Tuesday, 23 May 2017

Meeting Notes May


 

 

More on the Spinny

Following on from Peters article on The Spinney, more information has come to light from the excellent book Northumberland and Cumberland Mining Disasters by Maureen Anderson.

She recalls how one of those who escaped the disaster was Johnny Threw, his farther and two older brothers William and George were to die in the pit. Here is an extract from the book:

When William's body was recovered in his pocket was his candle-box on which he, with certain knowledge that death was hovering close by, had used a nail to engrave a message to his mother. Although this widow, as did many others, manage to survive on subscriptions for a period of time eventually the money would become depleted and she would have had to depend on her own labour for a means of support. A few years later after the disaster Reverend Leigh Richmond  on a bible tour in the north when he heard the heart- rendering story of the box on which the message had been written, It was lent to him on the condition that if money any contributions were made because of his telling the storey and exhibiting the box the money was to go to the window. Eventually a sum of £16 10s was remitted to her. On Richmond's death Mrs Threw requested that the box be returned to her which was done. In about 1834 a travelling agent of the Sunday School Union of London, JR Wilson, borrowed the box on a similar understanding. Over three years a sum of £115 7s 3d was raised and paid to Mrs Threw at the rate of 5s a week and about £2 annual rent for a period of seven years. At the end of 1840 the funds were depleted and at the age of sixty-eight and unable to work the widow was destitute. She applied to the Gateshead Union and was allotted 2s a week but this was insufficient to pay her rent and keep her in food. An enterprising scheme was thought of to raise money for Mrs Threw and to bring to the attention of the public a reminder of the disaster. A pamphlet was printed in 1841 at the office of the Great Northern Advertiser and distributed to booksellers to be sold. The small publication related the storey of the tragedy and the message of a boy to his mother from beyond the grave.
'Fret not, dear mother for we were singing while we had time, and praising God. Mother, follow God more than ever I did'
On the other side of the the candle box which is supposed, must have been dictated by his farther, as it bears his signature, though he could not write:

'If Johnny is saved, be a good lad to God, and thy mother.
John Threw.'
Steve Elwood from  http://www.skyscrapercity.com has a link to the publication which has been borrowed for you to read here:

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Place Names


Last month we gave ourselves an exercise to find out a little bit more about peculiar names towns or villages, here is a selection we looked at.

Scotswood

What sort of place was it? How did it get its name? How did the people who
lived there earn a living?

In 1367 Richard Scot the son of John Scot (who was a wealthy and influential merchant of Newcastle) obtained a licence to enclose and make a park of his wood, originally called West Wood, containing 200 acres - the enclosure of the wood was not popular with Richard Scot's neighbours which resulted in a great deal of quarrelling. ln 1375 Richard Scot accused his neighbour, William Delaval, of breaking into the park, felling trees, digging up coal and also stealing cattle to the value of £40. The outcome of this is not known. ln the late 1600s it was thought that Scotswood had got its name from when the Scots army camped there in 1644 during the Siege of Newcastle, but Richard Scot's enclosure clearly predates this. Scotswood was a rural and generally a peaceful place until the 1840s with the coming of heavy industry a brick works was set up by the Lister family and later taken over by the Adams family in 1903 to become famous as Adamsez Sanitary Ware. This closed in 1972. The area of Scotswood has now changed beyond recognition due the closure or contradiction of the heavy industry, closure of the pit and other works, demolition on a large scale of the local housing from the 1970s onwards.

By Dave Smith

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Prudhoe (Northumberland)




An Anglo-Saxon name meaning Prud's spur of land.


