English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
COMP2
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
10
DAY2
08
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430360
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
MONTH2
6
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564640
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
Tennants Works (Alkali). These are not shown on 1st edition OS mapping, so were built after 1855 {1}. The large chemical works of United Alkali began as Tennant's Chemical Works in the mid 1860s. The chief product was soda crystals, but sulphuric acid, bleaching powder and waterglass were made here until the works ran down in the 1920s {2}. The firm of Messrs Tennant bought land at Hebburn on which to move their works from Glasgow, in which sulphate of soda was converted into alkali. The works commenced operated in 1865. It was one of the few sites at that time to possess a deep water quay. The Hebburn and Jarrow (HER 2279) Works shared in the development of the South Durham (Haverton Hill) salt deposits and in the formation of a local factory to work the copper in the pyrites used in making sulphuric acid - the Tharsis Copper Company. The Tennant Works and the Allhusen Works (HER 3519) were the last Leblanc Soda works to operate on the Tyne. The factory was taken over by the United Alkali Company in 1890 and was used to make soda crystals. The works ran down after the First World War.
Site Type: Broad
Chemical Industry Site
SITEDESC
Tennants Works (Alkali). These are not shown on 1st edition OS mapping, so were built after 1855 {1}. The large chemical works of United Alkali began as Tennant's Chemical Works in the mid 1860s. The chief product was soda crystals, but sulphuric acid, bleaching powder and waterglass were made here until the works ran down in the 1920s {2}. The firm of Messrs Tennant bought land at Hebburn on which to move their works from Glasgow, in which sulphate of soda was converted into alkali. The works commenced operated in 1865. It was one of the few sites at that time to possess a deep water quay. The Hebburn and Jarrow (HER 2279) Works shared in the development of the South Durham (Haverton Hill) salt deposits and in the formation of a local factory to work the copper in the pyrites used in making sulphuric acid - the Tharsis Copper Company. The Tennant Works and the Allhusen Works (HER 3519) were the last Leblanc Soda works to operate on the Tyne. The factory was taken over by the United Alkali Company in 1890 and was used to make soda crystals. The works ran down after the First World War.
Site Name
Tennant's Alkali Works
Site Type: Specific
Alkali Works
HER Number
2503
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2503 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
F.W.D. Manders, Walker and Hebburn; University of Newcastle upon Tyne Department of Extra-Mural Studies, 1961, The Old Tyneside Chemical Trade, chapter XII, pages 31-33
YEAR1
1994
YEAR2
2001
English, British
Class
Transport
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
Crossref
2499
DAY1
10
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430020
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564450
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
This staith, possibly associated with the adjacent Tyne Works, (HER ref. 2499) is shown on later editions of the Ordnance Survey map series but does not appear on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so was built after 1855.
Site Type: Broad
Water Transport Site
SITEDESC
Staith, possibly associated with the adjacent Tyne Works, (SMR 2499). These are not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so was built after 1855.
Site Name
Hebburn, Staith
Site Type: Specific
Staith
HER Number
2502
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2502 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
10
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430570
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564500
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
The Hebburn Colour Works are not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so were built after 1855.
Site Type: Broad
Chemical Industry Site
SITEDESC
Hebburn Colour Works. These are not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so were built after 1855. By the third edition OS. The site is referred to as "Engineering Works". It eventually is taken over by Reyrolle Works (HER 1585).
Site Name
Hebburn Colour Works
Site Type: Specific
Colour Works
HER Number
2501
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2501 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
10
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430240
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564460
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
A 200 yard Rifle Range at Hebburn. This is not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so was built after 1855.
Site Type: Broad
Military Training Site
SITEDESC
A 200yd Rifle Range at Hebburn. This is not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so built after 1855. Disused by 1921. Built over by Reyrolle Engineering Works by 1941.
Site Name
Hebburn, Rifle Range
Site Type: Specific
Firing Range
HER Number
2500
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2500 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
Crossref
2502
DAY1
10
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430220
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564220
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
The Tyne Works (Sulphur and Copper) are not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so were built after 1855. The precise nature of this site is unclear from the Ordnance Survey map, but it may have been a chemical works.
