Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Company explained

Type:Public company
Industry:Electricity generation and supply
Founded:1901
Defunct:1933
Fate:Reorganisation
Successor:Cleveland and Durham Electric Power Limited
Area Served:Tees district and south and west County Durham,
Services:Electricity generation and supply

The Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Company supplied electricity to the Tees district and to south and west County Durham, England. It generated and supplied electricity from 1904, merged with Newcastle-upon-Tyne Electric Supply Company in 1917 and was dissolved in 1933.

See below for Cleveland and Durham Electric Power Limited.

History

Short Title:Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Act 1901
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Year:1901
Citation:1 Edw. 7. c. civ
Collapsed:yes
Short Title:Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Act 1903
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Year:1903
Citation:3 Edw. 7. c. xxv
Collapsed:yes

The Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Company was established in 1901 under the provisions of the Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Act 1901 (1 Edw. 7. c. civ).[1] Its powers, extended by the Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Act 1903 (3 Edw. 7. c. xxv), were to generate or acquire electricity and provide electricity for lighting and power purposes for users. The area of supply covered 820 square miles.[2] By 1915 the company operated a generating station at Grangetown, Middlesbrough. This had a capacity of 6,000 kW. Energy was also supplied by waste heat stations at Newport, Weardale, Teesbridge, Port Clarence, and Ayresome. It also had agreements to exchange electricity with the Newcastle-upon-Tyne Electric Supply Company (NESCo) and County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company.

Directors

The directors in 1915 were:

Operations

The profits of the company were: £24,360 (1907); £38, 960 (1908); £52,800 (1909).[3]

In 1922 the power station at Grangetown had boilers supplying 290,000 lb/hour of steam to drive four alternators as follows:

1 × 2 MW, 1 × 2.4 MW, 2 × 6.6 MW. Total generating capacity was 17.6 MW.[4]

The company was dissolved in 1933[5] under the provisions of the North-Eastern Electric Supply Act 1932 (22 & 23 Geo. 5, c. xxxii).[6]

Cleveland and Durham Electric Power Limited

Cleveland and Durham Electric Power Limited
Founded:1906
Defunct:1932
Successor:Newcastle-upon-Tyne Electric Supply Company

Cleveland and Durham Electric Power Limited was registered on 18 July 1906. It was formed to acquire shares of the Cleveland and Durham County Electric Power Company and those of the Northern Counties Electricity Supply Company Limited. Its remit was to develop electric power in County Durham, Cleveland and parts of Northumberland.

In order to provide the finance, the company offered £1,000,000 share capital in July 1906.

The company was in financial difficulties and decided to take an electricity supply from the NESCo's Carville power station via a cable under the Tyne at Hebburn.[7]

In 1915 the company had 486 consumers. The number of connections were 36,283 (1910); 40,460 (1911); 48,429 (1912); 55,133 (1913).

Directors

The directors were:

The Cleveland and Durham Company's share capital was fully acquired by NESCo in 1917.

The company was dissolved on 30 September 1932.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Garcke, Emile . Manual of Electrical undertakings, 1914-15 Vol 18 . Electrical Press Limited . 1915 . London . 310–14.
  2. News: 17 July 1906 . A forthcoming electrical issue . 13 . The Times.
  3. News: 20 July 1906 . Cleveland and Durham Electric power . 13 . The Times.
  4. Book: Electricity Commission . Electricity Supply 1920-22 . HMSO . 1925 . London . E152-55, F382-7.
  5. Book: Register of Defunct Companies . Springer . 1990 . 9781349112715 . 123.
  6. Web site: North-Eastern Electric Supply Act 1932 . 21 October 2023.
  7. Book: Hannah, Leslie . Electricity before nationalisation. . Macmillan . 1979 . 0333220862 . London . 31–2.