Hawthorn Leslie Shipyard, joiners shop
Hawthorn Leslie Shipyard, joiners shop
HER Number
15741
District
S Tyneside
Site Name
Hawthorn Leslie Shipyard, joiners shop
Place
Hebburn
Map Sheet
NZ36NW
Class
Industrial
Site Type: Broad
Wood Processing Site
Site Type: Specific
Joiners Shop
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Description
Built before 1897 when it appears on the Ordnance Survey map. Brick-built in mottled machine-made red brick. It is twenty bays long with a double pitch roof, and built in a simple functional style. The scars of an external staircase to a mezzanine are visible on the south façade, and of a pitched roof over a third floor window on the east façade. The joiners shop is grander in style and scale than the contemporary rigging loft. The joiners shop has a square clock tower which projects above the southern end of the building and has a simple moulded stone string course. The clocks are damaged and no longer work. A panel in the south façade is pierced by several rows of holes for electric cables, which ran through them to the former platers' shed to the south. In plans of the 1950s held by Cammell Laird, the joiners shop is labelled as a 'saw mill (three floors)'. Recorded by Lancaster University Archaeological Unit in June 2000.
Easting
430500
Northing
565530
Grid Reference
NZ430500565530
Sources
Lancaster University Archaeological Unit, June 2000, Former Hawthorn Leslie Shipyard, Tyne and Wear, Archaeological Assessment