Site Type: Broad
Chemical Industry Site
SITEDESC
The Tyne Works (Sulphur and Copper) are not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so were built after 1855. The precise nature of this site is unclear from OS mapping. It may have been a chemical works.
Site Name
The Tyne Works (Sulphur and Copper)
Site Type: Specific
Chemical Works
HER Number
2499
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2499 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
10
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430460
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564180
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
This Clay Pit is marked as ‘Old’ on the 2nd edition Ordnance Survey plan, so was presumably out of use by 1895. The pit is also not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so was built after 1855.
Site Type: Broad
Mineral Extraction Site
SITEDESC
Clay Pit, marked as Old on the 2nd edition OS mapping, so was out of use by 1895. The pit is also not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so built was after 1855.
Site Name
Hebburn, Clay Pit
Site Type: Specific
Clay Pit
HER Number
2498
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2498 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Water Supply and Drainage
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
DAY1
10
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430540
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563070
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
This reservoir is not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so was presumably built after 1855.
Site Type: Broad
Water Storage Site
SITEDESC
Reservoir. Is not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so was built after 1855.
Site Name
Hebburn, Reservoir
Site Type: Specific
Reservoir
HER Number
2497
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2497 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 3, SW
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
Crossref
2466
DAY1
09
District
S Tyneside
Easting
441100
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563250
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Marsden
Description
North Eastern Paper Mills, opened in 1889, producing newsprint for local newspapers. Expanded in 1911 when new machinery was installed. Orders came from all over Britain - workers worked 13 hour shifts to satisfy demand. Over 300 tons of paper produced each week. There was a fire in 1912 which burned for a week. The mill struggled on for 12 years, diversifying into making wallpaper. Closed in 1933. Was at the southern terminus of the South Shields, Marsden and Whitburn Colliery Railway, (HER 2466).
SITEASS
Paper manufacture began in Britain in the late C15. It was made by hand at first, from torn-up linen or cotton rags beaten up in water to a pulp. The pulp was sometimes boiled in caustic soda to remove impurities, and sometimes bleached to make fine quality white paper. The pulp was made into paper, a sheet at a time, in a mould made of fine copper wires. The wet paper sheets were then squeezed under a screw press to remove excess water, then hung on ropes in a drying loft. If intended for printing, the sheets were dipped in a gelatine size then dried again. In around 1650 the Hollander roller beater was invented. In the 1820s resin and alum were added at beating stage instead of the separate gelatine size and second drying stage. In the early C19 wood fibres began to replace old rags. Wood pulp and waste paper became the raw materials. Esparto grass from Spain and North Africa was introduced c.1860. Making paper in a continuous length began with the fourbrinier machine in 1807. This was imrpoved in 1820 by a steam drying section patented by Thomas Bonsor Crompton. By about 1830 half the paper made in Britain was made by machine. By 1860 95% was machine made. A typical 1860s paper mill would comprise reservoirs and filter beds for controlling the quality of the water, a rag store, sorting room, rope chopper, dusting house, Hollander beating house, boiling kiers, bleach house, paper making machines, paper cutting machines, glazing house, warehouse, boiler house and a copious water supply usually from a river (William Jones, 1996, Dictionary of Industrial Archaeology).
Site Type: Broad
Paper Industry Site
SITEDESC
North Eastern Paper Mills, opened in 1889, producing newsprint for local newspapers. Expanded in 1911 when new machinery was installed. Orders came from all over Britain - workers worked 13 hour shifts to satisfy demand. Over 300 tons of paper produced each week. There was a fire in 1912 which burned for a week. The mill struggled on for 12 years, diversifying into making wallpaper. Closed in 1933. Was at the southern terminus of the South Shields, Marsden and Whitburn Colliery Railway, (SMR 2466).
