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#1
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1903 building in Red Row
A question for the southerners.
Spotted this one on rightmove. What was that originally? Looks like it's converted from commercial property? http://www.rightmove.co.uk/property-...-51513343.html streetview: https://www.google.co.uk/maps/place/...ca27e8!6m1!1e1 |
#2
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It was the Red Row CO OP, the "Store", up until the 80's or so. Also contained the managers house.
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#3
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I should be able to remember that building it but it's gone from my memory unfortunately.
Now who has a photo of that side of the street? Just picked up a 1st World War medal to a recipient from along that way. William Kinghorn, a steamroller driver in a Road Construction Company of the Royal Engineers. Lived 38 Swarland Terrace. One of my ancestors, Anthony Richardson, also live there, No. 2 Swarland Terrace, and served in the Labour Corps in WW1. |
#4
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On the subject of Swarland Terrace, a good number of houses were demolished there? am I correct?
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#5
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here's the maps:
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#6
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#7
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There is a terrace or something on the 1866 map on the corner of the East Chevington road which has gone by the 1898 map. Mysterious. Anyone know anything about that?
Perhaps the first part of Swarland Terrace was 'modern' housing built to replace that old terrace? |
#8
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I'm sure someone will correct me if I am wrong but I believe the demolished Swarland Tce houses, which were mostly, if not all, colliery upstairs and down flats. In the 70's when opencast was commenced to the West of Red Row the houses stared showing signs of instability. One story I heard was that the opencast had disturbed flooded old workings which caused movement so affecting the properties. whether this was the fact or not it is an interesting theory.
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#9
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Quote:
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#10
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Here's the Northumberland Land ownership map (Local Authority land that is). That plot is council land, the wooded area between the old Grey Arms site and back down to the remnant of Swarland Terrace West.
Looking at borderlad's picture I can remember the Grey arms but not the old extent of the terraces, memory failure again. (but if they went in the 70s I can be forgiven) |
#11
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I believe this is the part of Swarland Terrace which was demolished in the 70s
Wish I knew who these old timers were, bet they could tell us a story |
#12
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William Kinghorn is on the Absent Voters List. I've just counted the number of men on the AVL from Swarland Terrace. By my reckoning there are 40. So many men from a small street, shows the impact of the war on communities.
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#13
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And the total number will be higher again with casualties and men discharged before the AVL
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#14
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Nice. Tightly packed chimneys. 8 per stack? Wonder if they are the flats Alan mentioned? Of course it was normal to have fireplaces in the bedrooms. Still have ours.
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#15
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The bro in law reckons that end of the terrace came down about 1965.
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#16
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It's ok for me not to remember then if it was 1965
I had a look through the newspaper archives to see if there was any mention of the construction of Swarland Terrace - and perhaps the demolition of the row/terrace (if that is what it is) opposite the Smithy in the 1866 'Proto-Red Row' map; came up with nowt. (apart from lots of adverts for a dentist at 79 Swarland Terrace) |
#17
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On the subject of subsidence, the Coal Authority shows a pair of seams outcropping right on that spot, so perhaps the workings were very old that caused the problem. (outcrop = purple bands below, the cross is an Adit filled in in 1983, no mention of its age, but nothing is shown on the OS maps online of any age. That Adit is probably in someone's back garden? )
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#18
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John, the bro in law thinks one of them was a chap called Crinkley. The two on the left look like brothers to me, definitely related.
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#19
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Quote:
The Willows makes an appearance in the following year, so maybe built around the same time? |
#20
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The newspapers in 1899 mention that MORE houses were going to be built at Swarland Terrace.
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