English, British
ADDITINF
N
Class
Monument <By Form>
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
Crossref
8088
DAY1
01
DAY2
08
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437603
Grid ref figure
10
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MAP2
NZ36SE
MATERIAL
Sandstone
MONTH1
2
MONTH2
4
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565001
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Harton
Description
This wall was listed Grade II in 1983 with the following description:
'Boundary wall to churchyard on Sunderland Road and Moor Lane (1866-67). Coursed rubble with ashlar saddle-back coping. Entrance gates front onto Sunderland Road. Two square, ashlar piers with pyramidal caps. Original cast iron lamp with faceted globe remains on the northern pier.' LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Identified as At Risk during Grade II Historic England Testing the National Framework Project 2015. Priority C - Slow Decay; no solution agreed
Site Type: Broad
Boundary
SITEDESC
This wall was listed Grade II in 1983 with the following description:
'Boundary wall to churchyard on Sunderland Road and Moor Lane (1866-67). Coursed rubble with ashlar saddle-back coping. Entrance gates front onto Sunderland Road. Two square, ashlar piers with pyramidal caps. Original cast iron lamp with faceted globe remains on the northern pier.'
Site Name
Sunderland Road, Church of St. Peter, boundary wall
Site Type: Specific
Boundary Wall
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8101
Form of Evidence
Structure
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 14/71 and 12/71; NECT, 2015, National Heritage at Risk Grade II Project; https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1232560
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2024
English, British
ADDITINF
N
Class
Commemorative
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
8124
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437070
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Timber
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
NMRNUMBER
NZ 36 NE 486
Northing
567530
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
South Shields
Description
Lying immediately to the west of the Jubilee Memorial the lifeboat "Tyne" built in 1833. Placed here in 1894. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Commemorative Monument
SITEDESC
Lying immediately to the west of the Jubilee Memorial the lifeboat "Tyne" built in 1833. Placed here in 1894.
Site Name
Ocean Road, lifeboat
Site Type: Specific
Commemorative Monument
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8100
Form of Evidence
Structure
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 12/61
https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1232425
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437030
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565750
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Westoe
Description
After circa 1855.
A uniform terrace of 2 storey red brick houses with slate roofs. The elevation is
terminated at either end by a 2 storey wood bay window. All other windows have
stone heads. The entrances are framed by a moulded stone architrave except for that
at no 1 which has a projecting Corinthian portico. Nos 2-6 have a segmental headed
dormer window. No 1 is of 4 bays. No 7 is of 2 bays. Nos 2-6 are of 3 bays.
Nos 3, 4 and 5 have been re-glazed the rest hale undivided sashes. No 1 has a
stone plaque inscribed "Wood Terrace" set at first floor level.
Named after the Wood family who owned the estate. See also Westoe Villa.
Plan of Building Ground belonging to Miss A Wood, Mark Thompson, architect
circa 1855 shows Wood Terrace (not named) set out with numbered building plots.
Included in Census Enumerators' Return for 1861. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - the only part executed of Matthew Thompson's grand plan of c.1855 for developing Miss Wood's estate.
Site Type: Broad
Terrace
SITEDESC
After circa 1855.
A uniform terrace of 2 storey red brick houses with slate roofs. The elevation is
terminated at either end by a 2 storey wood bay window. All other windows have
stone heads. The entrances are framed by a moulded stone architrave except for that at no 1 which has a projecting Corinthian portico. Nos 2-6 have a segmental headed dormer window. No 1 is of 4 bays. No 7 is of 2 bays. Nos 2-6 are of 3 bays.
Nos 3, 4 and 5 have been re-glazed the rest hale undivided sashes. No 1 has a
stone plaque inscribed "Wood Terrace" set at first floor level.
Named after the Wood family who owned the estate. See also Westoe Villa.
Plan of Building Ground belonging to Miss A Wood, Mark Thompson, architect
circa 1855 shows Wood Terrace (not named) set out with numbered building plots.
Included in Census Enumerators' Return for 1861 {1}. Christopher Wood, local brewer laid out Wood Terrace in 1828. He named the street in 1855 when he built Nos. 1-7. A polite elegant Georgian teerace with Welsh slate roofs, square white chimney pots, tall ground floor windows, moulded foor surrounds. Curved-headed dormers on the five middle houses. A larger one has been added to No. 7, spoiling the unity. Later two-storey bays have been added to either end. No. 1 is the largest and was used as a restaurant and club in the 1960s. Its timber portico has lost the Corinthian detailing recorded in the listing description. All the stonework has been painted. The western chimney stack has been reduced. The railings subdividing the gardens survive in two places. Most of the windows are sashes, possibly not original. Several original front doors survive. Many have cellars with windows. The backs have extensions, rooflights and rendering.
