English, British
ADDITINF
N
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
DAY1
01
DAY2
29
District
S Tyneside
Easting
433070
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NW
MATERIAL
Sandstone
MONTH1
02
MONTH2
09
Grid Reference
NZ
NMRNUMBER
NZ 36 NW 61
Northing
565680
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Jarrow
Description
House, now public house. Late C18/early C19. Coursed squared sandstone, ashlar
plinth and quoins; roof of Welsh slate. 2 storeys, 4 bays. West elevation:
ground floor has mid-C19 double shop front with central door in 3 bays, having
glazing bars, ornate brackets to plain fascia under cornice, 4-panelled door
recessed in panelled reveals; then house door under oblong fanlight, and window
with original external shutters, upper sash having lost glazing bars; 4 windows
at first floor. All windows sashes with glazing bars, having projecting cills,
alternating block jambs and painted lintels. Left return : 2 late C19 shop
fronts, partly blocked in between 6 flat Tuscan pilasters of wood, having plain
fascia; one window at first floor left. Roof, half-hipped, has square brick
chimney stack with ashlar plinth in centre of hip at left, one end chimney of
stone and brick at right, one rear stack of brick. C19 street name on west
elevation. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
House, now public house. Late C18/early C19. Coursed squared sandstone, ashlar plinth and quoins; roof of Welsh slate. 2 storeys, 4 bays. West elevation: ground floor has mid-C19 double shop front with central door in 3 bays, having glazing bars, ornate brackets to plain fascia under cornice, 4-panelled door recessed in panelled reveals; then house door under oblong fanlight, and window with original external shutters, upper sash having lost glazing bars; 4 windows at first floor. All windows sashes with glazing bars, having projecting cills, alternating block jambs and painted lintels. Left return : 2 late C19 shop fronts, partly blocked in between 6 flat Tuscan pilasters of wood, having plain fascia; one window at first floor left. Roof, half-hipped, has square brick chimney stack with ashlar plinth in centre of hip at left, one end chimney of stone and brick at right, one rear stack of brick. C19 street name on west elevation {1}. Recorded by Northern Counties Archaeological Services before demolition in 2008 to make way for the new Tyne Tunnel. Presumed delisted as not appearing on the NHL in 2023.
Site Name
1-3 Commercial Road, The Tunnel Tavern
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listing Building Delisted
HER Number
8071
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 1/88, Northern Counties Archaeological Services, 2006, The Gas Light PH, Commercial Road, Jarrow, Historic Building Recording
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2023
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
DAY1
01
DAY2
19
District
S Tyneside
Easting
433780
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NW
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
02
MONTH2
06
Grid Reference
NZ
NMRNUMBER
NZ 36 NW 50
Northing
565400
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Jarrow
Description
This house was listed Grade II in 1949 with the following description:
'House, now a Museum. 1785 for Simon Temple coal owner. Brick with stone dressings; roof of Welsh slate. Simple block with set back wing at north. 2 storeys; 3 bays by 5 to the main house and one to the set-back. West elevation : central 6-panelled door under decorated round fanlight in panelled recess and dentilled open pedimented Tuscan doorcase; cill bands to sash windows with glazing bars and flat stone lintels; eaves cornice. South elevation : 5 windows; central 3 in semicircular bay having pointed parapet with rendered coping; cill bands, stone lintels, those over the central 3 windows of later date, as are the fixed light windows; other windows sashes with glazing bars. Hipped roof, 2 transverse corniced ridge chimneys of brick; half-hipped roof to wing. Interior : cornices to lower and upper halls; 6-panelled doors in panelled reveals having reeded architraves; fluted pilasters carrying hall arches; open well staircase with decorated tread ends, 2 plain square balusters to each tread, inlaid handrail with spiral curtail; Venetian landing window with Gothick tracery and low relief heads either side of round-headed window.' LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - Brick villa of c.1800. Three-bay west façade, its doorcase with an open pediment on slender pilasters, with a one-bay wing to the north. Large bow on the south, its parapet rising into a sort of primitive pediment. Oval room inside.
