DOWN THE TYNE.
The town of Hexham, standing on hilly
ground overlooking the Tyne, immediately below the
point at which the North and South Tyne unite, and
spreading from thence down to the levels all round,
is one of the most ancient in the kingdom. To
write of Hexham with any measure of fulness would
require much more space than can be given to it within
the limits of a small book; only a mere summary can
be offered here. Britons, Romans, and Saxons,
in turn, have dwelt on and around the hill which, in
Saxon days, was to be crowned with Wilfrid’s
beautiful Abbey, which, we read, surpassed all others
in England at that time for beauty and excellence
of design and workmanship; nor was there another to
equal it anywhere on this side of the Alps.
The name of Hexham is generally understood
to be derived from the names of two little streams,
the Hextol and the Halgut, now the Cowgarth and the
Cockshaw Burns, which here flow into the Tyne; or,
as Mr. Bates suggests, it may have been the “ham”
of “some forgotten Hagustald,” which the
name perpetuates. In any case its name was Hagustaldesham
when King Ecgfrith (or Egfrid) of Northumbria gave
it to his queen, Etheldreda, who wished to take the
veil. Queen Etheldreda, however, preferred to
go to East Anglia, which was her home; she retired
to a convent at Ely, and bestowed the land at Hagustaldesham
on Wilfrid, a monk of Lindisfarne, clever, ambitious
and hardworking, who had become Bishop of York, which
meant Bishop of all Northumbria.
Wilfrid had been to Rome, and seen
the churches of that city and of the lands through
which he travelled; and, on his appointment to power,
he set himself to make the churches of his diocese
worthy to compare with those of older civilizations.
He did much to the cathedral of York, and built that
of Ripon; but the Abbey of Hexham was his masterpiece.
He built a monastery and church, dedicating the latter
to St. Andrew, for it was in the church of St. Andrew
at Rome that, kneeling, he felt himself fired with
enthusiasm for his work, in the same church from which
Augustine had set out on his journey to Britain some
fifty years before. The year 674 is generally
accepted as the date on which this noble Abbey was
founded.
Wilfrid lived in great splendour at
York, and ruled his immense diocese with a firm hand;
in fact, he was the first of that line of great ecclesiastics
who have moved with such proud, and oft-times turbulent,
progress through the pages of English history.
King Ecgfrith’s second wife, Ermenburga, was
jealous of the great power and magnificence of the
Northumbrian prelate, and through her influence, Archbishop
Theodore was induced to divide the huge diocese of
Northumbria into four portions York, Hexham,
Ripon and Withern in Galloway. Wilfrid, naturally
indignant, found all his protests disregarded, and
immediately set out for Rome, to obtain a decree of
restitution from the Pope. It was given to him,
but little cared the Northumbrians for that. Wilfrid
was imprisoned for nine months, and then banished from
Northumbria.
He went southwards and dwelt in Sussex,
where his genius for hard work found scope in a mission
to the Saxons of the south lands, and where he built
and founded more churches and monasteries. Readers
of “Rewards and Fairies” will have made
acquaintance with Wilfrid in his Sussex wanderings
and hardships. On his recall to the North by King
Aldfrith, he returned to Hexham. On the death
of Aldfrith, the new King, Edwulf, banished Wilfrid
once more, ordering him to leave the kingdom within
six days; but the friends of Aldfrith’s young
son, whom Edwulf had dispossessed, obtained the ascendancy,
and Wilfrid was re-instated in his Abbeys of Hexham
and Ripon.
While on his way back from Rome, on
his last visit, Wilfrid had a severe illness, but
was granted a vision in which he was told that he had
four years more to live, and that he must build a
church to the honour of the Blessed Virgin. The
little church of St. Mary, which stood close to the
walls of the great Abbey of Hexham, was erected in
fulfilment of this command.
In the Abbey church itself, all that
was known for centuries of the original work of Wilfrid
was the famous crypt, which is almost unique, that
of Ripon, also the work of Wilfrid, being the only
one like it; but recent excavations have brought much
more of the ancient cathedral to light, and laid bare,
not only its original plan, but some of the walls,
and part of the very pavement trodden by the feet of
Wilfrid and his fellows so many centuries ago.
The tomb of Wilfrid, however, is not at Hexham, but
at his other foundation of Ripon.
The ancient Abbey suffered much at
the hands of the Danes, and in later years from the
ravages of the Scots, having been burnt several times,
notably in 1296, when 40,000 Scots ravaged the North
of England, plundering, burning, and laying waste
wherever they went, exactly as the Danes had done
four hundred years before. Some of the stones
of the old Abbey yet bear traces of the fires by which
the ancient building was so often nearly destroyed,
and in these frequent conflagrations all records,
charters, etc., of the Abbey, from which might
have been compiled a complete history, not only of
the Abbey but of much of the provincial and national
history of the times, were lost.
The Abbey was restored and rebuilt
again and again, but for varying reasons was without
a nave for some hundreds of years. Within the
last ten years, however, a complete restoration has
been carried out, under the loving, and, what is more
to the point, the capable superintendence of Canon
Savage and his colleagues, in the spirit and manner,
as nearly as possible, of the beautiful portions already
standing; and several disfiguring so-called “restorations”
of nineteenth century work, which could only detract
from the beauty and dignity of the noble building,
have been removed entirely. This work was completed
in 1908, and all who have the honour of our famous
county at heart must rejoice that its noblest church
is at last more worthy of its own high rank and glorious
past.
Among the many deeply interesting
objects to be seen in the Abbey is the stone Sanctuary
seat the Frid Stool, or seat of peace at
which fugitives, fleeing from their enemies, might
find refuge. It is believed that this was the
“Cathedra” of St. Wilfrid himself.
The arms and back of the chair are ornamented with
a twisted knot-work pattern. The right of Sanctuary
extended for a mile round the Abbey, the boundaries
being marked by crosses, one at each point of the
compass at that distance.
