EPW060887 ENGLAND (1939). The Durham Timber Co Sawmill and housing off New Road, Crook, 1939
© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.
Delweddau cyfagos (29)
Manylion
Pennawd | [EPW060887] The Durham Timber Co Sawmill and housing off New Road, Crook, 1939 |
Cyfeirnod | EPW060887 |
Dyddiad | 1-May-1939 |
Dolen | |
Enw lle | CROOK |
Plwyf | |
Ardal | |
Gwlad | ENGLAND |
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad | 416102, 534889 |
Hydred / Lledred | -1.75006565008, 54.708651794482 |
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol | NZ161349 |
Pinnau
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![]() Porcy |
Thursday 29th of August 2019 05:50:46 PM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:09:14 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:07:42 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:07:05 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:06:17 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:03:57 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:02:27 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 09:59:43 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 09:57:53 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 09:57:01 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 09:56:14 AM |
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John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 09:55:40 AM |
Cyfraniadau Grŵp
This is a view looking south-west at the southern edge of the small market town of Crook, which had grown significantly from a hamlet of 193 folk in 1801 to more than 11,400 a century later. The rapid development was almost entirely due to large-scale coal-mining and associated coking plants. When this picture was taken, Crook was still in the throes of the Great Depression, when unemployment rates rose to 34% throughout much of the decade. The town's population reached a peak of 12,706 in 1921, only for it to decline to 11,690 in 1931. One current estimate is 9,547 (2011). The photograph shows some of the newer manufacturing concerns on the southern outskirts of Crook, which would eventually be developed further as a series of industrial estates in post-war years. The railway was closed in the mid-1960s, part of which was used as a new road layout (A689), but most of the housing remains extant. The brickworks were eventually closed in the 1960s after more than a century of activity and the site is now occupied by the Beechburn Industrial Estate. Apart from that, the scene is largely unchanged, in marked contrast to the former works on the north-western side of the town. |
John Swain |
Saturday 31st of August 2013 10:29:27 AM |