
Front Street, Black Bull Inn
Front Street, Black Bull Inn
HER Number
9430
District
N Tyneside
Site Name
Front Street, Black Bull Inn
Place
Longbenton
Map Sheet
NZ26NE
Class
Commercial
Site Type: Broad
Eating and Drinking Establishment
Site Type: Specific
Public House
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Mid 20th Century 1933 to 1966
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Description
Second pub of this name on this site. The first is shown on a plan of 1755 and was a coaching innwith stable behind. Thomas Addison, founder of the modern science of Endocrinology and discoverer of Addison's Disease) was born in a house that adjoined the inn in 1793. The present pub was built in 1938 to a design by Hetherington and Wilson of Newcastle. Adjoining older shops (including 'Peggy's Parlour' survived until about 1950. LOCAL LIST
Easting
427270
Northing
568490
Grid Reference
NZ427270568490
Sources
North Tyneside Council, Draft Local List Nominations, 2006; W.G. Elliott, Bygone Days of Longbenton, Benton, Forest Hall, West Moor, Killingworth, Palmersville and Benton Square, Book Two, p 6; W.G. Elliott and Edwin Smith, Bygone Days of Longbenton, Benton, Forest Hall, West Moor and Killingworth, pp 24-27; North Tyneside Council, November 2008, Register of Buildings and Parks of Special Local Architectural and Historic Interest SDP (Local Development Document 9); ARS Ltd., 2011, Land at The Black Bull, Longbenton, Newcastle upon Tyne - archaeological evaluation