The village is approximately 7 miles (11 km) northwest of the town of
Okehampton, and most places in the village have excellent views over
Dartmoor. The village is relatively isolated, not being served by any main roads. It has an attractive main square surrounded by traditional buildings, some of them
thatched; just off the square are a
pub, the local primary school and two churches, the
Church of England parish church of
Saint Thomas of Canterbury and the
Methodist church (originally
Bible Christian). The evangelical Christian preacher
Ann Freeman was born here in 1797. The
ecclesiastical parish of Northlew has been combined with the neighbouring village of Ashbury, and since the school is a Church of England
voluntary controlled school, it bears the name of both villages. The hamlet of Crowden is on the Highampton side of the village. Historically, Northlew formed part of
Black Torrington Hundred. It gets its name from the ancient
manor of Lew, mentioned in the
Domesday Book; the village of
Lewdown and the
River Lew are nearby. The village has the melancholy distinction of having lost the highest proportion of its enlisting population of any municipality in the United Kingdom during the
First World War: of 100 men who enlisted in the forces, 24 died. A stone memorial to them was recently erected in the churchyard, replacing wooden memorial tablets within the church. Legend has it that the devil died of the cold in Northlew. There is a stone in the village that represents where the devil is meant to have died of the cold. ==The Bell Ringers song==