Heddon-on-the-Wall Local History Society
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Northumberland OS Name Books

27/8/2021

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A set of dog-eared and characterful handwritten books record over fifteen thousand place-names from Abberwick to Youly Sike, with brief descriptions of the places, giving a fascinating overview of Northumberland (including Tyneside) around 1860, a time of great change, and they are now accessible on the Northumberland Name Books website which goes live on 1 September 2021.

The 104 Ordnance Survey Name Books for Northumberland (most housed in The National Archives, Kew) record the immense fieldwork project that lies behind the First Edition Six Inch-scale maps of the county, and all subsequent maps. The surveyors visited every corner of the county, consulting locals, describing the landscape and archaeological sites and recording gentlemen's residences, colliers' cottages, churches, chapels and now long-gone farms, ferries, wells, spas, pubs, mines and 'manufactories'.
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Newton Seahouses (now Low Newton by the Sea) as described in the Name Books for Embleton parish
Thanks to the dedicated work of over thirty volunteers led by retired professor Diana Whaley, a full set of transcriptions and images, together with introductory sections, can now be freely searched and browsed on the website. For anyone interested in town and country, past and present, in names,
or in the story behind our mapping, this is a treasure trove well worth exploring.

Particular thanks to Irwin Thompson, Cornwell Internet, Explore, principal funders the English Place-Name Society (Jim and Mary Ann Wilkes Fund), the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne and Catherine Cookson Charitable Trust.
There are a few interactive maps of some of the areas covered by the Northumberland OS Name Books - Allendale, Redesdale and the Cheviot Hills - on this website (live and/or for download) which can be found under the navigation tag, Place Name Studies. Maps of several other Northumberland parishes are currently under construction.
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New houses at Tulip Mews

8/8/2021

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Tulip Mews from Towne Gate. Photo A Curtis (2020).
Some photos of the newly built houses on the former site of Town Farm (later Tulip's Yard) adjacent to the old A69 when it passed this way through the village. The line of Hadrian's Wall likes under the houses and was subject to excavation during development of the site. The development of two detached, 4-bedroom houses and three link-detached, 3-bedroom dormer bungalows was completed in the summer of 2019.
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Tulip Mews, Heddon on the Wall. Photo A Curtis {2021).
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Tulip Mews, Heddon on the Wall. Photo A Curtis {2021).

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Wylam history walk

25/6/2021

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A figure of eight, local history walk of 4.2 miles (6.7km) around the village of Wylam. You can view the walk on the ViewRanger web-site. A pdf of the walk with photos and other information can be downloaded below.
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wylam_walk_on_viewranger.pdf
File Size: 7296 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

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Journal of William English

25/6/2021

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I have just received the following notification about the launch online of the Journal of William English.

"I am writing to announce that the website and journal of William English, (www.williamenglish.net) a miner originally from the North East of England who through hard work became a mining engineer in the gold mines of South Africa, is now live.
The website and journal covering the period 1875 to 1915 has been a project for William’s descendants, Hilary Norris and Larry Cunningham.
William found his own first job as a trapper when he left school at thirteen but after a week, ‘I didn’t like the mine, and wanted to leave, but my father said I had looked for the job myself and would now stay there. Well that fixed my destiny, but I know I should never have been a miner’.
William later followed in his father Henry’s footsteps and found work in the mines of South Africa. In 1899 he joined the Kaffrarian Rifles, fighting in the Boer War, and keeping a diary of each skirmish he took part in.
It is possible the journal was begun around this time. William’s life wasn’t solely defined by his work as a mining engineer although he details the materials, costs and dangers involved. He had many other interests, cycling perhaps being his greatest passion.
In transcribing William’s journal we have tracked the tragically short life of a self taught man in his own words. Additional material adds context and background information on the family. If you’d like to contact us please do so on info@williamenglish.net Larry Cunningham & Hilary Norris June 2021"
The homepage of the website is here: https://williamenglish.net
William English was born in Wylam in 1875 and died in 1915 at the Phthisis  Sanatorium at Modderfontein, near Johannesburg in South Africa.

His Journal probably written at a much later period of his life has been transcribed by his relatives and the website contains much more information about places and historical context.
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William English 1875-1915.
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Excert from the transcription of page 1 of William English's Journal
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Excert from the transcription of page 2 of William English's Journal
Some information about Isaac Jackson, his clocks and model steam locomotives can be found in the blog articles on this site. There is also information about the song, Canny Wylam.
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Heddon Colliery & Brick Works

2/6/2021

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Heddon Colliery & Brick Works c1908
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Flocktons & Station Road. Photo by John Flockton Sipple-Asher (1952).
Photos by A Curtis (May 2021)
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Heddon Colliery & Brick Works. OS 1:2500 (c1900) & DTM LIDAR (2017) from NLS.
Link to 1:2500 georeferenced OS and LIDAR in Side by side view at National Library of Scotland.
In LIDAR data, the digital surface model (DSM) represents the earth's surface and includes all objects on it. In contrast to a DSM, the digital terrain model (DTM) represents the bare ground surface without any objects like plants and buildings. The laser pulses from the tree canopy are effectively removed from the data allowing the model to see through the trees.