 Quebec (County Durham)



This village near Esh Winning is one of a number of places in the North East which take their names from other parts of the world. Quebec was a mining village and apparently named because the fields in the area were enclosed in 1759, the year General Wolfe captured Quebec from the French in Canada. It is not unusual for fields to be named after foreign towns and places and often occurs where fields were situated at a considerable distance from their home farm. Thus fields could have names suggesting remoteness like Botany Bay or Nova Scotia. This kind of name has also gained prominence in the North East because they were topical names for nineteenth century coal mining or ironstone villages. North East place names which may fall into this category include New York near Whitley Bay, Toronto near Bishop Auckland, Philadelphia near Houghton le Spring and Canada which is part of Chester-le-Street. California can be found in North Yorkshire where it is part of the village of Great Ayton and is also found in Cleveland as a district of Eston in Middlesbrough. When far off field names were not available battles or places connected with the Boer War or Crimean War could also provide a source for naming Durham's nineteenth century villages. Thus we have Bloemfontein near Stanley, Portobello near Birtley from a Battle of 1739, and Inkerman near Tow Law, named from the 1854 Crimean War Battle of Inkerman. With imagination it is quite possible to travel the whole world without leaving the North East.


 Redheugh (Tyneside)



A corruption of Reed Haugh, the flat meadowland where reeds grew.


 Romaldkirk (County Durham)



Romaldkirk is a picturesque little village, with a nearby stream called the Beer Beck. The village is on the south bank of the River Tees in County Durham, but should really be in Yorkshire. A huge portion of south Teesdale was taken from Yorkshire and moved into County Durham during the local government reforms of the 1970s. Only the north bank of Teesdale is truly County Durham. Romaldkirk means the church of St Rumwald. The word Kirk is an alternative word for church, used in northern England and Scotland. Romaldkirk's church known as the cathedral of the dales is dedicated to St Rumwald, about whom we know very little because of his short life. Rumwald was the son of a Northumbrian king, and is said to have spoken on the very first first day of his life, crying out the words I am a Christian. With such a miracle, there was no hesitation in having the baby prince baptised, but despite his remarkable talent for learning speech, he was unable to hold onto life and died of ill health two days later. St Romwald's resting place is recorded as Buckingham, but there may be some connection with Romaldkirk, which the history books have not recorded.


 Roseberry Topping (Teesside)



There is an old saying When Roseberry Topping wears a cap, let cleveland then beware of a clap which is a recognition that the cloud-topped summit of this famous landmark could result in a heavy clap or shower of rain. Roseberry Topping is sometimes known as The cleveland Matterhorn because of its distinctive shape and is steeped in local legend. In olden times the hill was closely associated with the Vikings and the word Topping comes from Toppen an Old Danish word for a hill. Roseberry is a corrupted name which derives in an unexpected way from the nearby settlement of Newton-under-Roseberry. It is known that the original Old Norse name for Roseberry Topping was Odins-Beorg meaning Odins Hill. Odin was the most important Viking God and it is possible that Roseberry was a centre for his worship in Pagan times. Over the years, the name Odinsberg gradually changed to Othensberg, Ohenseberg, Ounsberry and Ouesberry. Association with the village then called Newton-under-Ouseberry at the foot of the hill led to the modern name Roseberry when the final R of under produced the initial letter of the modern name. Newton under Ouseberry is now called Newton under Roseberry. Incidentally the Norse God Odin is still remembered by his alternative Saxon name of Woden from which the name of Wednesday (Wodens Day) derives.


 Rothbury (Northumberland)



This means Rotha's settlement.


 Sadberge (County Durham)



A stone on Sadberge village green proclaims that Queen Victoria was Queen of Britain, Empress of India and Countess of Sadberge. The description is accurate, as Sadberge was once the name of a separate earldom stretching from Hartlepool to Middleton in Teesdale and had its origin as a Viking wappentake. Wappentakes were places where weapon taking Vikings would assemble to discuss the affairs of the district. The name of Sadberge is Viking and derives from the Old Norse Set Berg meaning flat-topped hill. Set Berg is a place name found in Iceland, Norway and in Cumbria where it occurs in the form Sedbergh.


