Lobley Hill
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Lobley Hill is located in the west of the old
County Borough County borough is a term introduced in 1889 in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to refer to a borough or a city independent of county council control, similar to the unitary authorities created since the 1990s. An equivalent te ...
of Gateshead within the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead in
Tyne and Wear Tyne and Wear () is a metropolitan county in North East England, situated around the mouths of the rivers Tyne and Wear. It was created in 1974, by the Local Government Act 1972, along with five metropolitan boroughs of Gateshead, Newc ...
, North East
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
having been previously part of the parish of
Whickham Whickham is a village in Tyne and Wear, North East England. It is in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead. The village is on high ground overlooking the River Tyne and south-west of Newcastle upon Tyne. It was formerly governed under the histor ...
. In its Demographic Profile for the Lobley Hill Plan Area produced in 2008 the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead quoted the 2001 census showing Lobley Hill had a population of around 6,199 of which 48% were males and 52% were females. Later at the 2011 Census, the ward was called Lobley Hill and
Bensham Bensham is a suburban area in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead. The area consists mainly of residential properties, with a range of predominantly terraced housing, built between the late 1890s and the 1980s. Community Like nearby Saltwell ...
. The population of this Gateshead MBC ward was 10,698.


Development of the community

The current Lobley Hill is defined by its boundaries as it has grown to fill the hillside while development along its eastern edge has encroached significantly since the first of the present housing was built in 1930s. The
River Team The River Team is a tributary of the River Tyne in Gateshead, England. Etymology The name ''Team'' may have a Brittonic origin. The name may be from the Brittonic root ''tā-'', with a sense of "melting, thawing, dissolving", plus a nasal root ...
lies just beyond what would have been considered a part of Lobley Hill separating it from the Teams,
Bensham Bensham is a suburban area in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead. The area consists mainly of residential properties, with a range of predominantly terraced housing, built between the late 1890s and the 1980s. Community Like nearby Saltwell ...
and Saltwell, Tyne and Wear areas of Gateshead but the development of the
Team Valley Team Valley is a trading estate located in Gateshead. It is home to the Retail World retail park, with many large, international companies are based in the area's trading estate. In 2017, there were approximately 700 companies on the estate, emp ...
Trading Estate hardened that boundary while the eventual building and upgrading of the A1 in Newcastle upon Tyne has ensured a definite edge. The southern neighbours are long enclosed farmland and estates which include
Ravensworth Castle (Tyne and Wear) Ravensworth Castle is a ruinous Grade II* listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument situated at Lamesley, Tyne and Wear, England. The building has been destroyed and rebuilt a number of times, and was the seat of the Ravensworth barons, t ...
. The western boundary is part of an industrial history of coal mining, railways and shipping. The waggonway forming that boundary links the collieries at Tanfield and Marley Hill to the River Tyne which have been developed over preceding centuries with the
Causey Arch The Causey Arch is a bridge near Stanley in County Durham, northern England. It is the oldest surviving single-arch railway bridge in the world, and a key element of the industrial heritage of England. It carried an early wagonway (horse-draw ...
at its southern end and the iconic
Dunston Staiths Dunston is particularly known for wooden coal staiths, first opened in 1893 as a structure for loading coal from the North Durham coalfield onto ships. In the 1920s, 140,000 tons of coal per week were loaded from the staiths, and they continued to ...
at the northern terminus. The distinction between Lobley Hill and
Dunston, Tyne and Wear Dunston is a western area of the town of Gateshead on the south bank of the River Tyne, in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead, North East England (into which it was absorbed in 1974). Dunston had a population of 18,326 at the 2011 Census. ...
that the waggonway provided has eroded as housing developed to the west of the waggonway filling the area between the two communities. The Lobley Hill built within the pre-1974 boundaries of the old County Borough used three distinctive sets of street names in the areas of domestic housing, in addition to the longstanding Lobley Hill Road, Consett Road and Coach Road. The initial housing took the names of trees, or more specifically their wood, on the south side of Lobley Hill Road while the south west has location names from Northumberland. The north side takes the names of ranges of British hills. Oakfield Road seems not quite to belong to any of these groups. As the first census to identify residents shows, the original location and population was a single farm in the parish of Whickham and some distance from the boundary with the town of Gateshead. Lobley Hill served as the location of heavy
anti-aircraft battery Anti-aircraft warfare, counter-air or air defence forces is the battlespace response to aerial warfare, defined by NATO as "all measures designed to nullify or reduce the effectiveness of hostile air action".AAP-6 It includes surface based ...
"Tyne F" during
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
. It included a command post, four 4.5-inch gun emplacements and two magazines. It was manned by 296 Battery of the 66th Royal Artillery Regiment in May 1940, and by 176 Battery of the 63rd Royal Artillery Regiment in December 1940. Some parts of the battery's structure were still on the site in the 1960s, although it was later demolished to make way for building development. The area was known for some time as the Gun Site long after the military withdrew. Some of the Army Huts were put into immediate post-war use as Council housing prior to extensive building works while other parts remained in use as the first primary school until Rothbury Gardens site was developed and continued as classrooms as a part of the primary school for several years after that building was opened. One hut was the branch library on the main road until replaced by the new building and for several years the site was used for part of the pedestrian foot bridge.


