Earsdon
Earsdon | |
Earsdon Front Street with The Cannon public house |
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Earsdon |
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OS grid reference | NZ322725 |
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Metropolitan borough | North Tyneside |
Metropolitan county | Tyne and Wear |
Region | North East |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | WHITLEY BAY |
Postcode district | NE25 |
Dialling code | 0191 |
Police | Northumbria |
Fire | Tyne and Wear |
Ambulance | North East |
EU Parliament | North East England |
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Coordinates: 55°02′47″N 1°29′43″W / 55.0463°N 1.4952°W
Earsdon is a historical village in the borough of North Tyneside in the county of Tyne and Wear, England. It sits on the border of Northumberland (to which it belonged in the past), and is approximately two miles from Whitley Bay. The village had a population of 613 in 2011.[1]
History
Earsdon was an urban district from 1894 to 1935, consisting of the four parishes of Earsdon, Backworth, Holywell, and Murton. It was then split between Seaton Valley, Tynemouth, and Whitley and Monkseaton, with Seaton Valley taking the bulk of the population of both the district and Earsdon parish.
Features
The graveyard of St Alban's Anglican church is home to a memorial to the 204 men and boys killed in the Hartley Colliery Disaster of 1862, at the nearby village of New Hartley. There is also a war memorial in the village.
A second church, Earsdon Methodist Chapel, is located within a former quarry.
There is a disused coal mine works a short distance from the village, including the Fenwick Heap. After closure, the heap spontaneously combusted underground and was burning internally until work started to reclaim the land. The reclamation work started in 2009 and was completed in September 2010.
In fiction
- The children's television series Supergran was filmed in part in the village.
- The Beehive Inn near Earsdon was used for the filming of the 1976 film The Likely Lads.
Gallery
- Church of St Alban
- Monument to Hartley Pit Disaster in St Alban's churchyard
References
- ↑ St Mary's census data 2011 – Earsdon is made up of two census output areas.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Earsdon. |
- Genuki.bpaers.org.uk, accessed November 10, 2008