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
This house was listed Grade II in 1949 with the following description:
'House, now a Museum. 1785 for Simon Temple coal owner. Brick with stone dressings; roof of Welsh slate. Simple block with set back wing at north. 2 storeys; 3 bays by 5 to the main house and one to the set-back. West elevation : central 6-panelled door under decorated round fanlight in panelled recess and dentilled open pedimented Tuscan doorcase; cill bands to sash windows with glazing bars and flat stone lintels; eaves cornice. South elevation : 5 windows; central 3 in semicircular bay having pointed parapet with rendered coping; cill bands, stone lintels, those over the central 3 windows of later date, as are the fixed light windows; other windows sashes with glazing bars. Hipped roof, 2 transverse corniced ridge chimneys of brick; half-hipped roof to wing. Interior : cornices to lower and upper halls; 6-panelled doors in panelled reveals having reeded architraves; fluted pilasters carrying hall arches; open well staircase with decorated tread ends, 2 plain square balusters to each tread, inlaid handrail with spiral curtail; Venetian landing window with Gothick tracery and low relief heads either side of round-headed window.' {1}.
Temple was declared bankrupt in 1812 and his house and business were sold to Thomas and Robert Brown from London. Thomas Brown moved into Jarrow Hall. He died in 1841 and his son Thomas Drewett Brown inherited the house and colliery. By 1873 the hall was leased to the Drewett's land agent Thomas Brady. He left the house in 1906 and it remained empty until 1910. In the 20th century it was used as a fever hospital, Shell Mex manager's house, a nursery school and civil defence centre. It is now a café and offices for Bede's World. Jarrow Hall has been enlarged twice, in the 19th century and the late 20th. It was acquired by St. Paul's Development Trust in 1972 and was restored and repaired as the Bede Monastery Museum in 1974. It reopened as part of Bede's World in 2000. The interior preserves a late 18th century quality although some of the joinery is a replacement and inaccurate. The centrepiece is formed of four elegant arches resting on pilasters, which frame the staircase to the first floor. The landing has bracketed cornices and plaster arches. The upper room to the bay is bow-ended to both north and south and is known as the oval room. It has a modern cornice and an inserted Victorian grey marble fireplace {2}.
Site Name
Jarrow Hall, Church Bank
Site Type: Specific
Country House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8070
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 1/83; South Tyneside Council, September 2006, St. Paul's Conservation Area Character Appraisal; https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1185882
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2024
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
Crossref
5234
DAY1
01
DAY2
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430870
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MATERIAL
Sandstone
MONTH1
02
MONTH2
05
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563840
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
These buildings were listed Grade II in 1985 with the following description:
'Linked pair of chapels. 1890 by Frederick West, surveyor to Hedworth, Monkton and Jarrow Burial Board. Snecked sandstone with ashlar dressings; roof of Welsh slate. Early English style, H-shaped plan. Tower with tall stone spire over carriage arch has narrow lancets at first and open 2-light windows at second stage. In arch are doors to corridors of 3 windows leading to chapels. East elevations have 3 tall cusped lancets, the central with flowing tracery; hood moulds with flower stops; buttresses and angle buttresses with gablets and coping to set-backs. Roof of corridor has red-tiled ridge; the chapel roofs high-pitched with stone gable coping; 2 ashlar chimneys.' LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Identified as Vulnerable during Grade II Historic England Testing the National Framework Project 2015. Priority C - Slow Decay; no solution agreed
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
SITEDESC
These buildings were listed Grade II in 1985 with the following description:
'Linked pair of chapels. 1890 by Frederick West, surveyor to Hedworth, Monkton and Jarrow Burial Board. Snecked sandstone with ashlar dressings; roof of Welsh slate. Early English style, H-shaped plan. Tower with tall stone spire over carriage arch has narrow lancets at first and open 2-light windows at second stage. In arch are doors to corridors of 3 windows leading to chapels. East elevations have 3 tall cusped lancets, the central with flowing tracery; hood moulds with flower stops; buttresses and angle buttresses with gablets and coping to set-backs. Roof of corridor has red-tiled ridge; the chapel roofs high-pitched with stone gable coping; 2 ashlar chimneys.'
