Chirton Hall, East Chirton

Chirton Hall, East Chirton

HER Number
5978
District
N Tyneside
Site Name
Chirton Hall, East Chirton
Place
Chirton
Map Sheet
NZ36NW
Class
Domestic
Site Type: Broad
House
Site Type: Specific
Country House
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Stuart 1603 to 1714
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
Ralph Reed, the owner of two farms in Chirton, sold his estate to John Clarke, an agent of the earl of Northumberland. He built a new house in the 1670s at Chirton on the west side of Silk's Lane, with materials dismantled from Warkworth Castle. The house was passed on to the Duke of Argyll in 1699 and then to Robert Lawson of Cramlington and eventually by terms of a will to Adam Cardonnel, who changed his name to Cardonnel-Lawson. Upon the opening of Burdon Main Colliery in 1811, he pulled down the hall and moved to his other estate in Cramlington. Craster says that in 1907, the gate posts and some of the outbuildings remained. A century earlier, Warburton described the house as "built of fine freestone and brick, having a good garden on the south front".
Easting
434500
Northing
568200
Grid Reference
NZ434500568200
Sources
<< HER 5978 >> Alan Williams Archaeology, 2004, Collingwood Arms Hotel, Front Street, Chirton, Archaeological Assessment
H.H.E. Craster, 1907, A History of Northumberland, Vol VIII pp 322-3
E. MacKenzie, 1811, A Historical and Descriptive View of the County of Northumberland
J. Taggart (Rev), 1963, A History of Chirton, Limited circulation work