Education

The first primary school for Lobley Hill was a section of the Gun Site installation behind the west end of Oakfield Road at its highest point of the hill. The second was subsequently built on Rothbury Gardens and opened around 1952 but has been replaced at the same location. Secondary education arrived in 1960 with a school built to the west of the waggonway on Whickham Highway. Housing has been built on that site since it closed in 1990. There are two schools in Lobley Hill. Emmanuel College is a City Technology College and offers schooling for 11–18 years old from a wide area of Western Gateshead and the West End of Newcastle. Lobley Hill primary school offers schooling for 4–11 years old and includes a nursery school. There is also Hillside Pre-school nursery run in the All Saints Church building. And there are local courses run at the Lobley Hill Youth and Community Centre.


Churches

There are two churches in Lobley Hill. All Saints Church is Anglican the older of the two. The Immaculate Heart Of Mary Church is a Roman
Catholic The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide . It is among the world's oldest and largest international institutions, and has played a ...
church. There used to be a Methodist chapel on Beechwood Gdns but this building now no longer exists.


Emmanuel House

On a street in Lobley Hill lies the Hospice Emmanuel House, fronted by long-time devout Catholic, Christine Deponio. The hospice itself is operated within her house, along with Husband Raymond, and sons Ryan and Lee Deponio, often performing fund-raising activities for clients and visitors to the house. Emmanuel House deals with local people who have been touched by cancer. As well as being a trained holistic therapist and a black belt in karate, Christine Deponio is also completely blind, as is her husband Raymond. Obviously all she has achieved with Emmanuel house and also being very musically talented is a massive achievement considering this disability.


Recreation and local events

It has a recently constructed park, called Watergate Forest Park, built on reclaimed land on the site of the former Watergate Colliery which may have been among some of the first places where industrial coal mining methods were used. Lobley Hill hosted the annual Gateshead Flower Show. In July 2008, the first Lobley Hill Festival was held, this is to be an annual event. There is a 9-hole pitch and putt golf course and driving range facility located at Beggars Wood. Lobley Hill is the home of youth football club Rutherford United with football facilities including full sized and 5 or 6 a side football pitches.


Famous residents

*Gateshead footballer, coach and manager Tom Callender *Liberty X band member,
Michelle Heaton Michelle Christine Heaton (born 19 July 1979) is an English pop singer, actress and television personality. She was a member of the pop group Liberty X from 2001 until they announced their split in 2007; they reformed one year later for a smal ...
, attended Emmanuel College. *Footballer and football manager
Ian Branfoot Ian Grant Branfoot (born Gateshead, 26 January 1947) is an English former footballer and manager. He played as a defender, and after starting at Gateshead joined Sheffield Wednesday, making his Football League debut in 1965. After 42 senior ap ...
was a pupil at the Primary School. *Bob Fuller CEO Hutchison 3G UK Limited, was a pupil at the Primary School