Site Name
1 to 7 Wood Terrace
Site Type: Specific
Terrace
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8099
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 10/89 and 11/89
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437080
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565940
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Westoe
Description
Late C18.
Brick, stone cills and lintels, slate roof. Three bays. Two storeys. Original
sashes. Central door has a wood Tuscan doorcase with open pediment and nice fanlight.
The back of the house is stone.
Now 2 flats known as Ivy House (North) and Ivy House (South).
See "A History of Westoe" Vol II by A C Flagg 1964. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - late C18/early C19 brick façade (two storey, three-bay, doorcase with Tuscan pilasters and open pediment), the rest of stone possibly older (c.1700).
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Late C18.
Brick, stone cills and lintels, slate roof. Three bays. Two storeys. Original
sashes. Central door has a wood Tuscan doorcase with open pediment and nice fanlight. The back of the house is stone.
Now 2 flats known as Ivy House (North) and Ivy House (South).
See "A History of Westoe" Vol II by A C Flagg 1964 {1}. Georgian house. Dark brown brick, stone window dressings (now painted), multi-pane sash windows, timber Tuscan door case with open pediment. Green Westmorland slate roof at the front, grey slate to the rear. The east gable is now pebbledashed. The east boundary wall is built in two phases, random rubble limestone then brick. The wall at the front is a complete rebuild.
Site Name
Westoe Village, Ivy House
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8098
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 11/86
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437170
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
566000
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Westoe
Description
Circa 1864 J J Stevenson architect.
Addition and alterations circa 1876 T A Page architect.
Designed for his brother J C Stevenson.
Red brick with stone dressings and irregular tiled roofscape. Two storeys above a
semi-basement and attic.
A fine, restrained asymmetrical composition using elements from pre C18 domestic
architecture free from "scholarly" restraints.
The entrance is protected by a timber, gabled porch with nice correct detail. This
part of the elevation is emphasised by a half-timbered gable lit by a 3 light window.
Above the gable roof rises an octagonal glazed lantern with conical roof.
The bay to the west of the entrance is set back and contains a fine staircase window
with hoodmould.
The westernmost bay then breaks forward, has a gabled roof and a bay to the ground
floor with mullions and transoms.
The 2 most easterly bays contain the service wing built circa 1876 (T A Page
architect and modified again circa 1896 J H Morton architect).
The main feature here is an oriel window supported on a carved, coved bracket.
The upper sashes have shaped heads. It has a pitched roof.
The majority of the other windows are single rectangular openings with stone heads
and cills. Now Headquarters of Personel and Management Services Department of Borough Council). LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - 1864 by J.J. Stevenson for his brother James. Much earlier than Southgarth (HER 8131) and pre-"Queen Anne" in style. Difficult to be sure what is Stevenson's, what is of 1876 by his clerk of works T.A. Page, and what is of 1896 by J.H. Morton who built and altered respectively the east service wing. Irregular façade with Jacobean motifs, the centre emphasized by a half-timbered gable, with an octagonal lattern over it, and a crude timber entrance porch. Tall mullioned staircase window.
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Circa 1864 J J Stevenson architect.
Addition and alterations circa 1876 T A Page architect.
Designed for his brother J C Stevenson.
Red brick with stone dressings and irregular tiled roofscape. Two storeys above a
semi-basement and attic.
A fine, restrained asymmetrical composition using elements from pre C18 domestic
architecture free from "scholarly" restraints.
The entrance is protected by a timber, gabled porch with nice correct detail. This
part of the elevation is emphasised by a half-timbered gable lit by a 3 light window.
Above the gable roof rises an octagonal glazed lantern with conical roof.
The bay to the west of the entrance is set back and contains a fine staircase window
with hoodmould.
The westernmost bay then breaks forward, has a gabled roof and a bay to the ground
floor with mullions and transoms.
The 2 most easterly bays contain the service wing built circa 1876 (T A Page
architect and modified again circa 1896 J H Morton architect).
The main feature here is an oriel window supported on a carved, coved bracket.
The upper sashes have shaped heads. It has a pitched roof.
