Pandon, Stock Bridge
Pandon, Stock Bridge
HER Number
6623
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Pandon, Stock Bridge
Place
Newcastle
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
Class
Transport
Site Type: Broad
Bridge
Site Type: Specific
Bridge
General Period
MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Medieval 1066 to 1540
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
"There harde by dothe… Deene watar dryve a mill, and passithe thrwghe the… on this watar there by is a litle archid bridge" (John Leland, c.1539). This may be the Stock Bridge, although there must have been other bridges here. Horseley, in 1732, describes Pandon dene as a hollow and a brook, with an old house nearby (Pandon Hall HER 6621) and the Stockbridge. There is a 13th century quitclaim (1269-70) which refers to land in "Pampedene" lying near the stone bridge. Gray records that the Stock Bridge was the site of the ancient fish market, where boats came up from the River Tyne. The hill of sand left next to Stock Bridge when the tide was out was known as "Alvey's Island" (HER 6528). Bourne reports that the bridge was made of timber in ancient times, although there is an account of it being stone when Thomas de Carliol was mayor in the reign of Edward I at latest (1272-1307). Stok brygg (1493) means either wooden bridge or bridge by a stump.
Easting
425340
Northing
564090
Grid Reference
NZ425340564090
Sources
Surtees Society, 137, 113; Archaeologia Aeliana Series 3, Vol XIV, p 219; H. Bourne, 1736, The History of Newcastle, p 153; W. Gray, 1649, Chorographia, p 13; H. Bourne, 1736, History of Newcastle upon Tyne, pp 138-9