Probably the line of an old wagonway between Team Colliery and Street Pit, possibly part of the original line of the Team Wagonway. The line does not appear on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan.
Site Type: Broad
Tramway Transport Site
SITEDESC
The probable line of an old wagonway, between Team Colliery and Street Pit. No line appears to have been drawn on the 1st edition OS mapping for this. This may have been part of the original Team Wagonway.
Site Name
Low Eighton, possible wagonway
Site Type: Specific
Wagonway
HER Number
4124
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4124 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, c.1855, 6 inch scale, Durham, 7
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Transport
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
Crossref
3741,4124
DAY1
26
District
Gateshead
Easting
426740
EASTING2
2670
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ25NE
MONTH1
8
Grid Reference
NZ
NGR2
NZ
Northing
557910
NORTHING2
5776
parish
Lamesley
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Low Eighton
Description
Probably the line of an old Wagonway, possibly part of the original line of the Team Wagonway.
Site Type: Broad
Tramway Transport Site
SITEDESC
Probably the line of an old Wagonway. possibly part of the original line of the Team Wagonway.
Site Name
Low Eighton, possible wagonway
Site Type: Specific
Wagonway
HER Number
4123
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4123 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, c.1855, 6 inch scale, Durham, 7
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Transport
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
COMP2
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
2222
DAY1
26
DAY2
08
District
Gateshead
Easting
427910
EASTING2
2685
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
MAP2
NZ25NE
MONTH1
8
MONTH2
3
Grid Reference
NZ
NGR2
NZ
Northing
560160
NORTHING2
5500
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Gateshead
Description
At its northern end the Pelaw Main Wagonway joined the Ouston and Pelaw Wagonway (HER ref. 2222), towards the south it ran out of the county.
Site Type: Broad
Tramway Transport Site
SITEDESC
The Pelaw Main Wagonway. At its northern end this joined the Ouston and Pelaw Wagonway, (HER 2222), towards the south it ran out of the county. Tomlinson records that this line was formerly called the Bewicke Main Waggonway. On this line there was an inclined plane at Whitehouse, which was 1,600 yards long, and started work on 15th March 1810. This inclined plane used the weight of the loaded wagons to put the empty ones up the hill. The first ever fixed engine used for hauling wagons was erected on Birtley Fell in 1808 (HER 3915) by Samuel Cooke, one of the owners of the Bewicke Main or Urpeth Colliery, when forming a wagonway to the River Tyne. It began working on the 17th May, 1809, drawing four chauldron wagons up the plane. Until 1816 when the colliery was closed, the Urpeth coals went northwards along the west side of the Urpeth Burn, eastward over the Team Valley branch, towards Birtley Station, where a footbridge had been built over the line. It crossed the Newcastle and Durham turnpike road (HER 4125), then ran up the fellside to Black Fell engine, and northwards to Eighton Banks. In 1815 a new line was built south of the engine, including the Birtley and Blackhouse planes, to Ouston Colliery. A section of the wagonway between Blackhouse Plane and the foot of the Eighton Bank Plane was worked by horses, until 1821 when Mr. Benjamin Thompson of Ouston Colliery, added two stationary engines. The Eighton Banks engine used a rope nearly a mile and a half long (the longest manufactured at that time) to pull six wagons and a tailrope from the Blackhouse engine.