The majority of the other windows are single rectangular openings with stone heads
and cills. Headquarters of Personel and Management Services Department of the Borough Council until 1988 {1}. Arts & Crafts influences - stained porch, buttressed chimneys, oriel sah windows with shaped heads, carved plaques, ornate joinery gable, gargoyle figures, octagonal glazed belvedere with swept roof. Splendid house, now flats.
Site Name
Westoe Village, Westoe Hall
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8097
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 9/84 and 11/84
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
Crossref
11814
DAY1
01
DAY2
16
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437220
Grid ref figure
10
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
MONTH2
1
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
566040
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Westoe
Description
Chapel House was listed Grade II in 1983 with the following description:
'Circa 1808. Red brick, with stone dressings and slate roof. Four bays, 2 storeys and attic. All windows re-glazed. The main house has 2 bay windows rising through the 2 storeys. Between them is the entrance, framed by a very good stone Tuscan doorcase, with attached columns and open pediment. Good fanlight. The 2 east bays are set back a little from the main house. Continuous stone sill at first floor. A band of unglazed buff, red, white and black tiles forms a first floor string course. On or near the site of a mediaeval chapel. This house replaces a mid C18 one. See "A History of Westoe" 1964 by A C Flagg.'
The building has a blue plaque commemorating Amy Flagg, a Second World War photographer and local historian, who had lived there.
SITEASS
Pevsner - built in 1808 but given C19 string courses of patterned encaustic tiles. C20 casements. Good stone doorcase with open pediment on Tuscan columns.
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Chapel House was listed Grade II in 1983 with the following description:
'Circa 1808. Red brick, with stone dressings and slate roof. Four bays, 2 storeys and attic. All windows re-glazed. The main house has 2 bay windows rising through the 2 storeys. Between them is the entrance, framed by a very good stone Tuscan doorcase, with attached columns and open pediment. Good fanlight. The 2 east bays are set back a little from the main house. Continuous stone sill at first floor. A band of unglazed buff, red, white and black tiles forms a first floor string course. On or near the site of a mediaeval chapel. This house replaces a mid C18 one. See "A History of Westoe" 1964 by A C Flagg.'
The building has a blue plaque commemorating Amy Flagg, a Second World War photographer and local historian, who had lived there.
Site Name
Westoe Village, Chapel House
Site Type: Specific
Villa
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8096
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 9/83; https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1232334; https://blog.twmuseums.org.uk/social-history-volunteers-at-south-shields-museum/chapel-house-westoe/; https://southshieldslocalhistorygroup.co.uk/index.php/people/famous-people/amy-flagg/; https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-60648513
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2024
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437180
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
566060
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Westoe
Description
Circa 1768 and Circa 1796.
Nicely picturesque with "Gothick" overtones.
Both of red brick with slate roofs. Two storeys and attics. Originally 2 houses.
No 17 built circa 1768, is of 3 bays and has a coped brick parapet. Two dormer
windows. Entrance in the west, ground floor bay.
No 18 built circa 1796, is of 3 bays and is set back a little from No 17. The
centre bay breaks forward, rises to an attic storey and is crowned by a pediment.
This attic storey is lit by a lunette. The elevation is crowned by a high
crenellated parapet which abuts the central attic storey.
The west bay of the ground floor has an elegant bay window. The central door has
a pointed arch and is flanked on either side by a narrow light.
All other windows are "bastard" Venetian, that is the centre light has a straight
head and is only a few inches taller than the side lights.
The heads of most of the sashes in both houses have "Tudor" shaped tops and all
windows have what is the most unusual feature of these houses "lattice" tracery.
That in the 2 ground floor windows of No 18 is finer than the rest.
In circa 1895 both houses were united to form one house by the addition of ground
and first floor corridors across the rear. J H Morton architect.
See "A History of Westoe" 1964 by A C Flagg. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - No. 17 (c.1768) and No. 18, the White House (c.1795) came into one ownership in 1795 when No. 17 was refronted to harmonize with No. 18, though not actually made into one house until 1895 by corridors across the back (ie. the present rear elevation by J.H. Morton). All windows have bold lattice glazing, at the front probably of 1795. No. 18 has tripartite windows, its centre bay emphasized by a pediment (with Diocletian window) and battlemented parapet. Billiard room of c.1905 at back also by J.H. Morton.
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Circa 1768 and Circa 1796.
Nicely picturesque with "Gothick" overtones.
Both of red brick with slate roofs. Two storeys and attics. Originally 2 houses.
