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Seaton Carew, the Green 1914
Memories of Seaton Carew, the Green
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Year: 1945
Seaton Carew
I lived in Seaton Carew from about 1944 to 1947. My parents ran a boarding house at 4 The Cliffe, (my sister was born there) adjacent to the Staincliffe, which as I recall (I was a 4 year old) was occupied by RAF personnel. I recall the bad winter of 1946, and the tremendous amount of snowfall. My first schooldays (kindergarten?) were at Seaton Carew. We used to go hunting for crabs on Blackhall rocks when the tide was out. Still have some old family photos taken on the beach. Posted: 13/11/2007 03:56 by Keith Booth |
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![]() Hartlepool, War Memorial c1955 (ref: H32321) |
War Memorial A memory of Hartlepool, Cleveland This war memorial is in what we called Old Hartlepool, near the sea by the Hartlepool Docks/Headland. The war memorial for West Hartlepool was called the Cenotaph and was in Victoria Road, West Hartlepool. Last edited: 14/07/2008 11:36 by Frances Walker |
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Year: 1910s
W. Hartlepool WW1 A memory of West Hartlepool, County Durham My father, Maurice Arthur (1902-1982), was the son of the GP, W. B. Arthur, in Wingate. He kept a daily diary from 1917 to 1982. There are many entries regarding Hartlepool, WW1 and the Durham Minefields. However, in 1918 he states (040218) "Hartlepool Tank gets £803,421". Then on 090218 he states, "Tank No 130, total to 4 pm. £2,200,000". And there are other references. These refer to a lot of money in those days. Were they some kind of War Effort? I wonder if any local historian can tell me what these "tanks" were? roland@rebarthur.f9.co.uk Last edited: 19/06/2008 15:29 by Roland Arthur |
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![]() West Hartlepool, Terraces, Ward Jacksons Park c1955 (ref: W66005) |
Memorial to South African War A memory of West Hartlepool, County Durham I need your help. The man who modeled for the statue seen in this photo is my grandfather. Unfortunately, the museum has the wrong man as the model, a relative with a close name who wasn't even born when the statue was made. Is it possible for you to get the original newspaper article stating who dedicated the statue as I believe that person was my grandmother. The model's name was Joseph Andrew Bright McClure and he worked for the stonemason who did the statue. I have the paperwork to prove it. The statue was vandalized and the bronze taken and only the boots remained for many years. Now only the cairn remains. I am anxious to clear this error before my mother dies as it was her father. Diane Posted: 10/10/2007 01:31 by Diane Fulton |
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![]() West Hartlepool, Wesley Church 1901 (ref: 46943) |
Year: 1880s
Chisholm Cottage A memory of West Hartlepool, County Durham My great-great-great grandparents lived opposite Wesley Chapel in the late 1800s, behind the trees on the right-hand-side of the 1901 Wesley Chapel photo. During the 1830s, Richard JACK (b1813) and some of his brothers moved to Hartlepool from Dalkeith Scotland. In 1841 Richard lived in Northgate Street, with his brothers nearby - they were coal trimmers. Richard lived with the WALTONs from Hexham, Northumberland; Thomas WALTON a Mason by trade; son William WALTON, a Joiner. Richard married Thomas' daughter Margaret WALTON (b1819). In 1851 Richard and family were on their own in Northgate Street. Richard JACK and two sons (Samuel and William Chisholm) were not found in the 1861 census, but Richard's wife and their youngest son were with the WALTONs - now on the East Side of Old Hart Road, Stranton, among the houses known as Fountain Terrace. (The area is now Raby Road, and on the north side of Wesley Square.) Fountain Terrace dates back to the 1850s and is shown on the 1856 plan of West Hartlepool town. It was adjacent to a large detached house called Fountain House. There was an area of land between the Fountain Terrace, and Fountain House. Wesley Chapel was not drawn on the 1856 town plan, but when it was built, it was opposite these properties. Oral