Monkseaton, saw pit
Monkseaton, saw pit
HER Number
5859
District
N Tyneside
Site Name
Monkseaton, saw pit
Place
Monkseaton
Map Sheet
NZ37SW
Class
Industrial
Site Type: Broad
Wood Processing Site
Site Type: Specific
Saw Pit
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
Tomlinson describes a plain-fronted stone house built in the early 19th century by Robert Lyon on the site of an old saw pit. This industrial part of Monkseaton village, combrising of whitewashed cottages and the Seven Stars Inn, set back from Front Street, was called The Fold or Fau'd. Other small-scale industry in The Fold included a skinnery, tin worker, cooper and umbrella repairer. Robert Lyons house is shown on map of 1833, the tithe map of 1845 and the Ordnance Survey first and second editions. By the third edition it had been rebuilt or divided into two. As the saw pit was already described as "old" at the beginning of the 19th century, it could potentially have early originals, maybe even the medieval period.
Easting
434300
Northing
571970
Grid Reference
NZ434300571970
Sources
<< HER 5859 >> 1833, Map of Monkseaton, Northumberland Records Office, ZHE 63/23
M. Snape, Tyne and Wear Museums, 2004, 88-90 Front Street, Monkseaton, Whitley Bay, North Tyneside, Archaeological Assessment, p 12
P. Johnson, 1993, In the footsteps of Tomlinson, unpublished dissertation
W.W. Tomlinson, 1893, Historical Notes on Cullercoats, Whitley and Monkseaton, pp 56-58
M. Snape, Tyne and Wear Museums, 2004, 88-90 Front Street, Monkseaton, Whitley Bay, North Tyneside, Archaeological Assessment, p 12
P. Johnson, 1993, In the footsteps of Tomlinson, unpublished dissertation
W.W. Tomlinson, 1893, Historical Notes on Cullercoats, Whitley and Monkseaton, pp 56-58