Other treasures of the Abbey are the
beautiful Old Rood Screen, dating from the end of
the fifteenth or beginning of the sixteenth century;
some wonderful old paintings, especially the portraits
of the early Bishops of Hexham, Alcmund, Wilfrid,
Acca, Eata, Frithbert, Cuthbert, and John, which date
from the fifteenth century; the mediaeval carved and
painted pulpit, and the tomb of good King Alfwald of
Northumbria. Many of the stones used by Wilfrid’s
builders were of Roman workmanship, and seem to have
come from the Roman city of Corstopitum, at Corbridge.
An inscription on one of these old stones in the crypt
takes us back some centuries before even Wilfrid’s
time, for it commemorates the Emperor Severus and
his two sons, Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (Caracalla)
and Publius Septimius Geta, and has the name of
the latter erased, as was done on all similar inscriptions
throughout the Empire, by order of the inhuman Caracalla,
after his murder of his brother.
A very interesting feature of the
building is the stone stairway in the South transept,
by which the monks ascended to their dormitories above.
Quite near to the Abbey, at the other
side of the Market Place, the ancient Moot Hall claims
attention. The modern visitor to the old town
walks beneath the gloomy archway, with its time-worn
stones, which forms the basement over which the Moot
Hall stands. Another building, grim and dark,
near at hand, is the Old Manor House, in which the
business connected with the ancient Manor of Hexham
was transacted.
An old foundation in the town was
the Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, which, after having
fallen into desuetude for many years, has been revived
in a form appropriate to modern needs, and housed in
a worthy building, formally opened by Sir Francis
Blake on November 2nd, 1910. The site on which
the new Grammar School of Queen Elizabeth stands is
one of the finest in the county, commanding, as it
does, an uninterrupted view of the river valley for
some distance, and of the rising ground beyond.
At the beginning of last century,
Hexham was famed for its glove-making: but that
industry has forsaken the town for many years.
Now, Hexham is surrounded by acres of market-gardens,
from which the produce of Tynedale is carried far
and wide.
The spacious stretch of level meadow-land
below Hexham, rising gradually up to the swelling
ridges beyond, is said to have been the scene which
John Martin had in mind when he painted the “Plains
of Heaven”; though the level reaches above Newburn,
unencumbered with buildings in John Martin’s
time, and then a scene of quiet pastoral beauty, also
claim that honour.
Flowing now between well ordered gardens,
green meadows, and ferny banks, brawling musically
over shingly shallows, or crooning gently between
fringing woods, the Tyne rolls onward to Corbridge,
receiving on its way the Devil’s Water, a sparkling
stream which flows through scenes of enchanting beauty,
whether between rugged cliffs and heather clad hills
as in its upper course, through the graceful overhanging
trees and cool green recesses of Dipton woods or between
rich meadows and green pasture-land where it loses
itself in the bosom of the Tyne.
There is no more delightful experience
than to wander through the woods of Deepdene (Dipton)
on a summer’s day, when it requires no stretch
of the imagination to believe oneself in an enchanted
forest, or, on hearing a crackle of twigs, or faint
sounds of the outside world filtering through the
green solitudes, to turn round expecting to see a
maiden on a “milk-white steed,” or one
of the Knights of the Round Table come riding by,
in bravery of glistening armour and gay surtout, and
to find oneself murmuring, “Now, Sir Gawain
rode apace, and came unto a right fair wood, and findeth
the stream of a spring that ran with a great rushing,
and nigh thereunto was a way that was much haunted.
He abandoneth his high-way, and goeth all along the
stream from the spring that lasteth a long league
plenary, until that he espieth a right fair house
and right fair chapel enclosed within a hedge of wood.”
On the green meadows of Hexham Levels
and near Dilston Castle two spots of more
than ordinary historical interest the Lancastrian
cause received, in 1464, a blow from which it never
rallied, though the courageous Queen fought gallantly
till the final disasters at Barnet and Tewkesbury.
The general of her forces, the Duke of Somerset, was
beheaded in Hexham market-place, and, together with
several others of rank and station, buried at Hexham.
The well-known incident of Queen Margaret’s
escape into Dipton, or Deepdene woods, where she and
young Prince Edward met with robbers, and afterwards
escaped by the aid of another member of that fraternity,
took place a year before this, after the first battle
of Hexham in 1463. The year had been one of constant
warfare between York and Lancaster in the north, the
Castles of Alnwick and Bamburgh having fallen into
the hands of Queen Margaret’s friends once more,
after having been raptured by Edward of York the year
before; the Scots with Margaret and King Henry VI.,
had besieged Norham, but were put to flight by the
Earl of Warwick and hid brother, Lord Montague; the
royal fugitives sought safety at Bamburgh, whence the
Queen, with Prince Edward, sailed for Flanders, leaving
King Henry in the Castle where he was in no immediate
danger; Warwick, with his forces, retired southward
again, and the gentle King remained in his rocky stronghold,
and enjoyed there nine months of unwonted peace.
Shortly after this, the Duke of Somerset deserted the
cause of York for that of Lancaster, and became the
leader of the Queen’s forces. In April,
1464, he and Sir Ralph Percy opposed, at Hedgeley Moor,
the troops of Lord Montague journeying northward to
escort the Scottish delegates who were coming to York
to make terms with Edward of York. Sir Ralph
Percy was slain, exclaiming as he fell “I have
saved the bird in my bosom” that
enigmatic sentence which has given rise to so much
conjecture, but which is generally held to mean that
he had saved his honour, by dying at last, after so
many changes of front, in the service of that King
and Queen to whom he originally owed allegiance.
“Percy’s Cross,” marking the site
of his death, may be seen by the side of the railway
near Hedgeley Station, on the Alnwick and Wooler line.
The rest of the force dispersed, and
made their way to Hexham; and Lord Montague marching
upon them from Newcastle, a sharp engagement took
place on the Levels, near the Linnels Bridge, with
the result, as we have seen, of the defeat and death
of Somerset, and the overthrow of Queen Margaret’s
hopes in the north, where she had had a strong following.
The historical interest centred on
Dilston Castle brings us to much later times, and
enshrines a story which possesses a pathetic interest
beyond that of any other place in Northumberland.