Site Name
Pelaw Main Wagonway
Site Type: Specific
Wagonway
HER Number
4122
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4122 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, c.1855, 6 inch scale, Durham, 7; W.W. Tomlinson, 1914, The North Eastern Railway - Its Rise and Development, pp 17-18
YEAR1
1994
YEAR2
2005
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
Crossref
3775, 1663
DAY1
24
DAY2
23
District
Gateshead
Easting
424540
EASTING2
2202
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ25NW
MONTH1
8
MONTH2
1
Grid Reference
NZ
NGR2
NZ
Northing
559430
NORTHING2
5993
parish
Lamesley
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Stuart 1603 to 1714
Place
Ravensworth
Description
The Trench was part of a scheme by Sir Thomas Liddell to drain several hundred acres of the Team Valley and Ravensworth. It was a long and circuituous leat, approximately 3km in length, constructed for Sir Thomas Liddell to provide sufficient water to power pumps at the coalmill (HER ref. 1663 ). It followed the 225 foot contour and powered three water wheels which in turn drove a battery of pumps in interlinked shafts. The deepest shaft was c.460 feet (128 metres). The whole system was recorded in 1672 by George Sinclair. The Trench also provided water for Cowclose Mill (HER ref. 3775). The locations of the shafts and wheels are not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan. The Trench was fed from the Black Burn, which bounded the Ravensworth estate to the north. It now serves as a field drain for most of its length and has been partly recut. An associated rectangular holding pond is now mostly dry.
A portion survives at NZ2271159850 and was added to the Gateshead local list in 2023. The local list description reads:
'Earthwork ditch running through the north part of Ravensworth Park via Coxclose Wood, Coxclose Dene and north of Trench House. It was built by Sir Thomas Liddell in the 1670s to power the coalmill which forms part of the Scheduled Monument NHLE 1015922 (900m to the south-east).'
SITEASS
A leat from The Trench is still visible between Coach Road and the Western Bypass (NZ 2397 5913).
Site Type: Broad
Power Generation Site
SITEDESC
The Trench. Part of a scheme by Sir Thomas Liddell to drain several hundred acres of the Team Valley and Ravensworth. It was a leat, following the 225ft contour which powered three water wheels which in turn drove a battery of pumps in interlinked shafts, with enormous timber transmission shafts and cog-and-rung gearing. The deepest shaft was c.460ft, 128m. The whole system was recorded in 1672 by George Sinclair. The Trench also provided water for Cowclose Mill (SMR 3775). The locations of the shafts and wheels are not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping {2}. The Trench was a long and circuitous leat, constructed for Sir Thomas Liddell, to provide sufficient water to power the pumps at the coalmill (SMR 1663). The leat channelled the water to a series of three interlinked waterwheels. The Trench is approximately 3km in length and was fed from the Black Burn, which bounded the Ravensworth estate to the north. It now serves as a field drain for most of its length and has been partly recut. It enters a rectangular holding pond, which is now mostly dry {3}.
A portion survives at NZ2271159850 and was added to the Gateshead local list in 2023. The local list description reads:
'Earthwork ditch running through the north part of Ravensworth Park via Coxclose Wood, Coxclose Dene and north of Trench House. It was built by Sir Thomas Liddell in the 1670s to power the coalmill which forms part of the Scheduled Monument NHLE 1015922 (900m to the south-east).'
Site Name
Ravensworth Park, The Trench
Site Type: Specific
Leat
SITE_STAT
Local List
HER Number
4121
Form of Evidence
Earthwork
Sources
<< HER 4121 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, c.1855, 6 inch scale, Durham, 6
Bennett, G, Clavering, E & Rounding, A, 1989, A Fighting Trade, Vol 1, p 67
Dept. of National Heritage, 1997, Schedule Entry for Ravensworth Coalmill, 21662; Gateshead Council, 1999, Conservation Area Policy Guidelines, Strategies and Character Statements, Ravensworth Conservation Area, pp 61-63
YEAR1
1994
YEAR2
2024
English, British
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
24
District
Gateshead
Easting
427470
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ25NE
MONTH1
8
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
558480
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Eighton Banks
Description
Weavers Row, possibly a row of weavers cottages, appears at this location on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan.
Site Type: Broad
Industrial House
SITEDESC
Weavers Row. This is possibly a row of weavers cottages, but this is not made clear on the 1st edition OS mapping.
Site Name
Eighton Banks, Weavers Row
Site Type: Specific
Weavers Cottage
HER Number
4120
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4120 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, c.1855, 6 inch scale, Durham, 7
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
05
District
Newcastle
Easting
423790
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563080
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Elswick
Description
A Clay Pit is marked on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, but its precise location is unclear.