Site Name
Hebburn Cemetery, mortuary gateway and chapels
Site Type: Specific
Cemetery Chapel
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8069
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 2/81;
NECT, 2015, National Heritage at Risk Grade II Project;
https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1185874
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2025
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
Crossref
5234
DAY1
01
DAY2
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430660
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MATERIAL
Sandstone
MONTH1
02
MONTH2
05
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563840
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
This building was listed Grade II in 1985 with the following description:
'Lodge. 1890 by Frederick West of Hebburn for Hedworth, Monkton and Jarrow Burial Board. Snecked sandstone, ashlar quoins and plinth; roof of Welsh slate. L-plan with entrance porch in angle. Main elevation to street : 2 storeys, 3 bays, the third cross-gabled; ground floor has sash window, moulded parapet to porch containing boarded door and elliptical-headed fanlight in moulded surround, 3-light mullioned and transomed window in gabled bay. First floor : sash window partly in gabled dormer; double sash window in gable to street; all windows having chamfered surrounds. High-pitched roof has bands of fishscale slates; all gables have barge boards with finials; 2 tall stone corniced chimneys, at rear and on end return, the latter buttressed. Included for group considerations.' LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Identified as Vulnerable during Grade II Historic England Testing the National Framework Project 2015. Priority F - Repair scheme in progress
Site Type: Broad
Cemetery Lodge
SITEDESC
This building was listed Grade II in 1985 with the following description:
'Lodge. 1890 by Frederick West of Hebburn for Hedworth, Monkton and Jarrow Burial Board. Snecked sandstone, ashlar quoins and plinth; roof of Welsh slate. L-plan with entrance porch in angle. Main elevation to street : 2 storeys, 3 bays, the third cross-gabled; ground floor has sash window, moulded parapet to porch containing boarded door and elliptical-headed fanlight in moulded surround, 3-light mullioned and transomed window in gabled bay. First floor : sash window partly in gabled dormer; double sash window in gable to street; all windows having chamfered surrounds. High-pitched roof has bands of fishscale slates; all gables have barge boards with finials; 2 tall stone corniced chimneys, at rear and on end return, the latter buttressed. Included for group considerations.'
Site Name
157 Victoria Road West, cemetery lodge
Site Type: Specific
Cemetery Lodge
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8068
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 2/79;
NECT, 2015, National Heritage at Risk Grade II Project;
https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1185857
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2025
English, British
Class
Commercial
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
CONDITION
Very Bad
Crossref
8166
DAY1
01
DAY2
25
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430425
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36NW
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
02
MONTH2
01
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565295
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
Formerly listed grade II. Subject to fire in 2011 and partially demolished for safety reasons. Building is vacant, a roofless shell and subject to arson and vandalism. Removed from list 2014.
Former listing description:
Offices. Circa 1890. Brick with stone dressings; roof part Welsh slate, part roofing felt. 2 storeys, 17 windows in 3 builds. First build qf 9 windows has round-headed entrance to works containing diagonally boarded double doors under a segmental fanlight in third bay from left. Ground floor windows have fixed lights and transom casements. Second build of 7 bays has office entrance in fifth bay from left with elliptical head and decorative brick jambs containing12-panelled double door under fanlight; all windows sashes with glazing bars having flat heads and projecting cills of stone, as are first floor windows of first build. One-bay third build, with similar windows, keyed in at ground floor. Dogtooth bands and dentilled brick eaves cornice on second and third builds. Roof has 3 transverse ridge brick chimneys and small domed louvre over office entrance. Interior : second build contains well staircase with case iron balustrade of elaborate meadow cranesbill motif: founder I and A Law Glasgow. First build has board room first and second bays from right, first floor, containing oak-panelled walls, decorative chimney piece framing painting of Hebburn shipyard in 1883, low relief frieze showing ancient and mediaeval ships, and ceiling of painted copper panels in simple geometric pattern. Historical note: the shipyard was set up by Andrew Leslie in 1853; in 1886 his firm amalgamated with Hawthorns, manufacturers of ships' engines as, well as railway engines, to form Hawthorn Leslie. Listed mainly for historical interest.