Originally the home of the family of D’Eivill,
later Dyvelstone (which explains the name “Devil’s
Water”) Dilston Castle came into the possession
of the Radcliffes by marriage, and in the days of
the Commonwealth the Radcliffe of the day forfeited
his estates on account of his loyalty to the house
of Stuart. Charles II. restored them, and the
close attachment between the houses of Stuart and
Radcliffe continued until the fortunes of both were
quenched in disaster and gloom. The figure of
the young and gallant James Radcliffe, last Earl of
Derwentwater, holds the imagination no less than the
heart as it moves across the page of history for a
brief space to its tragic end. Though born in
London, in June 1689, young Radcliffe passed his childhood
and youth in France in the closest companionship with
James Stuart, son of the exiled James II. At
the age of twenty-one he returned to his home in Northumbria,
and took up his residence there, his charming manners,
kind heart, and openhanded hospitality speedily endearing
him to all classes. His servants and tenants,
in particular, were passionately devoted to him.
In the words of the old ballad of “Derwentwater”
“O, Derwentwater’s a bonnie
lord,
And golden is his hair,
And glintin’ is his hawkin’
e’e
Wi’ kind love dwelling there.”
On his marriage in 1712, the young
bride and bridegroom remained for two years at the
home of the bride’s father, and preparations
were made for restoring the glories of Dilston on
an extensive scale. On Derwentwater’s return
to his beautiful Northumbrian seat in 1714, the death
of Queen Anne had excited the hopes of all the friends
of the house of Stuart, and plots and secret meetings
were being planned throughout Scotland and the north
of England, the objective being the restoration of
the exiled Stuarts to the throne. Derwentwater
took little part in these attempts to organise rebellion
for some time, but at length was drawn into the dangerous
game, as he was too valuable an asset to be passed
over by the Jacobite party.
At last rumours of the projected rising
reached London, and a warrant was issued for the arrest
of Derwentwater, even before it was known whether
he had actually joined the plotters, his well-known
friendship with the exiled Prince making it almost
certain that he would be an important figure in any
movement on their behalf. For the next few weeks
the young Earl found himself obliged to remain in hiding,
finding safety in the cottages of his tenants, and
in the houses of friends and neighbours. Finally,
though his good sense warned him that he was embarking
on an almost hopeless enterprise, he decided to throw
in his lot with the Jacobites.
Tradition has it that his decision
was brought about by the taunts of his Countess, who,
like the rest of the Jacobite ladies, was more enthusiastic
than the men. Throwing down her fan, she scornfully
offered that to her husband as a weapon, and demanded
his sword in exchange. The immediate result was
seen on that October morning when Derwentwater and
his little band of followers rode over the bridge at
Corbridge with drawn swords, on their way to Beaufront,
which was their first rendezvous; and from there proceeded
to Greenrigg, near the great Wall, which had been
appointed as a general meeting-place.
There they were joined by Mr. Forster,
of Bamburgh, with his contingent, and a few from the
surrounding district. Rothbury next saw the little
army, which was joined on Felton Bridge by seventy
Scots; and thereafter Warkworth, Alnwick, and Morpeth
heard James Stuart proclaimed King under the title
of James III.
Newcastle was to have been their next
objective, but, hearing that the city had closed its
gates, and intended to hold out for King George, the
Jacobite force, after some indecision, returned northward
to Rothbury, where they were joined by a large company
of Scottish Jacobites under Lord Kenmure. Northward
again they marched to Kelso, where more than a thousand
Scots joined forces with them.
The little army numbered now almost
2,000, and a council was held to determine what their
next step should be. On its being resolved to
enter England, some hundreds of the Highlanders returned
home, leaving an army of about 1,500 to march southwards
to Lancashire. On their way they put to flight
at Penrith a motley force which was raised to oppose
them; and, elated with a first success, moved forward
to Preston, grievously disappointed on the way at
the failure of the people of Lancashire to rise with
them, for they had been given to understand that thousands
in that county were only awaiting an opportunity to
declare for “King James.”
At Preston they barricaded the principal
streets, and repulsed General Willis; but the arrival
of General Carpenter from Newcastle changed the face
of affairs. Young Derwentwater had fought valiantly
and worked arduously at the barricades, but Forster whose
appointment as General had been made in the hope of
attracting other Protestant gentry to the Jacobite
cause offered to submit to General Carpenter
under certain conditions. Carpenter’s reply
was a demand for unconditional surrender, and the
hopeless little tragi-comedy was played out. The
last scene took place on Tower Hill three months later,
when the gallant young Earl, then only twenty-six
years old, laid down the life which, after all, had
been spent in the service of others, with no selfish
purpose in view, and which was offered him, together
with wealth and freedom, if he would forsake his faith
and throw aside his allegiance to the house of Stuart.
Refusing to purchase life at such a price, he was condemned,
and executed on Tower Hill on February 24th, 1716.
His brother Charles, who had been
by his side throughout the rising, had the good fortune
to escape from Newgate Prison, and passed most of
his life abroad. Thirty years later, on his return
to take up arms on behalf of James’ son Charles “bonnie
Prince Charlie” when he also drew
the sword in an attempt to regain the throne of his
fathers, Radcliffe was captured and beheaded. (For
account of a monument to the memory of these two brothers
see in previous chapter paragraph relating to Haydon
Bridge.)
The story of General Forster’s
escape from Newgate is told by Sir Walter Besant,
as all readers of his novel, “Dorothy Forster”
know, though the author has taken those minor liberties
with unimportant facts which are by common consent
allowable in fiction.
James Radcliffe’s friends were
allowed to have his body, though they were forbidden
to carry it home for burial; for such were the love
and esteem borne for the young Earl in the hearts
of all his North-country friends and dependents, that
the authorities feared a disturbance of the peace
should his body be brought amongst them while their
rage and grief were still at their height. Notwithstanding
the prohibition, however, the body was brought secretly
to Dilston, and buried in the vault of the chapel,
which, with the ruined tower, are all that remain of
the home of the Radcliffes. Standing amidst luxuriant
foliage, and overlooking a romantic dell, the ruins
of tower and chapel remain as they fell into decay
on the death of their luckless owners. The confiscated
estates were bestowed on Greenwich Hospital, whose
agents administer them still, with the exception of
certain portions purchased from time to time by various
landowners. No other family took the place of
the Radcliffes in the deserted halls; but tradition
holds that the unfortunate Earl and his sorrowful
lady still revisit their ancient home. The Earl’s
body is now at Thorndon, in Essex. Below is Surtees’
beautiful ballad, “Lord Derwentwater’s
Farewell.”