Document about site history by Tyne Valley Gun Club

The land which measures approximately 10 acres is contained wholly within the North Tyneside Green Belt and was formerly the Margaret Pit and Heddon Brick Works. It was active as a colliery and brick making works until 1947 when operations ceased.
Until 1949 the site was used as a printing works then for light engineering and thereafterwards  for the storage of paper.
In 1962 the then Minister of Housing and Local Government confirmed a Discontinuance Order requiring the use of the land for general industrial purposes to be discontinued and required all buildings and works on the land to be removed.
Protracted negotiations took place regarding compensation payment, and in 1965 final settlement was agreed on the basis of a cleared site without industrial use but with the benefit of an alternative use as a single dwelling house.
Since 1949 a series of applications were made for planning permission for various uses and details of these applications and their determination are as follows:
  • 1949 Drying and processing in respect of concrete block manufacture REFUSED
  • 1953 Development of land for housing REFUSED
  • 1959 Development of land as a caravan site REFUSED
  • 1960 Use of old tile works for vehicle spraying REFUSED
  • 1965 Establishment of Country Club REFUSED
  • 1967 Conversion of former colliery winding house to dwelling REFUSED (& DISMISSED ON APPEAL)
  • 1968 Mobile washing plant REFUSED
  • 1974 An application was made by the Northumberland County Small-bore Rifle Association for the development of of an outdoor small-bore rifle range with future storage, changing and toilet facilities.
The application was REFUSED for the following reasons:
  • undesirable sporadic development contrary to the established policy of preserving the open, undeveloped character of the area.
  • associated noise and activity prejudices the amenities of nearby residents.
  • increased use of a winding road with no adequate provision for turning or parking of vehicles prejudicial to road safety.
An APPEAL was lodged against the planning refusal and subsequently determined by written representation. In a letter dated 30th January 1976 the Secretary of State, taking into account comments received from interested parties, advised  that he had allowed the appeal and granted planning permission subject to details of the design of buildings, site landscaping and means of access.

In September 1977, an application was received from the Tyne Valley Gun Club for the addition of two 25 metre pistol ranges. This application was considered by the Development Control Committee in October and approved subject to landscaping requirements, dates and times of shooting.

Owner of adjoining property submitted technical details in respect of provision of earth ramparts in an effort to baffle sound from the ranges. The Club were prepared to implement these reccommendations in full and this was done.

The application was further considered in January 1978 and deferred for a site visit to assess the problem of noise. On 2nd February approval was granted subject to revised shooting times.

On 27th April 1978, because of continual complaints from adjoining owners and in an effort to establish better public relations a further revision of the shooting times was approved in order to increase the 'quiet period' until the second Sunday in September.

An application by the Gun Club on 3rd July 1980  to extend shooting times into July was REFUSED.



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The story of the foot and mouth crisis - from those who were there

14/5/2021

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The story of Northumberland's foot and mouth crisis - from those who were there.
On February 19, 2001, Britain's first case of foot and mouth since the 1960s was confirmed - what followed was 12 months of horror which will never be forgotten in Northumberland.

By Hannah Graham
ChronicleLive - 19th February 2021
Link     ArchiveLink

ITV News - 17th February 2021
Link     ArchiveLink
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Blayney Row & Moore Court

12/10/2020

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Blayney Row from the north. Photo A Curtis (2010).
The terraced houses of Blayney Row were built for the employees of Heddon Brickworks by Bates of Heddon Hall in 1889 and sold to the Throckley Coal Company in 1895.

Cadwallader John Bates (1853–1902), was a notable antiquarian who inherited Heddon Hall, Colliery and Brick Works from his father Thomas Bates.

The Bates family had been established in Northumberland since the fourteenth century, but their connection with the Blayneys of Gregynog, Montgomeryshire, introduced a strain of Celtic blood, and Cadwallader himself was named after a cousin, the twelfth and last Lord Blayney (d. 1874).

This was the connection used by Cadwallader John Bates in his naming of Blayney Row.

Another row of terraced houses nearby, Moore Court, also now in Newburn parish, was named for the maiden name of the mother of his great uncle, Thomas Bates, a famous stock-breeder.
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Blayney Row & Throckley Colliery from Ryton Church c.1900. Gateshead Ref.03_12.
The photos below were kindly supplied by John Taberham, a member of the St James Heritage and Environment Group in Benwell. They show the ornate cast-iron vent or stench pipe almost hidden by vegetation behind the houses at Blayney Row.
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Stench pipe, Blayney Row. Photo J Taberham (2020).
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Stench pipe, Blayney Row. Photo J Taberham (2020).