 School Aycliffe (County Durham)



Aycliffe has a Saxon name meaning oak clearing - (Originally called Acley) and was a felled area in a great oak woodland that stood in the district. Later part of Saxon Aycliffe was acquired by a Viking called Scule who is remembered in the name School Aycliffe. Scula or Scule was given extensive tracts of land in south Durham by the Viking Ragnald, as a reward for military service in the year 920 AD. King Ragnald and his warrior general Scule were Irish Vikings who invaded the north of England from their colonial base in Dublin, Ireland. Ragnald seized York from the Danes and appointed himself king of all the Vikings in Britain.


 Stella (Tyneside)



The place Stella which you mentioned 'was near Blaydon' is still near Blaydon and its name derives from 'stelling' meaning a cattle fold. Stella had a colliery as early as the sixteenth century and was one of the main collieries to supply coal to Elizabethan London. It was the site of the Jacobean Stella Hall which was once the home of the Tempest and Towneley families. In Victorian times it was the home of the radical politician Joseph Cowen who once entertained Garibaldi at the hall. The hall was demolished in 1953 to make way for a housing estate.


 Peterlee (County Durham)



Peterlee is a new town built in 1948 to house miners from nearby villages in the Easington district. The town is named after a former miner and trade union leader called Peter Lee (1864-1935), who became the leader of England's first all Labour County Council at Durham in 1909. Mr Lee was born at the local colliery village of Trimdon Grange and started work at the age of ten as a pony driver at Littletown Colliery near Durham City. In 1886 he emigrated to the United States and worked in Ohio , Kentucky and Pennsylvania before returning to County Durham in 1887. Peterlee town was named after Mr Peter Lee at the suggestion of the former engineer and surveyor of Easington Rural District Council, Mr C.W.Clark. The new town of Peterlee incorporates the site of an ancient abandoned medieval village called Yoden which lay near to where the Eden Lane playing fields are sited today.


Pity Me (County Durham)



It has been suggested Pity Me was the site of a small lake or 'mere' and that the name means Petit Mere, Petty Mere or Peaty Mere. A more fanciful suggestion is that St Cuthberts coffin was dropped here by wandering monks on their way to Durham. The miracle working saint is said to have pleaded with the monks to be more careful and take pity on him. Another suggestion is that Pity Me is the cry of the Peewits (or Lapwings) which inhabit the area. Other Pity Mes can be found in the north of England, including a small place near Barrasford in the North Tyne valley, and a Pity Me near Bradbury in south Durham. The name of Tynedale's Pity Me is said to be a corruption of the Celtic words Beddan Maes meaning Field of Graves. There are a number of other theories for the Pity Mes in Durham and Northumberland, but the most likely explanantion is that it was used to describe poor quality farmland. It was therfore perhaps a field name given by a farmer to help identify a particularly field that was difficult to farm. Sometimes these fields are known as 'Fatherless Fields' for reasons which I will leave to the imagination.


 Unthank (County Durham)



There are a number of Unthanks throughout the north, the name comes from the Anglo-Saxon Unthances, and refers to a farm once occupation by squatters.


 Byker (Tyneside)



A Viking village (a by) near a kerr. Kerr was a Viking word for a marsh, suggesting that the Vikings had to make do with poor quality land on Tyneside. Nearby Walker means marsh or 'Kerr' near the Hadrians Wall.


 County Durham - Land of the Prince Bishops (County Durham)



Even without the sub-heading Land of the Prince Bishops, the name County Durham is very unusual because it is the only county in England which should be prefixed with the word County, that is County Durham and not Durham County. Apart from being a convenient means of distinguishing the county from the city of Durham, the name is a throwback to the days when County Durham was officially the County Palatine of Durham. The County Palatine was an almost separate realm ruled by Prince Bishops. The Prince Bishops had virtually the same powers in the County of Durham as the king had in the rest of England, although ultimately it was the king who was responsible for appointing the bishops, as their powers were not hereditary. The post of Prince Bishop came about in the reign of William the Conqueror, who combined the political powers of the old Earls of Northumbria (who at that time ruled between the Tees and Tweed) with the ecclesiastical powers of the Bishop of Durham.The Prince Bishops were responsible for looking after the king's interests in this far northern territory and defended England from the Scots. The most powerful Prince Bishops were the medieval bishops like Hugh du Puiset (Pudsey) and Bishop Anthony Bek. Over the centuries their powers were gradually reduced, particularly when the danger of Scottish invasion was no longer a threat. In 1832, on the death of Bishop William Van Mildert, the few remaining vestiges of the Prince Bishops' powers were handed over to the crown. See also Durham City.