SITEASS
The shipyard was established by Andrew Leslie in 1853. In 1886 after his retirement, the firm merged by Robert and William Hawthorn to form R and W Hawthorn Leslie and Co. Ltd. In 1891 Herbert B Powell was appointed shipyard manager to improve the financial performance of the yard. The present office building was constructed in the 1890s probably as a result of this process. The shipyard closed in November 1982. The building was listed in 1985. Several internal features of note are thought to have been removed. In 2011 there was a fire which caused internal damage and the partial demolition of the building. The building continues to be repeatedly set on fire and vandalised. The linear range on Ellison Street is now derelict. The three storey brick building attached to it is not listed. The earliest part of the building is a two storey block of nine bays. The wide round-headed entrance gives access to the rear shipyard. It contains diagonally boarded double doors under a segmental fanlight. The roof structure is charred with some slate remaining at lower levels. The small chimney stack survives. The later seven bay building attached to the left now stands to first floor window cill level. The first floor and roof have been demolished after fire damage. The fifth bay from the left retains its 12-panelled double door under a fanlight. Sash windows survive. To the left is a third phase - the ground floor of a single bay with similar windows. The left return stands to just above ground floor level. Straddling the first and second phases at ground floor level, a hole in the wall contains the fixing and backing of the metal drinking fountain (stolen). The staircase with iron balustrade has gone. The former board room has suffered extensive fire damage {English Heritage 3 December 2013}.
Site Type: Broad
Commercial Office
SITEDESC
Formerly listed Grade II. Subject to fire in 2011 and partially demolished for safety reasons. Building is vacant, a roofless shell and subject to arson and vandalism. Removed from list 2014.
Former listing description:
Offices. Circa 1890. Brick with stone dressings; roof part Welsh slate, part roofing felt. 2 storeys, 17 windows in 3 builds. First build qf 9 windows has round-headed entrance to works containing diagonally boarded double doors under a segmental fanlight in third bay from left. Ground floor windows have fixed lights and transom casements. Second build of 7 bays has office entrance in fifth bay from left with elliptical head and decorative brick jambs containing12-panelled double door under fanlight; all windows sashes with glazing bars having flat heads and projecting cills of stone, as are first floor windows of first build. One-bay third build, with similar windows, keyed in at ground floor. Dogtooth bands and dentilled brick eaves cornice on second and third builds. Roof has 3 transverse ridge brick chimneys and small domed louvre over office entrance. Interior : second build contains well staircase with case iron balustrade of elaborate meadow cranesbill motif: founder I and A Law Glasgow. First build has board room first and second bays from right, first floor, containing oak-panelled walls, decorative chimney piece framing painting of Hebburn shipyard in 1883, low relief frieze showing ancient and mediaeval ships, and ceiling of painted copper panels in simple geometric pattern. Historical note: the shipyard was set up by Andrew Leslie in 1853; in 1886 his firm amalgamated with Hawthorns, manufacturers of ships' engines as, well as railway engines, to form Hawthorn Leslie. Listed mainly for historical interest.
Site Name
British Shipbuilders Ltd Offices, Ellison Street
Site Type: Specific
Commercial Office
SITE_STAT
Listing Building Delisted
HER Number
8067
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
SURVIVAL
20-39%
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2022
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
1951
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
431070
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MATERIAL
Sandstone
MONTH1
02
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564180
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Hebburn
Description
Parish church, formerly a service wing of Hebburn Hall. Converted to church
in 1886-87 by F R Wilson. Sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings; roof of Welsh
slate. Oriented NNW-SSE; unaisled; east transept at south end having entrance
porch in the angle; west porch at north end. Decorated style windows : 7 of
3 lights in the nave, 2 of 2 lights in the transept elaborate tracery over 7
lights at the north end, all between buttresses with gablets and set-backs.