Moore Court

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John Smith of High Close House

7/6/2020

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I've not found a good local story for a while then this turned up which is definitely quite interesting. It comes from Chris Mitchell from Queensland, Australia who has strong evidence for being an ancestor of John Smith (1787-1853) who was brought up by George and Isabella Smith at what was then called High Close Farm. They had four other children, Margaret, Jane, George and Ann, all baptised at Heddon on the Wall.

At the time, High Close House, now a private residence surrounded by a golf course, was probably the Home Farm of Close House Estate, owned by the Bewicke family.
The family are remembered by a gravestone in St Andrew's Churchyard [14] which reads:

Sacred to the memory of Isabella Smith wife of George Smith of Close House who died the 13th of November 1822 aged 71 years. Also to the memory of George Smith husband of the above Isabella Smith who died the 5th of June 1836 aged 82 years. Margaret Smith daughter of the above died at Close House 25th July 1858 aged 75 years.
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High Close House seen over Close House golf driving range. Photo A Curtis (2017)
John Smith married Frances Jackson from Southwell, Nottinghamshire on 21 October 1816 and emigrated with one infant, George, on the vessel, Shipley, bound for Australia on 18 December in the same year. By coincidence this was the same vessel which carried John Gill to Australia in 1821, having been convicted  for the Great Heddon Tea Robbery.

In January 1818 John Smith received a land grant of 500 acres at Bringelly, about 50km west of Sydney. He named it Close House. Owing to the effect of heat on Frances' health, in 1820 they decided to move to Tasmania. John applied for and received a location order for 500 acres at Breadalbane about 7 miles south of Launceston. The property was named Marchington, after property inherited by Frances from her father Magnus Jackson.

Although Chris seems sure of John Smith's connection with High Close House he is not quite so certain of the rest of the tale, a collection of family stories, heirlooms, family likenesses and genetics which suggest that John Smith might actually have been the son of Prince George (later King George IV 1820-30) and Maria Fitzherbert. They were secretly married in 1785 but later annulled.

Could John have been paid off for his silence and encouraged to emigrate as far away as possible? He is only one of several who claim to be children of George. If true, John Smith would have been a cousin of Queen Victoria.

Is there another reason John could have been placed with the Smiths at High Close House? No connection is yet known between Maria Fitzherbert and George and Isabella Smith. However, there are local connections. Maria's cousin, Sir Edward Smythe owned Esh Hall near Durham until his death in 1811, and her uncle, Henry Errington posessed Beaufront Castle near Hexham, only 15km west of Close House estate. Henry's will referred to his nephews (Maria's brothers), Charles and Henry 'Smith'.

Chris has produced a nicely written, well documented and balanced assessment of the evidence which you can read below. Perhaps more will come to light in the future. Read it and make up your own mind.

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Heddon Home Guard & ARP

7/5/2020

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Heddon Home Guard 1939 - 1945 (NRO 07701/1)
Top row:
Eddie Allen, Bob Armitage, George Laws, Ken Percivil, Reuben Willie, Joe Beilby, Jackie Hymers, Ken Ord
Middle row:
Tom Donaldson, George Graham, George Philipson, Bob (Tanky) Thompson, Billy Archibald, Billy Stuart, Hubert Laws, John Sanderson
Bottom row:
Tom Shield, Mansel Beilby, John Wall, Vaughan, Billy Moore, Tony Thompson

(names courtesy of Philip Sanderson & Hazel Thompson)

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First Aid Patrol & Air Raid Precautions group photo outside Swan Inn, Heddon. Photo courtesy M Tulip.
Caption of the photo above corrected from location against wall of Knott Hall to the east wall of The Swan (facing the Old Library) thanks to Neil McGreevy (comment below)..
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VE Day 75th Anniversary

21/3/2020

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When VE Day dawns on 8th May 2020 it will be 75 years since the guns fell silent at the end of the war in Europe. Years of carnage and destruction had come to an end and millions of people took to the streets and pubs to celebrate peace, mourn their loved – ones and to hope for the future, but not forgetting those still in conflict until 15th August when it was announced that Japan had surrendered unconditionally to the Allies, effectively ending World War II.
Because of the current Coronavirus emergency and consequent Government guidance, we are advised to cancel or postpone our planned VE Day 75 community celebrations. A possible date (unless longer shut-down becomes necessary) is the weekend of 15th–16th August.
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Click on the title above to go to the IWM website and  on Read More below to see a film.

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