Cullercoats (Northumberland)



Culler from Culfre - a pigeon or dove. The name means dove cots.


 Gateshead (Tyneside)



Gateshead was at the head of the Roman Road which crossed the Tyne at this point. The location of the place seems to explain the name, as the old northern word gate meant road or way. Head of the road would seem a satisfactory explanation if it were not for the Venerable Bede, who writing of Gateshead in Saxon times described the place as Ad Caprae Caput. This name translates not as Gateshead but as Goat's Head. The heads of goats and other animals were often fixed on poles as the symbol of a meeting place. In 1080 Gateshead was used as a meeting place by the first Prince Bishop of Durham William Walcher who, called a meeting with his people at the site. They murdered him.


 Haltwhistle (Northumberland)



The name of this Northumbrian town in the heart of Hadrians Wall Country would seem straightforward enough and not surprisingly is often interpreted as a railway station halt where locomotives blew their whistles. In the nineteenth century Haltwhistle was certainly the site of a Victorian railway station but the name is not in any way connected with this and is first recorded in the thirteenth century as Hautwisel. There are two parts to the name the first haut is Old French and means high ground. The second element is Twisel or Twisla and is a word of medieval origin meaning a fork in a road or river. In the case of Haultwhistle the twisla is a fork in the river where the River South Tyne is joined by the Haltwhistle Burn. Haltwhistle is situated on high ground located in the fork formed by the conjunction of the two watercourses. Other twisels in the north include Twizel near Berwick, Twizle near Morpeth and Twizell between Chester-le-Street and Stanley.
This is an extensive list from Peter Sutherland and duplicates in a small part the efforts of the rest of our group. Maureen supplied us with with a very good reference book called Place Names- From Abberwick to Yetlington by Ian Robinson listing places with origins from Vicking, Saxon, Norman and Flemish nationalities.

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Joan Teesdale  has covered some of Peters efforts with Torronto and Quebec but here are a few that Joan covered.:

Philadelphia

Near Sherburn and Houghton-le-Spring villages. The village was named during the American War of Independence by a local colliery owner to commemorate the British capturing of the Americian city of Philadelphia. The village cricket field is named Bunker Hill after the battle in The American War of Independence. Other battle related place names are Portobello-Birtley after the Battle 1739 with Spain. Inkerman near Tow Low (1854 Crimea Battle).

Plawsworth 

Plawsworth on the Great North Road between Durham and Chester-le-Street, although Plawsworth has a small colliery in 1647, it is not classed as a pit village. The name is first recorded in 1135, but dates from Anglo Saxon times, it signifies an enclosure for sports, games or amusement, the nature of play (Plaw) is unknown (worth) is Anglo Saxon for enclosure. Simon Vitulus, owner in 1100, provided greyhounds for hunting expeditions for Durhams Prince Bishops. Another previous landowner Plawsworth took their name from the village as was usual for family names to be taken from place names at the time.

A Roman road runs through Durham City and Plawsworth, its exact track is unknown, although it can be traced through Segefield and Shincliffe (South Durham) and even built up areas of Chester-le-Street and Gateshead

Joan leaves us with a cautionary note: If you visit Plawsworth Village you will need to cross the Great North Road to visit the Red Lion Pub, don't get drunk.

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Iris came up with additional names as follows:

Jarrow

Derived from Anglo Saxon word for marsh land.

Peterlee

Named after the celebrated local miners' leader PETER LEE

Benwell

Known as BYNNEWALLE in the 11 century which translates as " By the wall".

Thirlwell (Northumberland)

Thirwell is a weak point in Hadrians Wall were native tribes are said to have 'Thirled' through Roman defences.