Site Type: Broad
Mineral Extraction Site
SITEDESC
A Clay Pit the location of which is unclear on the 1st edition OS mapping, but it probably lay within a 100m radius of this grid reference.
Site Name
Elswick, Clay Pit
Site Type: Specific
Clay Pit
HER Number
4119
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4119 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, 1864, 6 inch scale, Northumberland, 97
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
COMP2
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
05
DAY2
05
District
Newcastle
Easting
424030
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MONTH1
9
MONTH2
1
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563190
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Elswick
Description
This Coal Shaft was sunk around 1805 and closed by 1859. An inclined plane (HER ref. 4906) linked the shaft with the riverside.
Site Type: Broad
Coal Mining Site
SITEDESC
A Coal Shaft, marked as Old on the 1st edition OS mapping, so was out of use by 1858. The coal shaft was sunk in around 1805 and closed by 1859. An inclined plane (SMR 4906) linked the shaft with the riverside.
Site Name
Elswick, Coal Shaft
Site Type: Specific
Colliery
HER Number
4118
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4118 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, 1864, 6 inch scale, Northumberland, 97
Northern Archaeological Associates, 2000, Elswick Lead Works, Newcastle upon Tyne, Archaeological Assessment
YEAR1
1994
YEAR2
2001
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
05
District
Newcastle
Easting
424160
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563270
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Elswick
Description
This Gravel Pit is shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey map, but not on the 2nd edition, indicating that it was probably out of use by 1895.
Site Type: Broad
Mineral Extraction Site
SITEDESC
A Gravel Pit. This is not shown on the 2nd edition OS mapping, so was probably out of use by 1895.
Site Name
Elswick, Gravel Pit
Site Type: Specific
Gravel Pit
HER Number
4117
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4117 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, 1864, 6 inch scale, Northumberland, 97
YEAR1
1994
English, British
ADDITINF
Y
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
COMP2
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
05
DAY2
20
District
Newcastle
Easting
424200
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MONTH1
9
MONTH2
12
Grid Reference
NZ
NMRNUMBER
NZ 26 SW 133
Northing
563090
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Elswick
Description
The lead works started as a partnership 'Walker, Fishwick and Ward', which was set up in 1778 as a manufacturer of white lead, the first on Tyneside. Initially a 2 acre site was leased, which was split into two parts, one half for the manufactory, contained within a stone wall measuring 100 x 36-38 yards, the other for a partner's house and worker's accomodation. Other structures built on the site at this time included a stack house, a melting house, a wash house, a brewhouse and a windmill. Paint manufacture started in 1779. Expansion of the site began with the lease of a further two fields in 1785. Red lead and lead shot production both began by 1786 and sheet lead production (rolled rather than cast) was begun in 1788. The lead manufactory continued to expand during the 19th century, with further purchases of land around the site, and survives, through a number of name changes, to the present day. The Elswick shot tower (NZ 2420 6312) was begun in 1796, went into use in 1797 and remained in use until 1951. It was demolished in 1968-9 after becoming unsafe. The site appears to have been extensively rebuilt, expanded and redeveloped between 1802 and 1827, to the extent that the only structures to survive this rebuilding appear to have been the shot tower, office (HER ref. 4899) and the worker's cottages (HER ref. 4896). An annotated plan of the site, provisionally dated to 1850 (NCLLSS Bell/9/16), gives much detail of the site, including names for many of the structures on the site. These include white lead stacks and associated facilities for washing and packing white lead, as well as red lead houses, three engine houses, a rolling mill, a number of silver refineries and a pipe shed. There are two riveted iron or steel cylinders at NZ 2419 6315 and NZ 2423 6317 which are likely to be the remains of boilers from one of the 19th century steam engines used on the site. A pond, 9.5 metres in diameter, built between 1827 and 1844 and removed between 1859 and 1894 was situated at NZ 2428 6316. It appears to have been part of the water system for the industrial part of the site. The 1st & 2nd edition Ordnance Survey maps provide additional good evidence for the layout of the site.
