The Old Smithy, Glebe Crescent
The Old Smithy, Glebe Crescent
HER Number
7048
District
Sunderland
Site Name
The Old Smithy, Glebe Crescent
Place
Washington
Map Sheet
NZ35NW
Class
Industrial
Site Type: Broad
Metal Industry Site
Site Type: Specific
Blacksmiths Workshop
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Description
Smithy, then pottery, now restaurant (The Blacksmith's Table). Mid to late C18. Sandstone rubble, pantiled roof. One storey. Central Dutch door under plain wood lintel. Square casement windows with vertical glazing bars and hooks for external shutters. Lower extension at right has corner timber posts supporting beams to pitched roof; full-width windows with glazing bars inserted in C20. Plank and batten door in south wall of extension. 2 end brick chimneys. LISTED GRADE 2. The last blacksmiths were the Dobson family in 1954. The building was a pottery until 1984 and then a restaurant from 1988. The building is said to be haunted by the spirit of a blacksmith who sits at table 9. A white lady is thought to be the ghost of Jane Atkinson who was ducked to death in the village pond in 1676 for being a witch. Another man is said to sit at table 6. The most 'famous' ghost is Robert Hazlitt, highwayman, who robbed a mail coach here in 1770 {Kirkup 2009}.
Easting
431020
Northing
556600
Grid Reference
NZ431020556600
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest, 2/78; Sunderland City Council, 2009, Washington Village Conservation Area Character Appraisal and Management Strategy; Rob Kirkup, 2009, Ghostly Tyne and Wear, pages 21-24