Site Name
North Eastern Paper Mills
Site Type: Specific
Paper Mill
HER Number
2496
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2496 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 4, SE; South Tyneside Libraries, 1991, Pictures of Old Marsden - The Village that Vanished, p 7
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Transport
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
Crossref
2491,2492,2466
DAY1
09
District
S Tyneside
Easting
440990
EASTING2
4074
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MONTH1
5
Grid Reference
NZ
NGR2
NZ
Northing
563880
NORTHING2
6399
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Marsden
Description
This railway connected quarries (HER ref.s 2491 & 2492) with the South Shields, Marsden and Whitburn Colliery Railway (HER ref. 2466). It is not shown on the 1st edition Ordnance Survey plan, so was presumably built after 1855.
Site Type: Broad
Railway Transport Site
SITEDESC
Railway connecting Quarries (SMRs 2491, 2492) with the South Shields, Marsden and Whitburn Colliery Railway (SMR 2466). Not shown on the 1st edition OS mapping, so built after 1855.
Site Name
Marsden, Railway
Site Type: Specific
Railway
HER Number
2494
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2494 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 4, SE
YEAR1
1994
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Truman L.P.H
COMP2
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
2466, 6805
DAY1
14
DAY2
14
District
S Tyneside
Easting
440880
EASTING2
0
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MONTH1
7
MONTH2
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563600
NORTHING2
0
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Whitburn
Description
The colliery was sunk in 1874 by Belgian miners for the Whitburn Coal Company. It opened in 1879 and in 1891 was absorbed by the parent Harton Coal Company. In 1877 it was the first successful shaft sunk by the "Kind Chauldron" method. This had to be adopted due to the large amount of water present during boring operations. The shaft was constructed of strong iron tubing 13 feet in diameter. It was completed in two years and 12000 gallons of water had been pumped out. Coal was worked a mile under the sea. Coal was transported from here by the South Shields, Marsden and Whitburn Colliery Railway, (HER 2466). The OS mapping up to 1951 shows expansion of spoil heaps and construction of a Bath House and Canteen between 1938 and 1942. In 1931 the pit had set a world record producing 18,000 tons of coal per week, with a work force of 1600. By 1956 the pit was the biggest producer of the four collieries owned by the Harton Coal Company and was producing 591,000 tons of coal per year. Production ceased on 1st June 1968 making a workforce of 819 redundant. By 1991 the whole colliery and accompanying Marsden pit village had been levelled and landscaped as a country park.
Site Type: Broad
Coal Mining Site
SITEDESC
The colliery was sunk in 1874 by Belgian miners for the Whitburn Coal Company. It opened in 1879 and in 1891 was absorbed by the parent Harton Coal Company. In 1877 it was the first successful shaft sunk by the "Kind Chauldron" method. This had to be adopted due to the large amount of water present during boring operations. The shaft was constructed of strong iron tubing 13 feet in diameter. It was completed in two years and 12000 gallons of water had been pumped out. Coal was worked a mile under the sea. Coal was transported from here by the South Shields, Marsden and Whitburn Colliery Railway, (HER 2466). The OS mapping up to 1951 shows expansion of spoil heaps and construction of a Bath House and Canteen between 1938 and 1942. In 1931 the pit had set a world record producing 18,000 tons of coal per week, with a work force of 1600. By 1956 the pit was the biggest producer of the four collieries owned by the Harton Coal Company and was producing 591,000 tons of coal per year. Production ceased on 1st June 1968 making a workforce of 819 redundant. By 1991 the whole colliery and accompanying Marsden pit village had been levelled and landscaped as a country park.
Site Name
Whitburn, Whitburn Colliery (Marsden Colliery)
Site Type: Specific
Colliery
HER Number
2493
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 2493 >> 2nd edition, Ordnance Survey map, 1898, 6 inch scale, Durham, 4, SE
N.T. Sinclair, & I.S. Carr, 1990, Railways of South Shields, p.12; Durham Mining Museum www.dmm.org.uk; N. Emery, 1998, Banners of the Durham Coalfield; Northern Archaeological Associates, 2015, The Cleadon Village Atlas
SURVIVAL
None
YEAR1
1994
YEAR2
2005