EPW049489 ENGLAND (1935). The South Durham Iron and Steel Works and environs, Hartlepool, 1935
© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.
Delweddau cyfagos (5)
Manylion
Pennawd | [EPW049489] The South Durham Iron and Steel Works and environs, Hartlepool, 1935 |
Cyfeirnod | EPW049489 |
Dyddiad | October-1935 |
Dolen | |
Enw lle | HARTLEPOOL |
Plwyf | |
Ardal | |
Gwlad | ENGLAND |
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad | 451440, 530965 |
Hydred / Lledred | -1.2022819650061, 54.671015959638 |
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol | NZ514310 |
Pinnau
Seaton high lighthouse now down the Hartlepool marina |
keith49 |
Sunday 22nd of February 2015 03:44:27 PM |
bachelor robinsons known as the tin works then became Vulcan materials. then finally AMG resources the works is still there but has been sold. |
keith49 |
Sunday 22nd of February 2015 03:42:42 PM |
site of Casebourne's Cliff House cement plant |
Dylan Moore |
Sunday 16th of November 2014 04:41:41 PM |
allotments |
Dylan Moore |
Sunday 16th of November 2014 04:38:44 PM |
Early 20th century extractive industry to the south of Longhill: brick works, clay pits and slag heaps. Most of this area has been reclaimed since the 1960s for modern housing, industrial estates, open space and new roads. |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:36:21 PM |
Engineering works, saw mills and extensive timber yards to the north and west of the main iron and steel factory. |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:30:15 PM |
Terraced housing on Florence, Hill and Portland Streets, long since demolished. |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:28:21 PM |
North Eastern Railway: West Hartlepool Branch |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:22:03 PM |
Seaton Carew Iron Works |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:20:45 PM |
Carr House Sands |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:19:33 PM |
Hartlepool Bay |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:18:22 PM |
West Hartlepool Works |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:17:45 PM |
Cyfraniadau Grŵp
Hartlepool had lost most of its heavy industrial heritage by the 1970s and the areas previously occupied by the South Durham Iron & Steel works became covered in a mixture of light industrial estates, some of which were in place during the immediate postwar years. |
John Swain |
Monday 17th of June 2013 12:02:08 PM |
This view, taken looking north-west towards Hartlepool Bay, with the plumes from the smoking chimneys being carried out to sea on a brisk westerly wind. This large-scale manufacturing industry developed in the second half of the 19th century and was partially responsible for the rapid growth of West Hartlepool, from a population of 14,515 in 1861 to 68,135 70 years later. The merger of the Cargo Fleet Iron Company with the West Hartlepool Steel & Iron Co. created the South Durham Steel & Iron Co. in 1898. The whole area suffered during the Depression of the 1930s, but there was a brief period of recovery in the post-war years, until British Steel closed the plant in 1977 with the loss of 1,500 jobs. The Tubes Division remains extant (Tata Steel Europe). |
John Swain |
Friday 14th of June 2013 09:07:18 AM |
This should read "Looking north-east towards Hartlepool Bay..." |
John Swain |
Friday 14th of June 2013 09:07:18 AM |
An image which reflects the industrial legacy of West Hartlepool and North East England, which lasted little more than a century, from modest beginnings in the 1860s, through mergers in late-Victorian times to create the South Durham Steel & Iron Company, to recession in the 1930s and a brief recovery in post-war Britain, before closure in 1977. This scene is very different at the present time! |
John Swain |
Wednesday 12th of June 2013 07:44:01 PM |