail run in the Simonside Hills is called the Duergar Nightcrawler;[55] and a Rothbury art gallery is named Red Deaugar Art Gallery, run by local artist Margaret Bodley Edwards, a descendant of Gothic Revival architect George Frederick Bodley (1827–1907), and of diplomat and founder of the Bodleian Library in Oxford, Sir Thomas Bodley (1545–1613).[56]

Bedlington Terrier

The Bedlington Terrier was originally named after Rothbury and known as the Rothbury or Rodbury Terrier however the name changed due to popularity of the breed with miners in the Northumberland pit village of Bedlington.[57]

Crime

The following are notable crimes committed in or connected to Rothbury.

1919 armed robbery of Rothbury Brewery

Dubbed by a newspaper as a "Wild West Drama",[58] on the night of 28 February 1919, an attempted armed robbery took place at the Rothbury Brewery. Two Russian sailors, Peter Klighe and Karl Strautin, broke into the Rothbury Brewery to rob it, however, at around 9:00 pm, patrol officer PC Francis Sinton was walking past the Brewery, and he approached it after hearing noises of breaking glass. As he did so he told a passer-by named James Curry to fetch the manager, Mr Farndale. As PC Sinton approached the brewery one of the two men appeared from it and shot at Sinton, missing him only slightly, and the two began to tussle as the second man appeared from the brewery and smashed Sinton's head with an iron bar. Curry and Farndale arrived finding PC Sinton laying on the ground, Farnsdale struggled with one of the assailant, however he managed to fight Farnsdale off leaving Farnsdale with the assailant's muffler scarf, with the assailant escaping with his accomplice.[59] After an extensive police search around Northumberland, the two perpetrators Klighe and Strautin were found in Walbottle Dene. Despite being armed with a pistol they gave themselves up. Klighe and Strautin were found wearing clothes stolen from the Ashington Co-Op, where they also broke into the safe. They were suspected of breaking into a number of safes across the region. They were charged with four counts of burglary and attempted murder, being sentenced to penal servitude for 13 years before being deported. PC Sinton was awarded the Kings Police Medal for Gallantry.[60] [61] [62]

1993 armed robbery of the Rothbury Post Office

Overnight on 23 and 24 August 1993, Rothbury experienced another armed robbery. An organised crime gang robbed the Rothbury post office of £15,000 (about £30,000 in 2020 money)[63] in cash, stamps and pension books. Armed with iron crowbars and dressed in camouflage and ski masks, the robbers cut the telephone wires, blocked the main road with a stolen council van, and threatened local residents.

The then MP for Rothbury, Liberal Democrat Alan Beith said the event showed rural communities like Rothbury needed extra police cover to fight organised crime. Detective Inspector John Hope, who led the investigation, stated that too much of focus on cities leads to organized crime moving to rural villages. He also said that improving roads to give better police access to rural villages would help decrease crime, and that the criminal justice system was failing to convict people, with criminals knowing they could escape punishment.[64]

2010 Northumbria police manhunt

See main article: 2010 Northumbria Police manhunt.

In July 2010, Rothbury was the site of a major police manhunt. Raoul Moat was released from HM Prison Durham on 1 July, after an 18-week sentence for assaulting a nine-year-old relative. During his prison sentence, his girlfriend had a relationship with a police officer that she kept secret from Moat; his business also collapsed while he was in prison, for which he blamed the police. After his release, he discovered his girlfriend's relationship; he shot and killed her new boyfriend, 29-year-old karate instructor Chris Brown, and attempted to kill her. Then, while driving on the A1, he attacked police officer David Rathband, stationed in a patrol car on the roundabout of the A1 and A69 roads near East Denton, permanently blinding him. (Rathband would hang himself at home in Blyth 18 months later.) Moat then went on the run for six days (3–9 July), hiding in and around Rothbury. Police then cornered him by the river on the night of 9 July. After a six-hour stand-off, with Moat holding a gun to his head the entire time, Moat committed suicide by shooting himself early on the morning of 10 July.

2021 pub robberies

In May 2021 burglars broke into two pubs in the same night, the Newcastle House in Rothbury, stealing £4,000 and The Three Wheats in Thropton stealing £150. The landlord of The Three Wheats, Gail Hooper, called the burglars "scumbags".[65]

2021 cannabis farm discovery

In June 2021 police discovered a cannabis farm at the closed-down pub The Railway Hotel in Rothbury, the police said that "At about 2.20pm on Monday we received a report from an electric company that a cannabis farm had been found inside the Railway Hotel pub in Rothbury. Officers attended the scene and about 100 plants were removed and destroyed. A 25-year-old man was arrested and has since been charged with producing a Class B drug".[66]

Notable people

Deceased

Living

Places named after Rothbury

In popular culture

Film

TV

Documentary

Drama

Vera (2011–present), a ITV crime drama set in North East England; Northumberland and Tyne and Wear, has scenes from two episodes filmed in Rothbury:[69]

Line producer Margaret Mitchell commented on filming at Rothbury for Darkwater:[70] Rothbury was also mentioned by DS Joe Ashworth (David Leon) in the episode 'Poster Girl', Series 3: Episode 2.

