NEWCASTLE-LITTLE, a parish, in the union of HAVERFORDWEST, hundred of KEMMES, county of PEMBROKE, SOUTH WALES, 84 miles (N. by E.) from Haverfordwest; containing 431 inhabitants. This place derives its name from an ancient mound near the church, called " the Castle," and its distinguishing epithet from the inferiority of this fortification to a much older and more extensive work of the same kind, at a short distance from the village. The parish comprises a moderate tract of land, by far the greater part inclosed and cultivated, the remainder being stony, barren, and unfit for tillage, especially the northern portion of it, which is hilly: the rateable annual value is returned at £1113. 19. Fairs are held in the village on May 6th and July 10th. The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with £800 royal bounty, and £200 parliamentary grant; net income, £54; patron, T. Morse, Esq.; impropriator, Rev. T. K. W. Harries. The church is dedicated to St. Peter. There is a Sunday school, in which from 30 to 40 males and females are gratuitously taught by Baptists. Near the village is a spring designated Golden Well, which ebbs and flows regularly with the tide in St. George's Channel, from which it is nine miles distant; the water is said to be efficacious in coughs, and in diseases of the eye.