LORD DERWENTWATER’S FAREWELL
“Farewell to pleasant Dilston Hall,
My father’s ancient seat;
A stranger now must call thee his,
Which gars my heart to greet.
Farewell each kindly well-known face
My heart has held so dear;
My tenants now must leave their lord
Or hold their lives in fear.
No more along the banks of Tyne
I’ll rove in autumn grey;
No more I’ll hear, at early dawn,
The lav’rocks wake the day;
Then fare thee well, brave Witherington,
And Forster ever true;
Dear Shaftsbury and Errington,
Receive my last adieu.
And fare thee well, George Collingwood,
Since fate has put us down;
If thou and I have lost our lives,
Our king has lost his crown.
Farewell, farewell, my lady dear,
Ill, ill thou counsell’dst me;
I never more may see the babe
That smiles upon thy knee.
And fare thee well, my bonny gray steed,
That carried me aye so free;
I wish I had been asleep in my bed
The last time I mounted thee;
The warning bell now bids me cease,
My trouble’s nearly o’er;
Yon sun that rises from the sea
Shall rise on me no more.
Albeit that here in London Town
It is my fate to die;
O carry me to Northumberland,
In my father’s grave to lie.
There chant my solemn requiem
In Hexham’s holy towers;
And let six maids of fair Tynedale
Scatter my grave with flowers.
And when the head that wears the crown
Shall be laid low like mine;
Some honest hearts may then lament
For Radcliffe’s fallen line.
Farewell to pleasant Dilston Hall,
My father’s ancient seat;
A stranger now must call thee his,
Which gars my heart to greet.”
Near to Corbridge the waters of the
Tyne lave the ancient piers of the old Roman bridge
which led to Corstopitum, the most considerable of
the Roman stations in this region. The recent
careful excavations have laid bare the evidence of
what must have been a most imposing city, and many
treasures of pottery, coins and ancient jewellery and
ornaments, together with large quantities of the bones
of animals, some of them identical with the wild cattle
of Chillingham, have been brought to light. The
famous silver dish known as the Corbridge Lanx, which
was found at the riverside by a little girl in 1734,
had evidently been washed down from Corstopitum.
It is now preserved at Alnwick Castle. The antiquity
of Corbridge is thus superior to that of Hexham, as
far as may be known; but on the other hand, while
Hexham in Saxon times grew to power, Corbridge declined.
Yet, in its time, it was more than the home of a famous
Abbey; it was a royal city, albeit the date of its
elevation to royal rank coincided with the decline
of the kingdom of which it was the final capital.
When the fierce and ruthless internal quarrels, which
rent Northumbria after Edbert’s glorious reign,
had weakened it so that it fell a prey to the gradual
encroachments of its northern neighbours, the once
royal city of Bamburgh was left in the hands of a noble
Saxon family, and the court was removed to Corbridge,
which remained the abode of the kings of Northumbria
until Northumbria possessed royal rank no longer.
The tale of the two hundred years during which Corbridge
was the capital city is a tale of red slaughter and
ruin, murder and bitter feud, not against outside
foes, but between one family and another, noble against
king, king against relatives of other noble houses,
amongst which might possibly be found the thegn to
succeed him, or to murder him in order to bring about
his own more speedy elevation to a precarious throne.
So much was this the case, that Charles
the Great, at whose court the learned Northumbrian,
Alcuin, was secretary, said that the Northumbrians
were worse than the invading heathen Danes, who, by
this time, had begun their ravages in the land.
Amongst the rulers of Northumbria in those days, the
name of Alfwald the Just, who was called “the
Friend of God,” shines out with enduring light
across the stormy darkness of that terrible period;
yet even his just and merciful rule and noble life
could not save him from the hand of the assassin.
He was buried with much mourning and great pomp in
the Abbey at Hexham; and during the recent excavations
the fact of a Saxon interment was verified as having
taken place beneath the beautiful tomb which tradition
has always held to be that of King Alfwald the Just.
This fact also helped to demonstrate the extent of
the original Abbey.
There was a monastery at Corbridge
in the year 771, which is supposed to have been founded
by St. Wilfrid. Of the four churches which were
erected in later times, only one survives the
parish church of St. Andrew, which occupies the site
of the early monastery. In this ancient church
may be seen part of the original Saxon work, and many
stones of Roman workmanship are built up in the structure.
Like most other old churches in the
north, it suffered severely at the hands of the Scots,
and, as at Hexham Abbey, traces of fire may be seen
on some of the stones.
King David of Scotland, on his invasion
of England in 1138, which was to end at the “Battle
of the Standard,” at Northallerton, encamped
at Corbridge for a time, and terrible cruelties were
committed in the district by his followers. In
the next century, King John turned the little town
upside down in his efforts to find treasure which he
was convinced must be concealed somewhere in the houses;
but his search was fruitless. In the days of
the three Edwards, during the long wars with Scotland,
Corbridge suffered terribly, being fired again and
again; on one occasion, in 1296, the destruction included
the burning of the school with some two hundred hapless
boys within its walls.
Those heroes of our childhood’s
days, William Wallace and Robert Bruce, were far from
guiltless in these cruelties, though in justice to
them personally, the wild and lawless character of
the men who formed their undisciplined hosts must
be remembered; and we know that Wallace tried to save
the holy vessels in Hexham Abbey, but, as soon as his
back was turned, they were swept away in the very
presence of the officiating priest.
During these terrible years most of
Northumberland was a desolate waste; and divine service
had almost ceased to be performed between Newcastle
and Carlisle, even Hexham being deserted for a time.
After the battle of Bannockburn, matters were worse,
if possible, and all the north lay in fear of the
Scots, but from time to time spasmodic efforts at
retaliation were made by the boldest of the Northumbrian
landowners. In the reign of Edward III., however,
many of these great landowners thwarted the King’s
designs by making a traitorous peace with their turbulent
neighbours.