South elevation : 2 massive buttresses having 5 alternate gablets and set-backs
between 1-light cusped windows and flanking a tall 2-light window. The roof
has a tall pierced, coped belfry supported by the south buttresses, and a central
flèche with 8 gabled louvres. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner - the stables of Hebburn Hall converted into a church by adding buttresses, Decorated windows, a new roof with a fleche, and a chancel with a complicated seven-light imitation-early-Decorated window. A successful jon by F.R. Wilson, 1886-7.
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
SITEDESC
Parish church, formerly a service wing of Hebburn Hall. Converted to church in 1886-87 by F R Wilson. Sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings; roof of Welsh slate. Oriented NNW-SSE; unaisled; east transept at south end having entrance porch in the angle; west porch at north end. Decorated style windows : 7 of 3 lights in the nave, 2 of 2 lights in the transept elaborate tracery over 7 lights at the north end, all between buttresses with gablets and set-backs. South elevation : 2 massive buttresses having 5 alternate gablets and set-backs between 1-light cusped windows and flanking a tall 2-light window. The roof has a tall pierced, coped belfry supported by the south buttresses, and a central flèche with 8 gabled louvres.
Site Name
Canning Street, Church of St John
Site Type: Specific
Parish Church
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8066
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 2/73; Simpson & Brown and South Tyneside Council, 2007, Hebburn Hall Conservation Area - First draft Character Appraisal; www.hebburn.org; www.norman.dunn247.com; www.999hebburn.co.uk
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
Class
Commercial
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
430630
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SW
MATERIAL
Faience and brick
MONTH1
02
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564980
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Early 20th Century 1901 to 1932
Place
Hebburn
Description
Public house. Dated 1908. By J W Wardle of South Shields for Messrs John Rowell
and Sons Ltd. Yellow and brown faience, brick, roof of welsh slate. Free baroque
style. 2-storeys, 5 bays. Faience ground floor has central double door with
round fanlight recessed between adapted Ionic pilasters supporting an open,
broken segmental pediment which encloses a cartouche over the keystone; transomed
and mullioned windows of 2 and 3 lights to left of door, of 3 and 3 to right,
have cill aprons to lugged architraves, elliptical heads and large keystones,
and are flanked by Ionic pilasters, those between first and 2nd, and 3rd and
4th windows supporting open pediments containing cartouches; 6-bay return in
similar style; continuous cornice supported at the recessed corner by a large
cartouche with fruit and flower decoration. Fascia with name panels and cornice
at first floor cill level. First floor : Flemish bond brick; 2 sash windows
over central door, 2 to right, blank wall to left; 4 and a double sash in the
return. Roof has 2 gables central over the pairs of ground floor windows; return
has one; all have stone coping, and bands, cartouches and corniced chimneys
of yellow terracotta. Some windows have art nouveau glass. A rebuilding of
an earlier public house. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Eating and Drinking Establishment
SITEDESC
Public house. Dated 1908. By J W Wardle of South Shields for Messrs John Rowell and Sons Ltd. Yellow and brown faience, brick, roof of welsh slate. Free baroque style. 2-storeys, 5 bays. Faience ground floor has central double door with round fanlight recessed between adapted Ionic pilasters supporting an open, broken segmental pediment which encloses a cartouche over the keystone; transomed and mullioned windows of 2 and 3 lights to left of door, of 3 and 3 to right, have cill aprons to lugged architraves, elliptical heads and large keystones, and are flanked by Ionic pilasters, those between first and 2nd, and 3rd and 4th windows supporting open pediments containing cartouches; 6-bay return in similar style; continuous cornice supported at the recessed corner by a large cartouche with fruit and flower decoration. Fascia with name panels and cornice at first floor cill level. First floor : Flemish bond brick; 2 sash windows over central door, 2 to right, blank wall to left; 4 and a double sash in the return. Roof has 2 gables central over the pairs of ground floor windows; return has one; all have stone coping, and bands, cartouches and corniced chimneys of yellow terracotta. Some windows have art nouveau glass. A rebuilding of an earlier public house.
