Chapel of St. Ann

Chapel of St. Ann

HER Number
1421
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Chapel of St. Ann
Place
Byker
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
Site Type: Specific
Chapel
General Period
MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Medieval 1066 to 1540
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
In 1344 Robert of Byker granted to John Segerstane, a hermit, a plot of land in Byker 200 feet square, and a lane 20 feet wide extending from the plot to the Tyne, held from the manor of Byker, on which to build a chapel in honour of the Virgin Mary and St. Ann. This was on land which, in 1549, was annexed to Newcastle. In 1597 the chapel was used as a hospital during a plague outbreak. After the Reformation it fell into decay, but in 1628 was repaired at the expense of the town, and continued in use until replaced in 1768 by the present church. In the 18th century it was described as a chapel of ease to All Saints.
Easting
426060
Northing
564280
Grid Reference
NZ426060564280
Sources
<< HER 1421 >> H. Bourne, 1736, History of Newcastle, 154-5
TW.H. Knowles & J.R. Boyle, 1890, Vestiges of Old Newcastle and Gateshead, 89-90
M.H. Dodds, 1930, Part of the Chapelry of All Saints, Northumberland County History, XIII, 257