Felton Church of EnglandFirst School is for children between the ages of 3 to 9, after which they go to Duchess Secondary School in Alnwick.
Sport
A speedway training track operated from Bockenfield Aerodrome near Felton in the late 1970s. Trainees participated in junior league type events against fellow Northern England and Scottish tracks. The venue is no longer used for speedway however. It is now known as Eshott Airfield and is a base for flying microlights.
Transport
Road
Felton lies adjacent to the A1, the main national north/south trunk road, providing easy access to Newcastle upon Tyne and to the Scottish capital Edinburgh.
Bus
Felton has an hourly bus service provided by Arriva with routes between Alnwick and Newcastle stopping there every hour
Rail
The main East Coast railway link between Edinburgh and London runs via the nearby Alnmouth for Alnwick Station, with a weekday service of 15 trains per day north to Edinburgh and 13 trains per day south to London.
Air
lies around 45 minutes' drive-time away, and provides 19 daily flights to London, with regular flights to other UK centres. The airport also operates regular flights to many European destinations, along with destinations in Africa and North America.
Notable people
E.M. Forster
The novelist E.M. Forster's Uncle Willie lived at Acton House, just north of Felton. Forster spent part of the summer with him for several years around 1900. He wrote a letter from there on 27 July 1899, when aged twenty:
Yesterday I went to Bamborough saw the castle and tombs of my ancestors – I've no reason to suppose they are, though the name is the same and the arms similar, but Bamborough is such a nice cradle for one's race that I shall always call them mine. Then I paddled on the deserted beach...
Forster used Acton House as a model for Cadover in his novel The Longest Journey. This was Forster's most autobiographical work, in which the character of Mrs Failing owes something to Uncle Willie.
Before a bypass was built in the 1980s, the A1 passed through the village. A commemorative plaque on Main Street commemorated the stay of Oliver Cromwell when 6 Main Street formed part of a coaching inn called "The Old Angel". The building is believed to date from around 1631 and in 1650 Oliver Cromwell was reputed to have stayed there on his way to the Battle of Dunbar.