References and further reading

Further reading

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parish population 2011. 1 July 2015.
  2. Finlayson.. Rhona. Hardie. Caroline. 2009. Rothbury Northumberland Extensive Urban Survey. Northumberland County Council. 11.
  3. Scott. Andrew. 2012. The early railways of North East England and their heritage today. The International Conference on Business & Technology Transfer. 2012. 6. 141. 10.1299/jsmeicbtt.2012.6.0_141. 2433-295X.
  4. Hazell. Zoë. Crosby. Vicky. Oakey. Matthew. Marshall. Peter. November 2017. Archaeological investigation and charcoal analysis of charcoal burning platforms, Barbon, Cumbria, UK. Quaternary International. 458. 178–199. 10.1016/j.quaint.2017.05.025. 2017QuInt.458..178H. 1040-6182. free.
  5. 1959. Newcastle, Northumberland County, New Brunswick. 8. 10.4095/110227. free.
  6. Book: Graham, Frank. Rothbury and Coquetdale (Northern History Booklet No. 65). 1975. 978-0-85983-092-8.
  7. Book: Beckensall, (2001), Stan. Northumberland The Power of Place. Tempus Publishing. 2001. 978-0-7524-1907-7.
  8. Web site: Chronology Rothbury. 2021-03-18. rothbury.co.uk. 1993.
  9. Web site: Rothbury, Cragside and Coquetdale .
  10. Book: Ridley, Nancy . Portrait of Northumberland . Robert Hale Limited . 1966 . London . 155–157 . en-GB . XII Coquetdale and the Vale of Whittingham.
  11. Web site: Rothbury Jubilee Institute Hall: About the hall. 2021-03-18. www.rothburyjubileehall.org.uk.
  12. Web site: Rothbury Jubilee Institute Hall: History. 2021-03-18. www.rothburyjubileehall.org.uk.
  13. Web site: Past Engagements Prince of Wales. 2021-03-18. www.princeofwales.gov.uk. en.
  14. Web site: Royal Visit. 2022-01-07. Rothbury Butchers. en-GB.
  15. Web site: Rothbury Parish Council . Rothbury Parish Council . 3 January 2022 . Rothbury is a small market town set on the banks of the River Coquet in Northumberland, and although technically a town, everyone still tends to call it a village. It has a village feel about it..
  16. Web site: 23 March 2021. Councillor details – Councillor Steven Christopher Bridgett. 2021-03-23. northumberland.moderngov.co.uk. en.
  17. Web site: Northumbria Police set to move to new base secured for officers in Rothbury. 2021-03-24. beta.northumbria.police.uk. en-gb.
  18. Web site: Local fire stations – Our fire stations – Rothbury. Northumberland County Council.
  19. Web site: The Rothbury Practice. 2021-03-18.
  20. Web site: Rothbury • Northumberland National Park. 2021-03-26. Northumberland National Park. en-GB.
  21. Web site: B6341 – Roader's Digest: The SABRE Wiki. 2021-03-26. www.sabre-roads.org.uk.
  22. Web site: B6342 – Roader's Digest: The SABRE Wiki. 2021-03-26. www.sabre-roads.org.uk.
  23. Web site: B6344 – Roader's Digest: The SABRE Wiki. 2021-03-26. www.sabre-roads.org.uk.
  24. Web site: Custom report – Nomis – Official Labour Market Statistics. 2021-03-26. www.nomisweb.co.uk.
  25. Web site: All Saints Rothbury . Parish of Upper Coquetdale . 29 October 2018.
    see also The Rothbury Cross: An Iconographic Bricolage . Jane . Hawkes . Gesta . 35 . 1 . 77–94. 1996 . 767228. 10.2307/767228 . 193289467 .
  26. Web site: Rothbury, Northumberland. https://web.archive.org/web/20100526182628/http://www.dnar.org.uk/local-history/72-know-your-parish/135-rothbury-know-your-parish.html . 26 May 2010 . June . Watson . Durham & Northumberland Ancestry Research .
  27. Web site: Rothbury Racecourse . Greyhound Derby . 29 October 2018.
  28. Web site: Whitton Tower . Pastscape . 14 June 2011.
  29. Web site: Walking With Rock Art – 7. Lordenshaw . https://web.archive.org/web/20120415012547/http://rockart.ncl.ac.uk/interactive/outandabout/interactive_outandabout_walking7.htm . 15 April 2012 . rockart.ncl.ac.uk.
  30. Web site: Rothbury site record . Disused Stations . 29 October 2018.
  31. Web site: Coquetvale Hotel . https://web.archive.org/web/20180328111220/http://coquetvale.co.uk/ . 28 March 2018 . live . coquetvale.co.uk.
  32. Web site: Welcome to Rothbury First School . 2021-03-23 . www.rothburyfirst.northumberland.sch.uk.
  33. Web site: Rothbury First School – GOV.UK . 2021-03-23 . www.get-information-schools.service.gov.uk. en.
  34. Web site: THE THREE RIVERS LEARNING TRUST – GOV.UK. 2021-03-23. www.get-information-schools.service.gov.uk. en.
