Tyne and Wear HER(3937): Walbottle Brick Works - Details
3937
Newcastle
Walbottle Brick Works
Walbottle
NZ16NE
Industrial
Brick and Tilemaking Site
Brickworks
POST MEDIEVAL
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Structure
Walbottle Brick Works. Only the chimney is still extant. Owned by Kirtons in 1927. The yard produced very good quality "Newburn" red bricks and "Walbottle" white bricks. Originally Walbottle firebrick works and owned by the Walbottle Coal and Firebrick Company, the brickworks stood beside the Union Pit. Kirton and Sons took over the brickyard in about 1912 and opened a shale quarry next to the mine. In addition, clay was extracted from a clay pit on Hogg’s Lonnen (Lemington Lane). In 1932, four old Newcastle kilns were demolished and replaced by an eight-chamber semi-continuous kiln whose flue was connected underground to the chimney of the main kiln. The brickworks closed from 1939 to 1945. The works then had two machines that could press 24,000 bricks each day. The bricks burned in a 16-chamber continuous kiln, each chamber holding 15,000 bricks. The chimney stood 150 feet tall and was demolished in 1979.
Dates: Walbottle firebrick works 1869 – 1906
Kirton’s Yard Newburn brickworks 1912 – 1965
Manufacturer from 1920-1965 was M Kirton and Sons.
417070
565460
NZ417070565460
<< HER 3937 >> 1st edition Ordnance Survey map, 1864, 6 inch scale, Northumberland, 96
Tyne and Wear Industrial Monuments Trust, Newburn Plan Area; George Walton and A. Watson, 1992, Bygone Walbottle; Davison, P J, 1986. Brickworks of the North East, 86, 87 site 1, 89-90.