Shotton Colliery Explained

Country:England
Official Name:Shotton Colliery
Static Image Name:Memorial Pit Wheel Shotton Colliery - geograph.org.uk - 662090.jpg
Static Image Caption:Memorial Pit Wheel, Shotton Colliery.
Coordinates:54.7598°N -1.3942°W
Civil Parish:Shotton
Unitary England:County Durham
Lieutenancy England:County Durham
Region:North East England
Constituency Westminster:Easington
Postcode Area:DH
Dial Code:0191
Os Grid Reference:NZ3908240712

Shotton Colliery is a village in County Durham, England.

The civil parish of Shotton includes Shotton Colliery village and an area to the west, south and east, but is bordered by the A19 road to the east and does not include the village of Old Shotton which is to the east of that road and forms part of the town of Peterlee.[1] It has a parish council.[2] [3]

History

The village

Old Shotton can be traced back as far as 900 AD, when it was known as Scitton, which in Old English means 'of the Scots', The village name[4] was first recorded in 1165 as 'Sottun'. By the 16th century, when Easington was under the control of Prince Bishop of DurhamZPrince Bishops, the village had become known as Shotton.

In 1756, the Brandlings built Shotton Hall and this eventually passed through marriage to the Burdon family.

The colliery

In 1833, the Haswell Coal Company began to sink a colliery to the west of Old Shotton, near Shotton Grange Farm. This pit began producing coal the following year, and the village of Shotton Colliery soon started to develop.

The pit was initially prosperous, but it closed on 3 November 3 1877, causing people to leave the village to work at other pits in the area. In 1900, the pit reopened and grew rapidly, leading to an increased population in the village. More housing was built, making other industries, including the Coke Works and the Brick Works, less popular.

By 1947, the original houses, east of the railway line, were in disrepair. Most of the bottom of Front Street was demolished.

In 1972, the National Coal Board announced that it was closing the colliery, at a cost of 800 jobs. Easington District Council built new housing in the 1970s, pulling down most of the remaining pit houses in an attempt to improve the village. Throughout most of the 1970s, work was done to remove the pit heap, which was at one time the largest in the country. The Brick Works and Coke Works went with the pit.

The only pit building left is now used as a second-hand car showroom. The remains of the pit baths remain semi-derelict.

Present-day

Shotton Airfield/Peterlee Parachute Centre now occupies the colliery site, and it is common to see parachutists over the village most days.

Most of the parish's pubs, cinemas and the railway station have been demolished or converted to other uses. A small number of shops are left.

The village is now almost empty of work. There are a few industrial units close to the airfield and on the opposite side of the village at Thornley Crossings, but the main sources of employment are call centres which opened east of the village, dividing Shotton Colliery and Old Shotton.

Some of the buildings at Grange Farm remain and now overlook fields as they did in the 1840s, some of which contain the hard runway and hangars and other buildings of the parachute centre.

The war memorial in Front Street is Grade II listed and is the only listed building in the parish. It has an inscription "Erected 1920 by the parishioners and federated workmen of Shotton Colliery to the memory of the 152 men who fell in the Great War 1914-1919".

Notable residents

References

  1. Web site: Shotton Civil Parish . co-curate.ncl.ac.uk . 27 May 2024.
  2. Web site: Shotton Parish Council . cdalc.info . County Durham Association of Local District Councils . 27 May 2024.
  3. Web site: Working in Partnership for Our Community . Shotton Parish Council . 27 May 2024.
  4. Web site: Site Details . Keystothepast.info . 2013-11-10.

External links