  35. Web site: Dr Thomlinson C of E Middle School Where every child matters, Every child succeeds. 2021-03-23. drthomlinson.the3rivers.net.
  36. Web site: Dr Thomlinson Church of England Middle School – GOV.UK. 2021-03-23. www.get-information-schools.service.gov.uk. en.
  37. Web site: Graham. Hannah. 15 February 2019. Kids 'on strike' from school to force grown ups to save the planet. 2021-10-08. ChronicleLive. en.
  38. Web site: Rothbury Traditional Music Festival – a weekend of traditional music, dance and events. 2021-01-12. en-US.
  39. Web site: RECAP: Further Tales from Northumberland '" Episode Five. 2021-01-15. www.northumberlandgazette.co.uk. en.
  40. Web site: Alexander Armstrong announced as patron of Rothbury traditional music festival. 2021-03-17. North East Times. en.
  41. Web site: 6 July 2021. Our ace Patron, TV's Alexander Armstrong announces the festival from an Erupting /Icelandic Volcano! Festival is ON! Saturday 10th July with outdoor stage from 12.30pm-5pm. Facebook.
  42. Web site: 2015. Programme 2015. live. Rothbury Traditional Music Festival. https://web.archive.org/web/20131231045019/http://www.rothburymusicfestival.co.uk/programme-of-events.html. 31 December 2013.
  43. Web site: 2019. 2019 FESTIVAL DATES ARE 19TH – 21ST JULY: 2019 ARTISTS ANNOUNCED!. live. Rothbury Traditional Music Festival. https://web.archive.org/web/20191206191207/http://www.rothburymusicfestival.co.uk/. 6 December 2019.
  44. Book: Rothbury Traditional Music Festival 2019 Programme. 2019. 3–4.
  45. Web site: Performers 2021. Rothbury Traditional Music Festival.
  46. Web site: 13 June 2019. Rothbury Hills. 2021-03-23. Traditional Tune Archive. en.
  47. Web site: Dawson. Peter. Murray. Billy. Rothbury Highland Pipe Band. www.rothburypipeband.co.uk.
  48. Web site: Scott. Katie. 16 July 2020. History of the Rothbury Highland Pipe Band as it celebrates its centenary. Northumberland Gazette. en.
  49. Web site: Scott. Katie. 30 July 2020. Rothbury Highland Pipe Band's 'World Tours' inspired by comedian Billy Connolly. Northumberland Gazette. en.
  50. Web site: Rothbury Football Club. www.rothburyfc.com. en-GB.
  51. Web site: Viewing Club: Rothbury FC. Northern Football Alliance.
  52. Book: Green, Malcolm. Northumberland Folk Tales. 2014. The History Press. 978-0-7524-8998-8. Stroud, Gloucestershire. 20–23.
  53. Web site: The World of Lightness. 2021-03-17. www.jamestait.co.uk.
  54. Book: Tait, James. The World of Lightness: A Story of the Duergar of Simonside. Wanney Books. 2021. 9781999790585.
  55. Web site: The Duergar Nightcrawler | 10 Mile Night Trail Run.
  56. Web site: Margaret Bodley Edwards – a talented and remarkable woman who cares about giving artistic opportunities to all. 2021-01-12. www.northumberlandgazette.co.uk. en.
  57. Folklore has it that the Bedlington Terriers were used by Romani people of the Rothbury Forest to hunt silently for small game and the livestock of the landowners: Kerry V. Kern, "The Terrier Handbook"; Barron's Edu. Ser., 2005 New York.
  58. Book: Green, Nigel . Tough Times and Gristly Crimes: A History of Crime in Northumberland . Stonebrook Print and Designs . 978-0-9551635-0-0 . Wallsend, Tyne and Wear . 102 .
  59. News: 2 July 1920 . Attempted Murder at Rothbury . 4 . . Newspapers.com.
  60. Web site: If trees could talk, the tales this one could tell. 2021-12-30. www.northumberlandgazette.co.uk. en.
  61. News: 6 June 1921 . King's Medal for Northern Heroes . 5 . . Newspapers.com.
  62. News: 3 March 1920 . Police Constable Sinton . 7 . . Newspapers.com.
  63. Web site: Inflation calculator. 2021-03-18. www.bankofengland.co.uk. en.
  64. Web site: 23 October 2011. Crime gangs 'targeting rural areas': Audacious raid on village and. 2021-03-18. The Independent. en.
  65. Web site: Larkin. Paul. 8 May 2021. Burglars target two Northumberland pubs in one night. Northumberland Gazette.
  66. Web site: Smith. Ian. 9 June 2021. Man charged after cannabis farm discovered at Northumberland pub. Northumberland Gazette.
  67. Taylor, Rowland . 26 . Pollard . Albert Frederick . Albert Pollard. 472 . 1.
  68. Book: Fendley, Alan. The Jubilee Hall. D.W.Elson. 2014. 10.
  69. Web site: Hodgson. Barbara. 16 January 2020. Where is Vera's filmed? Check out locations used in the ITV drama. 2021-01-12. ChronicleLive. en.
  70. Web site: Discover the setting of ITV's detective drama Vera. 2021-01-12. Radio Times. en.