 
Jesmond Road, Cradlewell Public House
Jesmond Road, Cradlewell Public House
HER Number
              9891
          District
              Newcastle
          Site Name
              Jesmond Road, Cradlewell Public House
          Place
              Jesmond
          Map Sheet
              NZ26NE
          Class
              Commercial
          Site Type: Broad
              Eating and Drinking Establishment
          Site Type: Specific
              Public House
          General Period
              20TH CENTURY
          Specific Period
              Early 20th Century 1901 to 1932
          Form of Evidence
              Extant Building
          Description
              The Cradlewell pub was opened in 1904 by Robert Deuchar.  It was built on the site of the original Cradlewell Public House which dated from c.1833.  The pub took its name from the nearby water trough.  Deuchar’s building is sandstone and brick.  The main section is three storeys and there is a one storey extension which is now used as an entrance.  A further entrance on the south face is surrounded with elaborate carving in the sandstone which contrasts with the muted decoration elsewhere.  Another elaborate feature is the oriel window at the first floor on the south east corner.  It has a sandstone bowl base and a parapet that rises to the top of the second floor and the windows are of stained glass. LOCAL LIST
          Easting
              425970
          Northing
              565840
          Grid Reference
              NZ425970565840
    Sources
              Newcastle City Council, 2006, Local List of Buildings, Structures, Parks, Gardens and Open Spaces of Special Local Architectural or Historic Interest Supplementary Planning Document; Alan Morgan, 2010, Jesmond from mines to mansions, page 116; Bennison, Brian, 1997, Heavy Nights - A History of Newcastle's Public Houses, Volume Two, The North and East, pp 7-8