Shown on Ordnance Survey 1st edition of 1856. Labelled as chapel on 1896. By 1919 the building appears to have become a public house. Demolished 1960s?
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
SITEDESC
Shown on Ordnance Survey 1st edition of 1856. Labelled as chapel on 1896. By 1919 the building appears to have become a public house. Demolished 1960s?
Site Name
Barmston, Victoria Place, chapel
Site Type: Specific
Chapel
HER Number
6752
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<<HER 6752 >> Ordnance Survey 1st edition map 1856; The Archaeological Practice Ltd., 2014, List of Non-Conformist Chapels in Sunderland
Chapel of Wesleyan Association. Shown on Ordnance Survey 1st edition of 1856. Possibly built 1851. Demolised in 1960s?
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
SITEDESC
Chapel of Wesleyan Association. Shown on Ordnance Survey 1st edition of 1856. Possibly built 1851. Demolised in 1960s?
Site Name
Barmston, Wesleyan methodist chapel
Site Type: Specific
Wesleyan Associan Chapel
HER Number
6750
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<<HER 6750 >> Ordnance Survey 1st edition map 1856; The Archaeological Practice Ltd., 2014, List of Non-Conformist Chapels in Sunderland
SURVIVAL
None
YEAR1
2005
YEAR2
2014
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
3056
DAY1
07
District
Sunderland
Easting
431860
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ35NW
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
555440
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Usworth
Description
Commenced in 1887 by R.S. Newall and Son, manufacturing wire ropes. In 1903 a draft agrrement was drawn up to lease Washington Wire Rope Works from R.S. Newall and Son Ltd to the Washington Chemical Co Ltd (HER 3056). The rope works covered two acres of land. An earlier lease in 1892 is referred to with Frederick Sirling Newall (grandson of Hugh Lee Pattinson of the Chemical Works). The schedule lists a dwelling house, offices, works , stables, railway sidings and other buildings, plant and machinery. Washington Chemical Works purchased Magnesia Cork Coverings in 1906. A lease of 1908 allows any activity for carrying on the business of cork manufacture. Magnesia Coverings becomes Newalls Insulation Co Ltd the same year. The cork plant was on the site of the wire rope works and an extension is added. Demolished by May 1979.
Site Type: Broad
Metal Industry Site
SITEDESC
Commenced in 1887 by R.S. Newall and Son, manufacturing wire ropes. In 1903 a draft agrrement was drawn up to lease Washington Wire Rope Works from R.S. Newall and Son Ltd to the Washington Chemical Co Ltd (HER 3056). The rope works covered two acres of land. An earlier lease in 1892 is referred to with Frederick Sirling Newall (grandson of Hugh Lee Pattinson of the Chemical Works). The schedule lists a dwelling house, offices, works , stables, railway sidings and other buildings, plant and machinery. Washington Chemical Works purchased Magnesia Cork Coverings in 1906. A lease of 1908 allows any activity for carrying on the business of cork manufacture. Magnesia Coverings becomes Newalls Insulation Co Ltd the same year. The cork plant was on the site of the wire rope works and an extension is added. Demolished by May 1979.
Site Name
Washington Wire Rope Works
Site Type: Specific
Wire Mill
HER Number
6749
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 6749 >> Archaeo-Environment Ltd, 2004, Desk Top Assessment of the former Washington Chemical Works; A.L. Hind, 1976, History and Folklore of Old Washington, p 107; Sunderland Echo, 1960; Tyne and Wear Archives 1759/33 (1903); Tyne and Wear Archives 1759/32 (1908);
SURVIVAL
None
YEAR1
2005
English, British
Class
Industrial
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
3056
DAY1
07
District
Sunderland
Easting
432190
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ35NW
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
555720
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Usworth
Description
An undated copy of the Sunderland Echo (probably 1963) records that Hugh Lee Pattinson took over an old paper mill site for his chemical works in 1840. The place was already in use as a bleach mill (HER 6747), but the present road from the Glebe Schools to Waterside was called Paper Mill Lane (now Station Road). The buildings were used afterwards as stables for the chemical works.
SITEASS
Paper manufacture began in Britain in the late C15. It was made by hand at first, from torn-up linen or cotton rags beaten up in water to a pulp. The pulp was sometimes boiled in caustic soda to remove impurities, and sometimes bleached to make fine quality white paper. The pulp was made into paper, a sheet at a time, in a mould made of fine copper wires. The wet paper sheets were then squeezed under a screw press to remove excess water, then hung on ropes in a drying loft. If intended for printing, the sheets were dipped in a gelatine size then dried again. In around 1650 the Hollander roller beater was invented. In the 1820s resin and alum were added at beating stage instead of the separate gelatine size and second drying stage. In the early C19 wood fibres began to replace old rags. Wood pulp and waste paper became the raw materials. Esparto grass from Spain and North Africa was introduced c.1860. Making paper in a continuous length began with the fourbrinier machine in 1807. This was imrpoved in 1820 by a steam drying section patented by Thomas Bonsor Crompton. By about 1830 half the paper made in Britain was made by machine. By 1860 95% was machine made. A typical 1860s paper mill would comprise reservoirs and filter beds for controlling the quality of the water, a rag store, sorting room, rope chopper, dusting house, Hollander beating house, boiling kiers, bleach house, paper making machines, paper cutting machines, glazing house, warehouse, boiler house and a copious water supply usually from a river (William Jones, 1996, Dictionary of Industrial Archaeology).
Site Type: Broad
Paper Industry Site
SITEDESC
An undated copy of the Sunderland Echo (probably 1963) records that Hugh Lee Pattinson took over an old paper mill site for his chemical works in 1840. The place was already in use as a bleach mill (HER 6747), but the present road from the Glebe Schools to Waterside was called Paper Mill Lane (now Station Road). The buildings were used afterwards as stables for the chemical works.
Site Name
Usworth, paper mill
Site Type: Specific
Paper Mill
HER Number
6748
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
<< HER 6748 >> Archaeo-Environment Ltd, 2004, Desk Top Assessment of the former Washington Chemical Works; Sunderland Echo, ?1963