Site Name
Albert Street, The Albert Public House
Site Type: Specific
Public House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8065
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 2/71
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
436450
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ36SE
MATERIAL
Pebbledash
MONTH1
02
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
560650
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Early 20th Century 1901 to 1932
Place
East Boldon
Description
House. 1907 by H Hedley for F G Wainwright, shipbroker. Pebbledash with sandstone
dressings, roof of flat tiles. Half E-plan, with service wing to east in place
of left half. 2 storeys; 6 bays on main south elevation; 1-bay returns; 9 bays
on north which has 2 cross gables at centre containing servants' entrance and
house entrance. Tall mullioned and transomed staircase window over servants'
door. House entrance in corbelled recess; door elliptical-headed, upper part
glazed, with deep curved hood on brackets; art nouveau bell push, 5-light windows
in one-bay set back; 2 small 2-light and one ox-eye windows irregularly placed
in projecting cross-gable. South elevation : one-storey porch off-centre; ground-
floor windows of 4-lights, central mullions and transoms removed from some;
first-floor windows of 4, 2, 2, 2, 4 and 4 lights. All windows have stone mullions
with quarter-round mouldings internally and externally; alternating block jambs
have surrounding quarter-round mouldings. Roofs hipped with swept eaves except
for gables over entrances and at Chinese-influence service wing of 2 low storeys.
3 square tapering chimneys, rendered, on ridges. The whole is a balanced compo-
sition of varied shapes and scales. Interior : principal rooms ground floor
have moulded fireplaces with stone kerbs; all doors have Tudor-arched top panels
and ornamental hinges and lock plates; staircases have broad handrails and panelled
balustrades. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
House. 1907 by H Hedley for F G Wainwright, shipbroker. Pebbledash with sandstone dressings, roof of flat tiles. Half E-plan, with service wing to east in place of left half. 2 storeys; 6 bays on main south elevation; 1-bay returns; 9 bays
on north which has 2 cross gables at centre containing servants' entrance and house entrance. Tall mullioned and transomed staircase window over servants' door. House entrance in corbelled recess; door elliptical-headed, upper part
glazed, with deep curved hood on brackets; art nouveau bell push, 5-light windows in one-bay set back; 2 small 2-light and one ox-eye windows irregularly placed in projecting cross-gable. South elevation : one-storey porch off-centre; ground-
floor windows of 4-lights, central mullions and transoms removed from some; first-floor windows of 4, 2, 2, 2, 4 and 4 lights. All windows have stone mullions with quarter-round mouldings internally and externally; alternating block jambs
have surrounding quarter-round mouldings. Roofs hipped with swept eaves except for gables over entrances and at Chinese-influence service wing of 2 low storeys. 3 square tapering chimneys, rendered, on ridges. The whole is a balanced compo-sition of varied shapes and scales. Interior : principal rooms ground floor have moulded fireplaces with stone kerbs; all doors have Tudor-arched top panels and ornamental hinges and lock plates; staircases have broad handrails and panelled
balustrades.
Site Name
South Lane, South Lodge
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8064
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 3/68
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
8053
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
440530
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MATERIAL
Render; Timber
MONTH1
02
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
561830
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Whitburn
Description
House, 1867-9, built as lodge to No 47 (Whitburn House) for Thomas Barnes.