David II. of Scotland encamped at
Corbridge for a time during his second attempt to
invade England but this expedition ended in his defeat
and capture at Neville’s Cross. Thereafter
the north had rest for some years, and Corbridge seems
to have been left in peace. The Wars of the Roses
passed it by; and the Civil Wars in Stuart days also,
except for an unimportant skirmish; and the only part
Corbridge saw of the Jacobite rising of “The
Fifteen” was the little cavalcade from Dilston
which clattered over the old bridge on its way to
Beaufront. That bridge is the same which we cross
to-day; the date of its erection, 1674, may be seen
on one of its stones, and it was the only one on the
Tyne which withstood the great flood of 1771, when
even the old Tyne Bridge at Newcastle was swept away.
Quite close to the church there is
an old pèle-tower, which is in an excellent state
of preservation, little of it having disappeared except
the various floors. The vicars of Corbridge must
have been often thankful for such a refuge at hand,
where they could bid defiance to marauding bands,
whether of Scottish or English nationality. In
the Register of the parish church may be seen a most
interesting entry, showing the Earl of Derwentwater’s
signature as churchwarden.
At a little distance from Corbridge,
to the northward, is the fortified manor-house of
Aydon Castle, standing embowered in trees where the
Cor burn runs through a little rocky ravine,
down whose steep sides Sir Robert Clavering threw
most of a marauding band of Scotsmen who had attacked
the grange; the place known as “Jock’s
Leap” obtained its name from one of the Scots
who escaped the fate of his comrades by his leap for
life across the ravine. The Castle, or hall, as
it is variously called, has not suffered such destruction
as might have been expected, seeing that it dates
from the thirteenth century; but the thickness of
its walls, and the arrow-slits and narrow windows are
obvious proof of the necessity for defence which existed
when it was first erected in the days of Edward I.
Many features of great interest, notably the ancient
fireplaces, remain in the interior of the building.
Returning down the Cor burn to
the Tyne, our way lies eastward by the side of the
river, which here, after splashing and sparkling over
the shallows below Corbridge, narrows again to a deeper
stream of swifter current, and flows between green
meadows and leafy woods, fern-clad steeps and level
haughs, all the way down to Ryton, where the picturesque
aspect of the river ceases, and it becomes an industrial
waterway. On this reach of the river are several
places of considerable interest.
Riding Mill, a pretty village in a
well-wooded hollow, enclosed by steep hills which
rise ever higher and higher to the moors by Minsteracres
and Blanchland, stands where Watling Street, or Dere
Street, leading down the long slope of the country
from Whittonstall, on reaching the Tyne turned westward
to Corstopitum. Further down the stream is Stocksfield,
where the aged King Edward I. halted on his last journey
into Scotland, on that expedition which was to have
executed a summary vengeance upon the Scots; he journeyed
forward by slow stages, but was taken ill at Newbrough,
where he stayed for some time, before continuing his
journey by Blenkinsopp, Thirlwall, and Lanercost to
Carlisle.
On the opposite side of the stream
from Stocksfield is the lovely village of Bywell,
a “haunt of ancient peace,” “sleeping
soft on the banks of the murmuring Tyne.”
This little peaceful spot was at one time a very busy
centre of life and industry on a small scale; in the
Middle Ages the inhabitants drove a thriving trade
in all the necessities for a people who spent a great
part of their lives upon horseback, especially in
the making of the ironwork required “bits,
stirrups, buckles, and the like, wherein they are
very expert and cunning.” The Nevilles,
lords of Raby and earls of Westmoreland, held Bywell
at this time; before that it was in the hands of the
Balliols, of Scottish fame, who, like the Bruces,
were Norman knights high in favour with their kings,
Norman and Plantagenet, though they afterwards became
their most determined foes.
Long before the advent of the Normans,
a church was built here by St. Wilfrid, and in it St.
Andrew’s or the “White” Church Egbert,
twelfth bishop of Lindisfarne, was consecrated by
Archbishop Eanbald in the year 803. More than
a thousand years afterwards, in 1896, an Ordination
service was again held at Bywell, in St. Peter’s
church, when five deacons were ordained by Bishop
Jacob. And in times yet more remote than Wilfrid’s
age, Roman legionaries crossed the Tyne at this point
over a bridge of their own construction, of which the
piers might be seen until our own day. Bywell,
too, had its “find” of Roman silver; in
1760 a silver cup was found in the Tyne, bearing the
inscription “Desidere vivas” around
the neck of the vessel.
When the Nevilles were lords of the
manor of Bywell, they began to build a castle here,
which, however, was left unfinished; the ancient tower
still standing, with its picturesque draping of ivy,
was the gate-house of the intended fortress.
On the rebellion of the northern earls in 1569, Westmoreland’s
forfeited lands passed to the crown, so that Bywell
was held by Queen Elizabeth for a year or two, until
she sold the estate to a branch of the Fenwick family.
Bywell is unique in Northumberland
in possessing two churches side by side yet in different
parishes. The town of Bywell, we are told by the
same authority before quoted, lay in a long line by
the north bank of the Tyne, and was “divided
into two separate parishes” even then, so that
there ought to be traces of former buildings westward
from the present village. In connection with
the two churches which adjoin each other so closely,
tradition tells the well-known story of the two quarrelsome
sisters who could not agree on the building of a church
and therefore each built one. One might have
imagined, with some show of reason, that there being
two parishes, the two churches were placed there in
sheltering proximity to the castle, were it not for
the fact that the churches were in existence long
before the stronghold of the Nevilles was contemplated.
St. Andrew’s, called the “White”
church from the fact of its being served in later
days by the White friars, is the more ancient of the
two. As we have seen, a church erected by St.
Wilfrid stood on this site, and a goodly portion of
the Saxon work remains in the tower. The hagioscope,
or “squint” in this church, and the “leper”
window in St. Peter’s are interesting relics
of the Middle Ages.
St. Peter’s, or the “Black”
church which once belonged to the Benedictines or
Black friars, is of much later date than its neighbour,
though still an ancient building, being supposed to
date from the eleventh century. Its most interesting
possessions are two very old bells, bearing Latin
inscriptions, one announcing “I proclaim the
hour for people rising, and call to those still lying
down,” and the other reading “Thou art
Peter.”