History

Lobley Hill has been shown on maps over a period of time. The
Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey (OS) is the national mapping agency for Great Britain. The agency's name indicates its original military purpose (see ordnance and surveying), which was to map Scotland in the wake of the Jacobite rising of 1745. There was a ...
taken in 1857 for the map published in 1862 shows Lobley Hill marked at a junction just to the east of the signal box on the Tanfield Branch of the North Eastern Railway against a small group of buildings. These appear to be the buildings occupied according to the 1939 Register, and still standing in 1950s before clearance to make way for the branch library. Also high on the actual hill to the south is Green's Farm on the lane going to Streetgate. Further down the hill to the east at a crossroads that may be familiar as the Coach Road there are a group of buildings on the south east corner which may have been standing into 1960s or 1970s being a bookmakers and Bushells greengrocery. On the north west corner is a wooded area. The wood is marked Nor Wood and the buildings opposite Norwood. The general area within which these appear is shown as Farnacres. Both Norwood and Farnacres have been used for names of local collieries just to the north in Low Teams. The Team Colliery waggonway further to the east is also shown roughly where access to and from the eventual Norwood Coke Works could be seen. This area running north through Low Teams to Dunston Staiths was the site for the
Gateshead Garden Festival The Gateshead Garden Festival was the fourth of the United Kingdom's five national garden festivals. Held between May and October 1990, in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, it lasted 157 days, and received over three million visitors. Attractions i ...
in 1990 which was the fourth in a series of five National Garden Festival redevelopment projects in various parts of England, Scotland and Wales to reclaim industrial land with this held to have kick started a process which resulted in the Baltic centre, Sage Gateshead and the Millennium Bridge. The 1857 survey is close to the decennial 1861 Census in the United Kingdom and confirms the name of Lobley Hill arises from that group of buildings. The name written both as Lobly Hill and Lobley Hill is in schedules for the parish of Whickham comprising Dunston, Farnacres, Norwood and large areas of the Teams. It shows a farmer with agricultural labourers and the location of the house of a brakesman for the nearby top of the waggonway incline. A total of 29 people. The United Kingdom census, 1841 also shows a farm and several agricultural labourers. In the intermediate United Kingdom census, 1851 the schedules for Whickham parish do not identify locations of individual farms and houses. However, the agricultural labourer John Robson appears in all three while the railway brakesman John Brunton is in the same job in 1851 and 1861. The Brunton family were still there in
United Kingdom census, 1871 The United Kingdom Census 1871 was a census of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland carried out on Sunday 2 April 1871. It added the categories of "lunatic" and "imbecile" to those recorded as infirm. The total population of England, ...
while he appears to be working on the waggonway while the Blenkinsop farm had increased in size but was in the same hands. The 1857 map was revised about 1894/1895 and republished a few years later. The area is still showing as entirely rural and there have been no further developments beyond the farms at Lobley Hill, Green's Farm and Norwood although there is an area near the waggonway cottage shown as a coal depot. This is how the area remained for another 30 years.


Housing development

The progress of development can be seen in a photograph (Reference No: GL011742) on Gateshead Libraries Local Studies of the Team Valley and Lobley Hill in 1935. This shows the properties from the 1862 map on Norwood Farm with newer housing on Lobley Hill Road, Coach Road, Elmwood Gardens, and Beechwood Gardens where year of construction is shown on the property once used as a local clinic. There is still a semblance of woodland in the area seen then as Nor Wood. The 1939 Register shows that further development had added housing to the north side of Lobley Hill Road which appears complete starting with number 404, the newsagents and shop that was subsequently lost to demolition when the A1 road was first built through the Team Valley. Oakfield Road is partially developed at this time. On the south side the Waggon Team Inn is shown in this Register although not seen in the 1935 photograph. Lobley Hill Road is only built as far as number 439 running east to west. In addition to extending both Elmwood and Beechwood housing had been added in Thornwood, Elderwood, Oakwood and Pinewood. The south west area shows housing developed along Rothbury, Mitford, Meldon, Alwinton, Cragside, Belsay, Belford and the road to Streetgate shown as Sunniside Road as well as the only pre-war building on Lobley Hill Road west of Rothbury Gardens. The Lobley Hill Farmhouse is still occupied as are the nearby properties seen in previous census.


References


External links


Lobley Hill , OurGateshead

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