EPW026581 ENGLAND (1929). Consett Iron Works, Consett, 1929
© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.
Manylion
Pennawd | [EPW026581] Consett Iron Works, Consett, 1929 |
Cyfeirnod | EPW026581 |
Dyddiad | May-1929 |
Dolen | |
Enw lle | CONSETT |
Plwyf | |
Ardal | |
Gwlad | ENGLAND |
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad | 409812, 550208 |
Hydred / Lledred | -1.8471800740374, 54.846493540339 |
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol | NZ098502 |
Pinnau
Reservoirs |
J May |
Tuesday 2nd of March 2021 05:34:17 PM |
Low bridge over the Castleside road providing access to the slag heaps. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 01:24:14 PM |
Smoke plumes being carried on a brisk south-westerly wind to produce yet more fumigation effects over the town of Consett. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 01:18:26 PM |
LNER Consett Branch Railway |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:47:15 AM |
Berry Edge Road leading west to Beech Grove and the 17th century Consett Hall. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:46:05 AM |
Knitsley Lane |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:43:27 AM |
Pipe making Plant |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:42:43 AM |
Melting Shop and Angle Mill |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:41:30 AM |
Steel Cogging and Plate Mills |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:40:26 AM |
Blast Furnaces |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:38:30 AM |
Coke Ovens |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:37:57 AM |
Consett |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:37:05 AM |
Delves Brickworks |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:36:07 AM |
Reservoirs |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:35:04 AM |
LNER Annfield Plain Branch |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:34:09 AM |
Coke making plant |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:33:08 AM |
Railway sidings |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:32:33 AM |
Enormous slag heaps which dominated views of the area for over 100 years. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:31:22 AM |
Slag tipping area |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:29:08 AM |
Main road (A692) connecting Castleside on A68 with Leadgate. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:28:31 AM |
The Grove, built in late 1920s to the west of the iron and steelworks. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:26:46 AM |
Cyfraniadau Grŵp
A poem, penned by my son Rob about 5 months ago. Although it is over thirty years since the mighty Steel Works of Consett closed its memory lives and lives. Tom Beckwith Steel Tears Do you know the earth beneath your feet once blew a dusty red Sharp whistles in the distance lad rose all from in their bed Do you know my lad that Consett town was filled with men of muscle Men of steel and iron ore Front Street awash with bustle Do you know my lad that when they tipped the slag into the night Consett clouds shone bright as gold to guide my feet with tender light Though quiet she did fall my lad a wasteland for the wind Unto the wall of commoners we found our backs were pinned In the black yet faced with sack to London once again Like Jarrow men before we stood beneath a stubborn southern reign As dark stumps in a moorland field, battered to and fro By powers far beyond us lad, yet still the works they had to go A century of history so helpless to defend And what of you my precious lad on me you did depend No more the clank of metal or the trains that run through night I fought as hard as any could but shadows do not fight And so their insults cut like knives to decimate this town They even tried to pay me lad to pull the steel works down Brick by brick and yard by yard your heritage there falling And to the queues for pennies lad for many this our calling No more the music of the works play in us their sweet song The old ways disappearing all but little traces, gone Black mountains no more grace our land from deepened seams of coal Still watch the fire as she spits carnations from her soul Though I no more now walk with you it's this that you must know Fire burned within us all that lit the heart a glow She gave this town its industry and in her you are born Yet hopes upon tomorrow lad lie broken and forlorn I tried my lad to save for you a future forged in steel So you my boy before the state would never have to bend or kneel One hope filled wish I leave behind tis that you'll not forget That men worked hard with honesty to toil beneath a red rust sweat Proud men, generations lad, that grafted day and night Forget this not I beg of you, of this do not lose sight Don't dream it as a myth my lad, it's true now can you feel That in your heart their beats the truth young Consett man of steel Rob Beckwith 2013 |
Tom |
Saturday 8th of February 2014 05:49:22 AM |
A poem, penned by my son Rob about 5 months ago. Although it is over thirty years since the mighty Steel Works of Consett closed its memory lives and lives. Tom Beckwith Steel Tears Do you know the earth beneath your feet once blew a dusty red Sharp whistles in the distance lad rose all from in their bed Do you know my lad that Consett town was filled with men of muscle Men of steel and iron ore Front Street awash with bustle Do you know my lad that when they tipped the slag into the night Consett clouds shone bright as gold to guide my feet with tender light Though quiet she did fall my lad a wasteland for the wind Unto the wall of commoners we found our backs were pinned In the black yet faced with sack to London once again Like Jarrow men before we stood beneath a stubborn southern reign As dark stumps in a moorland field, battered to and fro By powers far beyond us lad, yet still the works they had to go A century of history so helpless to defend And what of you my precious lad on me you did depend No more the clank of metal or the trains that run through night I fought as hard as any could but shadows do not fight And so their insults cut like knives to decimate this town They even tried to pay me lad to pull the steel works down Brick by brick and yard by yard your heritage there falling And to the queues for pennies lad for many this our calling No more the music of the works play in us their sweet song The old ways disappearing all but little traces, gone Black mountains no more grace our land from deepened seams of coal Still watch the fire as she spits carnations from her soul Though I no more now walk with you it's this that you must know Fire burned within us all that lit the heart a glow She gave this town its industry and in her you are born Yet hopes upon tomorrow lad lie broken and forlorn I tried my lad to save for you a future forged in steel So you my boy before the state would never have to bend or kneel One hope filled wish I leave behind tis that you'll not forget That men worked hard with honesty to toil beneath a red rust sweat Proud men, generations lad, that grafted day and night Forget this not I beg of you, of this do not lose sight Don't dream it as a myth my lad, it's true now can you feel That in your heart their beats the truth young Consett man of steel Rob Beckwith 2013 |
Tom |
Saturday 8th of February 2014 05:49:19 AM |
A great pic of the former iron and steel works at Consett, County Durham, which began in 1840 and lasted for another 140 years, until closure in 1980. The 650-acre site has now been cleared and reclaimed, so that hardly any vestige remains of one of Britain's major inland steelworks, which employed over 7,000 as late as 1970. |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:56:21 AM |
The Derwent Iron Company started with two blast furnaces in 1840 and rapidly extended its operations over the next half century. With the growth of the iron works, coke ovens and local collieries, the population expanded from 146 in 1831 to over 9,000 in 1901, and the majority of families relied on the extensive works for their livelihood. By 1893 the Consett Iron Company owned ten collieries, seven blast furnaces, steel melting shops, plate and angle mills,a foundry, brickworks and engineering works. Following nationalisation in postwar Britain, the company became part of the British Steel Corporation, employing 7,250 as late as 1970. However, the isolated geographical location of Consett finally told against it and the steelworks closed in 1980. Today, massive reclamation and landscaping schemes have removed almost all traces of the former 650 acre iron and steelworks. Consett has reverted to its former rural setting, within a cleaner, less-polluted environment. The main town was laid out to the north-east of the works and when the prevailing westerly wind blew, Consett was covered in brick-red dust. If the wind was an easterly, then the air was filled with black coal dust! |
John Swain |
Monday 12th of August 2013 09:23:18 AM |