No 17 built circa 1768, is of 3 bays and has a coped brick parapet. Two dormer
windows. Entrance in the west, ground floor bay.
No 18 built circa 1796, is of 3 bays and is set back a little from No 17. The
centre bay breaks forward, rises to an attic storey and is crowned by a pediment.
This attic storey is lit by a lunette. The elevation is crowned by a high
crenellated parapet which abuts the central attic storey.
The west bay of the ground floor has an elegant bay window. The central door has
a pointed arch and is flanked on either side by a narrow light.
All other windows are "bastard" Venetian, that is the centre light has a straight
head and is only a few inches taller than the side lights.
The heads of most of the sashes in both houses have "Tudor" shaped tops and all
windows have what is the most unusual feature of these houses "lattice" tracery.
That in the 2 ground floor windows of No 18 is finer than the rest.
In circa 1895 both houses were united to form one house by the addition of ground
and first floor corridors across the rear. J H Morton architect.
See "A History of Westoe" 1964 by A C Flagg {1}. Two of the oldest and most unusual houses in the Conservation Area. The eighteenth century houses were linked in 1895 by ground and first floor corridors at the rear but are now in separate ownership once again. Built in brown brick, picturesque Gothick style. Each has a large brick chimney with ten tall terracotta pots. No. 17 has two dormer windows. No. 18 has a Welsh slate mansard roof and a flat-roofed bay window covered in lead, and a single storey bay window roofed with clay pantiles. An C18 rainwater hopper survives on the east gable. The central door has a pointed arch with flanking windows. No. 18 has a crenallated parapet, timber sash sliding windows with Tudor arched heads and diamond lattice tracery. It has a geometric front garden laid out with low Box hedging and planted beds which compliments the Gothic architecture. The low walls once had diamond profile railings.
Site Name
17 and 18 Westoe Village, White Cottage and White House
Site Type: Specific
Villa
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8095
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 9/81
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437130
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Render
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565970
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Westoe
Description
Early C18?
Rendered, with stone quoins, modern red clay tiles to roof. Two storeys and 5 bays
of an irregular disposition. The 3 ground floor windows "pseudo georgian" in large
openings. The 2 adjacent entrance doors recessed in plain openings. First floor
windows, casements in original openings, the 2 western ones 4 panes wide, the
3 eastern ones 3 panes wide.
Through a plain opening at the west end passes Westoe Passage, known once as Salters'
Trail part of an ancient bridleway, although its location has varied. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Early C18? Rendered, with stone quoins, modern red clay tiles to roof. Two storeys and 5 bays of an irregular disposition. The 3 ground floor windows "pseudo georgian" in large openings. The 2 adjacent entrance doors recessed in plain openings. First floor windows, casements in original openings, the 2 western ones 4 panes wide, the 3 eastern ones 3 panes wide. Through a plain opening at the west end passes Westoe Passage, known once as Salters' Trail (HER 11813) part of an ancient bridleway, although its location has varied {1}. No. 9 has aluminium window frames and modernisations to the rear and concrete roof tiles.
Site Name
9 and 10 Westoe Village, Spindlestone and The Neuk
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8094
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 11/79
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437040
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565970
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Westoe
Description
Early C19.
Red brick, slate roof. Roof line continuous with no 6. Two storeys with attic,
3 bays. All windows sashed, with glazing bars. Stone heads. Entrance in the west
bay with no doorcase. Stone head as ground floor windows. Semi-circular dormers. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Early C19.
Red brick, slate roof. Roof line continuous with no 6. Two storeys with attic, 3 bays. All windows sashed, with glazing bars. Stone heads. Service door entrance in the west bay with no doorcase. Stone head as ground floor windows. Semi-circular dormers.
Site Name
7 Westoe Village, Anchorage
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8093
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 11/77
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
437040
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565970
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Westoe
Description
Late C18.
Red brick, slate roof. Two storeys with attic, 4 bays, stone heads. All windows
sashed, with glazing bars. Stone Tuscan doorcase to the west most bay, semi-
circular headed opening to passageway in first, east, bay. Semi-circular dormers. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - No. 6 with a plain Tuscan door surround
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
Late C18.
Red brick, slate roof. Two storeys with attic, 4 bays, stone heads. All windows
sashed, with glazing bars. Stone Tuscan doorcase to the west most bay, semi-
circular headed opening to passageway in first, east, bay. Semi-circular dormers.
Site Name
6 Westoe Village, Woodcote
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8092
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 11/76
YEAR1
2006