 
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Val did extensive research into Seaton Sluice and is an article which deserves more space, hopefully for next month but here is the definition Val found.

Seaton Sluice

Seaton = cultivated land, farm settlement, village on a town beside the sea.

Sluice = a channel of water held by a sluice or lock gates.




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This was a great effort from everyone and shows what we can achieve as a group, lots of things planed for the summer but if you want to do some research it was suggested at our meeting that unusual pub names may well be worth doing.

Our next meeting will be held at the Hancock Museum, upstairs cafe 10.30 on 14 June. Please bring along your research or anything you might find that will interest us.
 

Saturday, 6 May 2017

Meeting Notes April




This month we almost had a full turnout at the Hancock Museum taking up quite a space in the upstairs cafe. We had lots to catch up on. Iris and Joan sent their apologies. Val brought in a book on Mining Disasters with reference to Peters article on The Spinny. Peter read out his article to a captive audience, he is going to amend his work with reference to the information supplied by Val, hope to see this next month.
Moira brought along some interesting information about early Roman Britain  and the Saxons in the North East which we mentioned in our map exercise last month, hopefully I can get a bit more transcribed  for next time.

We had an interesting correspondence about John's article on F. A. Rochfort a relative of his Michael Rochfort got in touch to mention that :
 F A Rochfort was the brother of my great grandfather, Joseph Rochfort

Article found here

Dave kept us informed of the current City Tours and Guided walks which he is talking along with his fellow City Guides, it seems that Grey's Monument is very popular and you have to book on line to get a place and an opportunity to walk to the top of the monument.

Joan Teesdale came up with the idea that we should look at a place name that is unusual and find out a little bit more about it for our next meeting, so if you have come across Pity Me and Nowhere now is your chance to find out a little bit more.

Interesting reads this month at cut down prices are the Incredible Elements by Joel Levy published by New Burlington 2017 and sold at a very reasonable price at the Works. Its a  totally non-scary guide to chemistry and why it matters. As mentioned before I have a love - hate relationship with chemistry but this book is more about the history of chemistry and some of the influential figures. It is packed with diagrams and little known facts and has  lots of little profiles of famous chemists and alchemists. It describes  chemistry in the ancient world, Alchemy and the birth of Chemical Science, tracking down the elements, those mysterious and infinitely small atoms and ions and lastly the Periodic Table. Talking about tables I have created a table of some of the figures mentioned in the book which you can find here:



Famous Chemists




A Memorial for Eric  Larkham

As you are aware Eric sadly passed away last year, he was a great member of our group and Michael's History Lessons. He was also well known for his guided tours and talks around the Ouseburn and the Victoria Tunnel and his work with the Ouseburn Trust and The Campaign for Real Ale. A proposal was submitted following an appeal to create a memorial for Eric Larkham. Members of Eric’s family and friends got together with the Ouseburn Trust and chose Colin Hagan's idea to create a thick wooden plaque with marquetry/inlay and relief cutting of the wood. More details can be found at:

www.ouseburntrust.org.uk/eric-larkham

 The trust is also planning an annual EricLarkham Memorial Walk around the time of Eric’s birthday on 22 June,hosted jointly with Tyneside & Northumberland CAMRA.This first year there will be two walks to allow as many people as possible to take part. On the evening of Tuesday 20 lune and the afternoon of Saturday 24th June Mike Greatbatch will lead a heritage walk of the Pubs of Ouseburn.The walk will be free of charge though donations are welcome.If you would like to join us, bookings can be made after l May on our website www.ouseburntrust.org.uk/walks-and-talks
by email to admin@ouseburntrust.org.uk or by phone on 0l9l 26l 6596.


An extract with further details from the newsletter of the Ouseburn Trust can be found here:


News letter extract





















Next Meeting

Our next meeting will be held at the upstairs cafe of the Hancock Museum 10:30 on 10 May. Topic for disscusion are Local Place Names and how they got their names. Please bring along any information you have on the subject.