Collingwood Main Waggonway

Collingwood Main Waggonway

HER Number
15335
District
N Tyneside
Site Name
Collingwood Main Waggonway
Place
North Shields
Map Sheet
NZ36NE
Class
Transport
Site Type: Broad
Tramway Transport Site
Site Type: Specific
Wagonway
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
This waggonway ran from Collingwood (or Burdon) Main Pit to staiths at North Shields. Parts of the abandoned Chirton Colliery were opened up in 1811 to re-work the High Main Seam. At the same time, Collingwood Main Pit was sunk towards the south-west end of the colliery and a waggonway constructed from it to staiths at North Shields. These were in the same location as those of the earlier Chirton Waggonway. They are shown on Watson 21/21, branching and running to two spouts beyond a coal yard. The staiths are also shown on Wood’s 1827 plan of North Shields in a different arrangement. The rest of the line is shown on Watson 21/15. Later, a branch-line was run to Collingwood Main Waggonway from Hopewell Pit to the north.
Easting
434740
Northing
567970
Grid Reference
NZ434740567970
Sources
Alan Williams Archaeology, July 2012, Waggonways North of the River Tyne - Tyne and Wear HER Enhancement Project; North East Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineering, Watson 21/21, Plan of Chirton Quayside. Not dated; Watson 21/15, Plan of Chirton Colliery, property of Edward Collingwood, John Liddell, Ralph Milbank, Duke of Northumberland etc. 1811; Wood, 1827, Plan of North Shields; DS Timoney, 1982, Waggonways of Tyne and Wear - unpublished typescript for Tyne and Wear County Council, p 97 (rioute 38); Les Turnbull, 2012, Railways Before George Stephenson (route 9B)