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James

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Everything posted by James

  1. James

    Dr Pit miners 2.jpg

    Photo from James T. Tuck's book "The Collieries of Northumberland"
  2. Photo taken by Willie Ward in 1952
  3. James

    Dr Pit stables.jpg

    Photo taken by Willie Ward in the underground stables at the Doctor Pit. The person in the centre was the head stablekeeper. No names unfortunately.
  4. James

    Dr Pit Banners.jpg

    Doctor Pit banners. 1948 banner on left. 1960’s banner on right.
  5. James

    Dr Pit union men.jpg

    Doctor Pit union men in 1960’s. Andy Fairbairn in middle at back. Anty Thompson on extreme right.
  6. From Stephen Martin’s booklet on Bedlington – “The old mill at the top of Bedlington Bank was built in 1821. Called Petrie’s mill, it was initially worked by a windmill and later by steam.”
  7. James

    DunCow1940s..jpg

    Dun Cow with the Co-op grocery dept on the right and Marshall’s buildings on the left
  8. Eggy I have duplicated this photo - can I delete it? James
  9. James

    Hartford Road.jpg

    Hartford Road with Hartford Crescent on the left in 1924
  10. James

    Hoppings.jpg

    The following is an extract from the book “Leisure and Recreation in a Victorian Mining Community” by Alan Metcalfe ……….. …….”this, is illustrated vividly by the history of the Bedlington hoppings which were held for three days every Whitsuntide from sometime in the seventeenth century.72 The focal point of the three days of festivities was the Front Street and the adjacent side streets. The Hoppings attracted commercial attractions from outside Bedlington. The streets were filled with "numerous swing boats, galloping horses, shooting galleries, cocoa nut stalls, ice creamers, hokeypokeyites, Jaffa orange vendors, ginger bread stalls'.73 Over the years menageries, circuses, theatres, boxing booths and a variety of other entertainments visited the hoppings. However, changes began to appear in the 1860s and it was in the athletic events that changes were to be observed, In the I850s the programme consisted of a variety of footraces, three-legged races, old men's races, tilting the bucket and climbing the greasy pole for a leg of mutton, Over the next 5O years they became more "athletic' with the 120 yard handicap becoming the premier event. However, there were some things that did not change: the central role of the innkeepers and tradesmen in organizing and sponsoring the events. They were, from the outset, commercial enterprises. However what is most significant is that real lack of change in the location, Despite efforts from the police in the 1890s to remove racing from the Front Street and the various attempts to introduce alternative sports, the basic form of the hoppings remained unchanged, They provide a salutary lesson on the power of tradition in the mining communities” …………
  11. James

    Church.jpg

    This photo shows the church with the semi - circular aisle and gallery that was demolished in 1912 and replaced with the rectangular North aisle and gallery that we see today. (From a Church of England booklet published 1949.)
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