Bywell suffered greatly in the flood
of 1771, when the bridge was swept away, many houses
destroyed, several people drowned, and both churches
greatly damaged.
It is not surprising that this tranquil
little village “the retreat of the
old doomed divinities of wood and fountain, banished
from their native haunts,” to quote Mr. Tomlinson’s
happy phrase has always been beloved of
artists, many of whom have transferred to their canvasses
the beauties of its mingled scenery of graceful woods
and sparkling waters, ancient fortress, peaceful meadows,
and gray old towers. Many noteworthy and fine
old trees are to be found in and around this artists’
haunt.
On the opposite side of the river,
Bywell’s younger sister, Stocksfield, grows
apace, reaching out towards the lulls and along the
eastward lanes, though not as yet in such measure
as to cover the hillsides with any semblance of a
town, being still almost hidden amongst the profusion
of trees that clothe most of the district in their
leafy greenery. On the north bank of the stream
the village of Ovingham now rises into view, its name
telling us plainly that there was a settlement here
in Saxon times “the home of the sons of Offa”;
and the slope above the river is fittingly crowned
by the ancient church of St. Mary, whose tower, with
its curiously irregular windows, is the work of the
Saxon builders of the original church. The rest
of the building, except some Saxon work at the west
end of the nave, dates from early Norman days.
Here is the burial place of the famous brothers John
and Thomas Bewick, who were born at Cherryburn House,
just across the river. In this delightful spot
the boy Thomas Bewick grew up, absorbing unconsciously
the natural beauties that are to be found here by the
Tyne and in the little ravine through which the Cherry
Burn flows, which beauties he so lovingly reproduced
on his engraving blocks later in life.
At the fords of Ovingham, Eltringham,
and Bywell, the Scots under General Leslie crossed
the Tyne in 1644, and made their way into Durham,
leaving six regiments to watch Newcastle.
The picturesque ruins of Prudhoe Castle,
whose lofty towers dominate the valley for some distance
up and down the stream, stand on a commanding rocky
ridge above the Tyne. The lands of Prudhoe were
given, soon after the Norman Conquest, to one of Duke
William’s immediate followers, Robert de Umfraville;
and it was Odinel de Umfraville who built the present
castle in the twelfth century. Its strength was
soon put to the test, for a few years after it was
built William the Lion of Scotland found that the
place baffled all his attempts to capture it.
In his anger he determined to reduce the fortress
of Odinel, who had spent much time at the Scottish
court in his youth, the Kings of Scotland being at
that time lords of Tynedale. The attempt ended
in total failure, the greatest harm the Scots did
on that occasion being to destroy the cornfields and
strip the bark from the apple trees near the Castle;
while, a day or two afterwards, Odinel de Umfraville,
with Glanvile and Balliol, captured the Scottish monarch
himself at Alnwick.
Another Umfraville, Richard, quarrelled
with his neighbour of Nafferton, on the opposite side
of the river, for having begun to erect a fortress
much too near Umfraville’s own. He sent
a petition to the King on the subject and King John
commanded Philip de Ulecote’s building operations
to cease. The unfinished castle, known as Nafferton
Tower, remains to this day as Philip’s masons
left it so many centuries ago.
Sir Ingram de Umfraville was by the
side of Edward II. at Bannockburn, when, before the
battle, Bruce ordered his men to kneel in prayer.
Edward looked on the kneeling host, and turning to
Umfraville, exclaimed “See! Yon men kneel
to ask mercy.” “You say truth, sire,”
answered the knight of Prudhoe; “they ask mercy but
not of you.”
The last Umfraville, who died in 1381,
left a widow, the Countess Maud, who married a Percy
of Alnwick, and so the castle passed into the hands
of that family, in whose possession it still remains.
When Odinel de Umfraville was building
the keep of his castle, every one in the neighbourhood
was pressed into the service, and all lent their aid
except the men of Wylam. Wylam had been given
to the church of St. Oswyn at Tynemouth, and, as was
customary, was freed by charter from the duty of castle
building, or any other feudal service excepting such
as were rendered to the Prior of Tynemouth as occasion
arose. So, in spite of the angry surprise of
the lord of Prudhoe, the Wylam men quietly held to
their charter, and not all Odinel’s threats or
persuasions moved them one whit.
The Stanley Burn, which enters the
Tyne close to Wylam railway station, divides this
part of the county of Durham from Northumberland, so
that from Wylam to the sea the south side of the Tyne
is in the county of Durham. The most noteworthy
object at Wylam, or, to be precise, a little way along
the old post-road, leading to Newcastle from Hexham,
is the red-tiled cottage in which George Stephenson
was born in 1781. It stands on the north bank
of the Tyne, where it can be distinctly seen from
passing trains. Its neighbour cottage has been
repaired and re-roofed, but Stephenson’s cottage
remains unaltered.
Mr. Blackett, who owned Wylam Colliery
at the beginning of the nineteenth century, took the
keenest interest in the question of locomotives, and
had tried more than one on his estate before George
Stephenson brought them to the point of practical use.
At Newburn, just four miles down the Tyne, George
Stephenson passed many years of his youth; here he
learned to read and write, when he was old enough to
earn a man’s wage and could afford the few pence
necessary; and here, in the parish church, may be
seen, with an interval of twenty years between them,
the entries of his two marriages.
Newburn is important nowadays for
its steel works, within whose workshops is incorporated
an old building formerly known as Newburn Hall; but
in days long past its importance arose from its being
on the ford of the Tyne nearest to Newcastle.
This ford was frequently made use of, notably by the
Scots in the reign of Charles I. Their chief camping
ground is pointed out to us by the name of Scotswood,
which also describes what Scotswood was like in those
days a great contrast to its present appearance,
when the lines of brick and mortar stretching out
uninterruptedly from Newcastle make it practically
one with that town. In 1640, the Scottish army,
under General Leslie, faced the Royalist troops, under
Lord Conway, on the south side of the river. The
Scots mounted their rude cannon on Newburn Church
tower, and the English raised earthworks along the
bank of the river, which was here fordable in two
places. The two armies calmly watered their horses
on opposite banks of the stream all the next morning,
but a shot at a Scottish officer from the English
ranks precipitated the battle; and the Scottish army,
having made a breach in both earthworks with their
artillery, waded across the fords and drove the Royalist
troops up the bank, after one spasmodic rally, which,
however, failed to check the Scottish advance.
