The current building was consecrated in 1901, after being built by the architect John Oldrid Scott.
A coffee shop now lies within the old lounge of the living quarters, and the B&B continues to run successfully.
Each year, the village holds a Well dressing event on the May Bank Holiday.
The wells in the village are decorated, and as described on the village's website, each year the residents use "wooden boards [which] are filled with soft, wet clay on which a design is picked out and then coloured using petals and other natural materials such as leaves, cones and bark".
[7] The village was renamed Newborough in 1263, after the 6th Earl of Derby, Robert de Ferrers, created a new borough.
[10] According to William White, who wrote about Hanbury as part of the History, Gazetteer and Directory of Staffordshire in 1851, the parish extended to "upwards of five miles square, and including the north end of Needwood Forest, and ten villages and hamlets, divided into five townships, viz, Hanbury, Newborough, Marchington, Marchington-Woodlands, and Draycott-in-the-Clay", while it also included "2483 inhabitants, and about 13,600 acres of land".