Timber frame with rendered infill; Welsh slate roof. In similar style to No
47. One storey, 2 bays with 2-light mullioned windows. Entrance porch on east
gable facing the drive. Overhanging eaves with curved wooden brackets; decorative
ridge tiles. Adjoining on south is a low semicircular wall of moulded and
grey brick, with bright red brick and decorated stone piers and wire railings
set in rendered panels. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner:- "is in the same vein [as No. 47] but one-storey. In the garden, a re-erected fragment of the chancel of St John, Newcastle (demolished 1848) brought here c.1867-9. It has a four-light Perp window".
Site Type: Broad
Lodge
SITEDESC
House, 1867-9, built as lodge to No 47 (Whitburn House) for Thomas Barnes.
Timber frame with rendered infill; Welsh slate roof. In similar style to No
47. One storey, 2 bays with 2-light mullioned windows. Entrance porch on east
gable facing the drive. Overhanging eaves with curved wooden brackets; decorative
ridge tiles. Adjoining on south is a low semicircular wall of moulded and
grey brick, with bright red brick and decorated stone piers and wire railings
set in rendered panels {1}. Later box dormer to main roof slope has an unsympathetic flat roof.
Site Name
49 Front Street, The Lodge
Site Type: Specific
Lodge
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8054
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 4/36
YEAR1
2006
English, British
ADDITINF
N
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
8054
DAY1
01
District
S Tyneside
Easting
440560
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MATERIAL
Render; Timber
MONTH1
02
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
561840
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Whitburn
Description
House. 1867-9 for Thomas Barnes, coalowner. Stone and half-timber with rendered
infill; roof of pantiles and plain tiles. 2 storeys; 2 bays of stone cross-gabled
then five of ornamental geometric timber-framing. The stone bays have 3-light
mullioned and transomed lower windows with small shell segmental pediments,
2-light mullioned windows above with decorated segmental pediments, and small
round windows in the gable peaks; the timber-framed part has a central door
with a timber porch and T-mullioned windows. A wood balcony on brackets runs
along the eaves in front of 2 small and one larger dormer windows which have
barge-boards as have the 2 large gables. Rainwater heads have the dates 1569
and 1869. West elevation, which is rendered, has 2 oriel windows at first floor.
East elevation has decorative timber and a brick chimney stack. A second ridge
chimney. Main entrance to rear has an oblong fanlight, Tuscan pilasters and
cornice. Rear wing of render with pantiled roof : 2 storeys, 6 bays and a one-bay
return. LISTED GRADE 2
SITEASS
Pevsner calls it "another extravaganza by Thomas Barnes… a five-bay Georgian house, the most inauthentic timbering of 1867-9 in panels of lozenges and foliated figures. Wooden balconies on brackets to alternate first-floor windows and, with an Alpine smack, a huge top-heavy trellised one at the eaves serving three gable dormers..".
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
House. 1867-9 for Thomas Barnes, coalowner. Stone and half-timber with rendered
infill; roof of pantiles and plain tiles. 2 storeys; 2 bays of stone cross-gabled
then five of ornamental geometric timber-framing. The stone bays have 3-light
mullioned and transomed lower windows with small shell segmental pediments,
2-light mullioned windows above with decorated segmental pediments, and small
round windows in the gable peaks; the timber-framed part has a central door
with a timber porch and T-mullioned windows. A wood balcony on brackets runs
along the eaves in front of 2 small and one larger dormer windows which have
barge-boards as have the 2 large gables. Rainwater heads have the dates 1569
and 1869. West elevation, which is rendered, has 2 oriel windows at first floor.
East elevation has decorative timber and a brick chimney stack. A second ridge
chimney. Main entrance to rear has an oblong fanlight, Tuscan pilasters and
cornice. Rear wing of render with pantiled roof : 2 storeys, 6 bays and a one-bay
return {1}. Thomas Barnes previously lived at The Red Cottage, but his wife wanted something larger. True decorative exuberence in mock-Elizabethan style. Ornate black and white half-timbering in panels of lozenges and foliated figures. The two stone bays on the west end may survive from an earlier building.
Site Name
47 Front Street, Whitburn House
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
8053
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest, 4/34
YEAR1
2006