The way was now open for the Scottish army to continue
down the south bank of the Tyne and attack Newcastle
from Gateshead. It had been Lord Conway’s
task to prevent this, but owing to his incapacity or
want of whole-hearted enthusiasm for his cause, he
failed entirely.
Not until 1644, however, was a Scottish
attack on Newcastle actually made, for on this occasion
Leslie, as we have already seen, led his men across
the fords higher up the river and marched southwards.
The earthworks thrown up by Conway’s troops
may still be seen on Stella Haughs.
It is supposed that the Romans had
a fort here, commanding the passage of the river;
indeed it would have been strange had this not been
the case, for the Romans were not the people to disregard
any point of strategical importance, especially one
so near their stations of Pons Aelii and Condercum.
Many stones of Roman workmanship have been used in
the building of the Newburn church.
From this point to its mouth, nearly
fifteen miles away, both banks of the Tyne present
an unbroken scene of industry. Between the steel
works of Newburn and the iron and chemical works,
the brick and tile works of Blaydon and past the famous
yards of Elswick, down to the wharves and shipyards
of North and South Shields, the Tyne rolls its swift
dark waters through a scene of stirring activity;
the air is dusky with soot and smoke, and reverberant
with the clang of hammers and the pulsing beat of
machinery. Some old and world-famed works have
been closed or removed, like Hawks’ and Stephenson’s,
but others, many others, have opened; and the map
of the positions of Tyne industries, published under
the auspices of the Newcastle and Gateshead Chamber
of Commerce, is a record of resolute toil and brilliant
achievement in the many aspects of industrial life
represented on the river.
And, apart from the mere prosperity
and commercial supremacy of the district, there is
another cause for pride in the many notable inventions
which hail from Tyneside; from the locomotive and the
“Geordie” lamp of Stephenson, the hydraulic
machinery and the big guns of Armstrong, to the wonderful
turbine engines of Parsons; the invention of water-ballast,
too, belongs to the Tyne, for it was the idea of a
Gateshead man, and first used at Jarrow.
And, in connection with ships and
seafarers, though not in any commercial sense, we
may proudly recall the fact that the first Lifeboat
was launched on the Tyne and named after the river;
and the first Volunteer Life Brigade was formed at
Tynemouth. The Worth Eastern Railway is carried
across the Tyne by the Scotswood Bridge; and it was
on this part of the river that the boat-races, for
which the Tyne was once famous, were rowed. At
Newcastle, the river is bridged by four huge structures The
Redheugh Bridge, the new King Edward VII. bridge, the
High Level, and Swing Bridges, all connecting
Newcastle with the sister town of Gateshead.
An interesting sight it is to see the Swing Bridge
gradually turning on its central pivot, until it lies
in a straight line up and down the stream, allowing
some huge liner to pass, or some new battleship, fresh
from Elswick, to sail down the river, on its way to
make its trial trip over the “measured mile”
in the open sea at the mouth of the river, and thereafter
to take its place among the armaments of the nations.
The High Level Bridge allows ships
of any height to pass under its lofty and graceful
arches, which look so light, but are yet so strong.
This splendid bridge is an enduring monument of Robert
Stephenson, whose work it was; and the story of its
erection, at the cost of nearly half a million of
money, makes most interesting reading. It took
nearly two and a half years to build, and was opened
for traffic in 1849 little more than three
years after the first pile was driven in. A few
months later, in 1850, the newly built Central Station,
with its imposing portico, was opened by Queen Victoria.
Passing down the Tyne from Newcastle,
which requires separate notice, and Walker, with its
reminiscences of “Walker Pit’s deun weel
for me,” we arrive at Wallsend, which in twenty-five
years has grown from a colliery village with a population
of 4,000 to a town of 23,000 inhabitants. Here
are great shipbuilding and repairing yards, chemical
works and cement works; here, too, are Parsons’
Steam Turbine Works, where was designed and built
the little “Turbinia,” on which tiny vessel
the early experiments were made with the new engines;
and here are the famous mines which have made “Best
Wallsend” a synonym for best household coal
all over the land. These mines, after having been
closed for many years, were reopened at the beginning
of the century, and now turn out upwards of one thousand
tons of coal per day.
The church of St. Peter, at Wallsend,
is little more than a hundred years old; the old Church
of Holy Cross, now long disused, was built towards
the end of the twelfth century. But Wallsend itself,
as all the world knows, is of much greater antiquity,
for was it not, as its name proclaims, situated at
the end of the Great Wall? Its name then, however,
was not Wallsend but Segedunum.
Willington Quay, further down the
river, was, for a time, the home of George Stephenson,
and here his son, Robert, was born. At Howdon,
which used to be known as Howdon Pans, from the salt-pans
there, the painter John Martin and his brothers once
worked when boys, being employed in some rope-works.
Here, too, the Henzells, a family of refugees who
settled in the district in the days of Elizabeth, founded
some glass works, for which industry the Tyne has
been famous from that day to this.
Before the railway on the south side
of the river was laid down, passengers who wished
to reach Jarrow had to alight at Howdon and cross
the river; and a racy dialect song “Howdon
for Jarrow” with its refrain of “Howdon
for Jarra ma hinnies, loup oot” commemorates
the fact. Willington Quay and Howdon carry on
the line of shipbuilding yards to Northumberland Dock
and the staithes of the Tyne Commissioners, where
the waggon ways from various collieries bring the coal
to the water’s edge. Tyne Dock, just opposite,
and the Albert Edward Dock near North. Shields,
provide abundance of shipping accommodation, besides
what is afforded by the river itself; and now the
river flows between the steep banks of North and South
Shields. As the names declare, these two growing
and prosperous towns once consisted of a few fishermen’s
huts, or “shielings”; but that was long
ago, when the north shore of the Tyne was owned by
the Prior of Tynemouth, and the southern shore by the
Bishop of Durham, and the citizens of Newcastle complained
to King Edward I. that these two ecclesiastics had
raised towns, “where no town ought to be,”
and that “fishermen sold fish there which ought
to be sold at Newcastle, to the great injury of the
whole borough, and in detriment to the tolls of our
Lord the King.” These quarrels between Newcastle
and the other settlements on the Tyne continued with
varying results, until in the days of Cromwell, Ralph
Gardiner of Chirton, a little village close to North
Shields, took up the cudgels for the growing towns;
and by dint of great perseverance, and in spite of
much persecution and ill-will, succeeded in getting
most of the unjust privileges of their stronger neighbour
abolished.