history says some of the family visited Australia "twice". We found a ship named "Eagles" with JACK passengers (Richd, "Melvuille", and J.) - all names familiar to our JACKs - the ship departed Victoria AUS for Liverpool, ENG in February 1856. Were they our JACKs? Was this the same ship Eagles reported in the Edinburgh newspaper "The Scotsman" on 27 Nov 1852 that it "returned to England from Australia with 600+ tons of gold - the largest amount of the precious metal ever known to arrive in one vessel"? It made the "most rapid passage ever on record, having done the voyage ... in seventy-six days". In 1857 Richard JACK, and two of his sons (Samuel and William Chisholm), and Richard's brother Thomas, visited Australia as "miners" on the SS Great Britain. We think Samuel went again in 1863 on the same ship; we have lost track of him. What has all this has to do with the 1900 photograph of Wesley Chapel in West Hartlepool? In the 1871 census, Richard JACK was back in Hartlepool, but this time living with his family in Fountain Terrace, Stranton.. Richard is no longer a coal trimmer, but a gardener. His daughter's family is in the house - Mary and Joseph Pattison - a coppersmith. In 1881, Richard, a Sawyer, still lives in the area of Fountain Terrace, with wife Margaret. This time, his property is described as Chisholm Cottage (the Chisholm name after Margaret's grandfather - James Chisholm - of Hexham, Northumberland) - a double-tennement building, housing up to four families, on that previously vacant land between Fountain Terrace and Fountain House - all properties opposite Wesley Chapel in Old Hart Road. Some JACKs wonder if they "struck it rich" during their "exploits" in AUS, but by 1857, the excitement of the gold rush in Victoria had reached its climax, and most of the alluvial gold had been retrieved.. The 1891 to 1912 West Hartlepool town map clearly shows the area where Chisholm Cottage stood; the street numbers can be transposed onto the map from a 1954 area map. Margaret JACK was alive and living in Chisholm Cottage when the 1901 photo of Wesley Chapel was taken. Richard died in 1896. Margaret died in 1903. Sadly we have no photograph or painting of "Chisholm Cottage", and the nearest we can see of it, is the trees in front of it on the right-hand-side of the 1901 Chapel photo. Chisholm Cottage of Old Hart Road, Stranton is not to be confused with Chisholm Villa which appears in the 1901 census in Clifton Avenue, West Hartlepool - owned by Richard and Margaret's youngest son Richard and wife Martha. He was a Tappersmith , with sons Richard (a Coppersmith) and John (a Clerk). A 1948 aerial photo of West Hartlepool, clearly shows that Fountain House was demolished. The resulting vacant land became a car park. Fountain Terrace itself survived into the 1950s when it was known as 8 to 26 Hart Road, West Hartlepool. The name Hart Road was changed to Raby Road on the amalgamation of West Hartlepool and Hartlepool in 1967. A small remnant of the Terrace survived up to the early 1970s. During the 1990s the area changed considerably. Raby Road was realigned and a new public square developed with an office building - New Clarence House - on part of the Fountain Terrace site. The 1854 town map shows where the original Clarence House once stood. Wesley Square was completed in 1998. We visited Hartlepool in 2003, and observed the changes to the Old Hart Lane/Raby road area over the years. Such important land where our JACKs once lived! Richard JACK had many descendants who inherited his name including Richard JACK (1866-1952) - the Royal Academician and Royal Portrait Painter, who was also an official World War I war artist for Canada. The young lads standing in front of the chapel would be the about the same age as my grandfather at that time - David JACK - who emigrated to Australia in 1924 with his wife Frances Mary ROBINSON, and son David William JACK (my father). Where are the descendants of those relatives now lost to us who went to Canada and America, and beyond? Maybe they have a photo of our ancestral home opposite Wesley Chapel. Vivienne Hooper (nee JACK) Australia Posted: 30/01/2007 11:21 by Vivienne Hooper |
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