SITEASS
The site is an important early example of a lead manufacturing site. Evaluation trenching in 2004 recorded the barrel-vaulted condenser flue system and a handmade brick surface. Preservation of industrial features was disappointing.
Site Type: Broad
Metal Industry Site
SITEDESC
The lead works started as a partnership 'Walker, Fishwick and Ward', which was set up in 1778 to manufacture white lead. This was a significant development in the region, since there were no other white lead manufactories on or near the Tyne, despite the large quantities of metallic lead being exported through the Tyne. The demand for white lead in the north east was presumably being met by the manufactories in Hull and London at this time. Initially a 2 acre site was leased, which was split into two parts, one half for the manufactory, contained within a stone wall measuring 100 x 36-38 yards, the other for a partner's house and worker's accommodation. Other structures built on the site at this time included a stack house, a melting house, a wash house, a brewhouse and a windmill. Paint manufacture started in 1779. Expansion of the site began with the lease of a further two fields in 1785. Red lead and lead shot production both began by 1786 and sheet lead production (rolled rather than cast) was begun in 1788. The lead manufactory continued to expand during the 19th century, with further purchases of land around the site, and survives, through a number of name changes, to the present day. The Elswick shot tower (NZ 2420 6312) was begun in 1796. It went into use in 1797 and remained in use until 1951. Although listed, it was demolished in 1968-9 after becoming unsafe. It is possible that a pit may have existed beneath the tower, although this seems unlikely in view of its height. The site appears to have been extensively rebuilt, expanded and redeveloped between 1802 and 1827, to the extent that the only structures to survive this rebuilding appear to have been the shot tower, office (SMR 4899) and the worker's cottages (SMR 4896). There is a gap in the otherwise very complete documentary records for the site during the same period, and it is conceivable that a fire or other catastrophic event may have necessitated the rebuilding of the site, and also led to the destruction of a substantial part of the company records. The mid-19th century extent of the site is derived from the buildings shown on the OS 1859 map, as this seems to show the fullest extent before further redevelopment between 1859 and 1894. An annotated plan of the site, provisionally dated to 1850 (NCLLSS Bell/9/16), gives much detail of the site, including names for many of the structures on the site. These include white lead stacks and associated facilities for washing and packing white lead, as well as red lead houses, three engine houses, a rolling mill, a number of silver refineries and a pipe shed. There are two riveted iron or steel cylinders at NZ 2419 6315 and NZ 2423 6317 which are likely to be the remains of boilers from one of the 19th century steam engines used on the site. They are unlikely to be in situ. A pond, 9.5m in diameter, built between 1827 and 1844 and removed between 1859 and 1894 was situated at NZ 2428 6316. It appears to have been part of the water system for the industrial part of the site. {3}
Site Name
Elswick Lead Works
Site Type: Specific
Lead Works
HER Number
4116
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4116 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, 1864, 6 inch scale, Northumberland, 97
I.M. Ayris, & S.M. Linsley, 1994, A Guide to the Industrial Archaeology of Tyne and Wear, p.52
Northern Archaeological Associates, 2000, Elswick Lead Works, Newcastle upon Tyne, Archaeological Assessment; Tyne and Wear Museums, 2004, Lead Works, Elswick - Archaeological Evaluation.
YEAR1
1994
YEAR2
2005
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
05
District
Newcastle
Easting
423710
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563160
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Elswick
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey map evidence shows the location of Elswick Iron Works.
Site Type: Broad
Metal Industry Site
SITEDESC
Elswick Iron Works.
Site Name
Elswick Iron Works
Site Type: Specific
Iron Works
HER Number
4115
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 4115 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey Map, 1864, 6 inch scale, Northumberland, 97