There were salt-pans, too, on both
sides of the mouth of the Tyne, which were worked
in connection with the monasteries from very early
days; and Daniel Defoe, when he visited the north
in 1726, declared that he could see from the top of
the Cheviot “the smoke of the salt-pans at Sheals,
at the mouth of the Tyne, which was about forty miles
south of this.”
North Shields clings haphazard to
the steep bank of the Tyne, and spreads away up and
beyond it, reaching out towards Wallsend on the river
shore and Tynemouth along by the sea, the older parts
by the river looking black and grimy to the last degree;
but there is a silver lining to this very black cloud not
visible, it is true, but distinctly audible in
the great shipbuilding and repairing works known as
Smith’s Dock, one of the largest concerns of
the kind in Great Britain, where so many hundreds
of men earn their daily bread; and in the fishing
industry, which was the foundation of the town’s
prosperity, and bids fair to be so for many years
to come, as it is increasing year by year. The
Fish Quay at North Shields is a sight worth seeing;
and, in the herring season, it is increasingly frequented
by Continental buyers.
The fortunes of South Shields and
Jarrow, though these towns are not in Northumberland,
are yet so bound up with the story of the Tyne that
no one would ever think of that river without them.
Especially is this the case with Jarrow, which “Palmer’s”
has raised from a small colliery village to a large
and flourishing town. In those famous yards,
everything that is necessary for the building of the
largest ironclad, from the first smelting of the ore
until the last rivet is in place, can be done.
All Northumbria Northumbria in the ancient
and widest sense of the word owes a debt
of gratitude to Jarrow, for was it not the home of
Bede? The monk of Jarrow, who spent all his long
life in the same monastery by the Don, coming to it
when he was a child of ten, made that spot of Northumbrian
ground famed to the farthest limits of the civilized
Europe of his day; and scholars from all over the Continent
came to learn at the feet of the Northumbrian teacher.
Beloved and revered by all, and in harness to the
last hour of his busy life, he died in the year 735,
just one hundred years after the coming of Aidan to
Lindisfarne. “First among English scholars,
first among English theologians, first among English
historians, it is in the monk of Jarrow that English
literature strikes its roots.” J.R.
Green.
The Jarrow of to-day, and all its
neighbours of industrial Tyneside, possess no beauty
of aspect such as the towns that are more fortunately
situated on the upper reaches of the river; they are
muffled in clouds of smoke and soot, and darkened
by the necessities of their toil in grimy ores and
the ever-present coal. But no one who has ever
looked on these smoky reaches of the Tyne with a seeing
eye, or steamed down the river on a day either of
gloom or sunshine, can refuse to acknowledge that
it has a certain grandeur, a stern beauty of its own,
that can stir the heart and the imagination more deeply
than any mere prettiness.
From the numberless hives of activity
on both sides of the river clouds of smoke roll heavily
upward, and jets of steam from panting machinery leap
up in momentary whiteness on the dark background; the
white wings of flocks of wheeling gulls flash in the
occasional sunshine which lights up the scene, and
between the clouds there are glimpses of blue sky.
Towards sunset, the evening mists drape the darkening
banks and crowded shipping in a soft robe of gray,
which, together with the glowing sky behind, produces
most wonderful Turneresque effects; and the fall of
night on the river only changes the aspect without
diminishing the interest of the scene. The blaze
from a myriad workshops and forges glows against the
darkness, the lamps twinkle overhead on the steep
banks, and the lights from wharf and steamer are reflected
in a thousand shimmering lines on the dark water,
which flows on soundlessly, like the river of a dream.
On a day of wind and sun all these
beauties are intensified a thousandfold; the smoke
is blown hither and thither in flying clouds, the
current seems to rush more swiftly, and a sense of
vigorous life permeates the whole scene, giving to
the beholder a feeling of keen exhilaration, as of
new life rushing through his veins. Especially
is this the case on reaching the mouth of the river
and meeting the dancing waters of the open harbour,
where the twin piers of South Shields and Tynemouth
reach out sheltering arms. Within the wide bay
they enclose, the storm-driven vessel may always find
comparatively smooth water, how wildly soever the
waves may rage and roar outside.
It is difficult to believe that so
lately as the years 1858-60, the “bar”
at the mouth of the Tyne was an insuperable obstacle
to all but vessels of very moderate draught; and that
ships might lie for days, and sometimes weeks, after
being loaded, before there came a tide high enough
to carry them out to sea. The river was full of
sand-banks, and little islands stood here and there one
in mid-stream, where the ironclads are now launched
at Elswick. Three or four vessels might be seen
at once bumping and grounding on the “bar”
unable to make their way over. Well might the
old song say
“The ships are all at the bar,
They canna get up to Newcastle!”
An old map of the Tyne shows a number
of sand-banks down the lower reaches of the river,
with ships aground on each, of them.
But the River Tyne Commissioners have
changed all that, and their implement of warfare has
been the hideous but necessary dredger. No longer
need vessels of heavy tonnage desert the Tyne for the
Wear, as they were perforce driven to do during the
first half of the nineteenth century, for the Wearsiders
had set about deepening and widening their river long
before the Tynesiders did the same by theirs.
Considerable and continuous pressure had to be brought
to bear on the civic authorities at Newcastle before
they finally took action; but having once done so,
the future of the Tyne was assured. Now it ranks
second only to the Thames in the actual number of
vessels entering and leaving, and owns only the Mersey
its superior in the matter of tonnage.