NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE.
“Her dusky hair in many a tangle
clings
About her, and her looks, though stern
and cold,
Grow tender with the dreams of by-gone
days.”
W.W. Tomlinson.
The outward signs of “by-gone
days,” in the Newcastle of to-day, with the
one notable exception of the Castle, must be diligently
sought out amongst the overwhelming mass of what is
often called “rampant modernity,” of which
the town to-day chiefly consists. The modernity,
however, is not all bad, as this favourite phrase would
imply; much of it is doubtless regrettable and a very
little of it perhaps inevitable; but no one will deny
either the modernity or the beauty of Grey Street,
one of the finest streets in any English town; or the
fine appearance of Grainger Street, Blackett Street,
Eldon Square, or any other of the stately thoroughfares
with which Grainger and Dobson enriched the town within
the last eighty years no one, that is, who
has learned to “lift his eyes to the sky-line
in passing along a thoroughfare” instead of
keeping them firmly fixed at the level of shop windows.
The grim old building which, when
it was new, gave its name to the town, is one for
which no search needs to be made; its blackened and
time worn walls are seen from the train windows by
every traveller who enters the city from the south.
So near is it to the railway, that in the ultra-utilitarian
days of sixty or seventy years ago, it narrowly escaped
the ignoble fate of being used as a signal-cabin.
It was rescued, however, by the Society of Antiquaries,
and carefully preserved by them more fortunate
in this respect than the castle of Berwick, for the
platform of Berwick railway station actually stands
on the spot once occupied by the Great Hall of the
Castle.
The site of the New Castle, on a part
of the river bank which slopes steeply down to the
Tyne, had been occupied centuries before by a Roman
fort, constructed by order of the Emperor Hadrian,
who visited Britain A.D. 120. He also constructed
a bridge over the Tyne at this spot, fort and bridge
receiving the name of Pons Aelii, after the Emperor
(Publius AElius Hadrianus). This became
the second station on the Great Wall erected by Hadrian’s
orders along the line of forts which Agricola had
raised forty years before. This station shared
the fate of others on the abandonment of Britain by
its powerful conquerors, who had now for more than
two hundred years been its no less powerful friends
and protectors. Pons Aelii fell into ruins; but
so advantageous a site could not long be overlooked,
and we read of a Saxon settlement there, apparently
that of a religious community, from which fact it
was known as Monkchester. All the records of
this period seem to have perished, for we hear nothing
of the settlement during the Danish invasions; but
a Saxon town of some kind was evidently in existence
at the time of the Conquest, though in 1073 three
monks from the south who came to York, and, obtaining
a guide to “Muneche-cester,” sought for
some religious house in that settlement, could find
none, and were prevailed upon by the first Norman Bishop
of Durham, Walcher, to stay at Jarrow. The years
from 1069 to 1080 were evil years for Northumberland,
for at the first-named date the Conqueror devastated
the North, and left neither village nor farm unscathed;
and, as the desolated land was beginning to recover
again, Odo of Bayeux and Robert of Normandy relentlessly
laid it waste once more, partly in revenge for the
murder of Bishop Walcher at Gateshead, and partly to
punish Malcolm of Scotland for his invasion of Norman
territory.
It was on his return from this expedition,
which had penetrated as far north as Falkirk, that
Robert, by his father’s orders, raised a stronghold
on the Tyne on the site of the old Roman fort, in the
year 1080. His brother, William Rufus, erected
a much stronger and better one, the Keep of which,
re-built by Henry II., stands to-day dark and grim,
looking out over river and town, as it has stood since
the Red King ruled the land, and, like his father,
the Conqueror, found it desirable to have a stronghold
at this northern point of his turbulent realm, around
which a town might grow up in safety.
The roof and battlements of the Keep
are modern, but the rest of it the walls,
12 to 18 feet thick; the dismal dungeon, or guard chamber,
with iron rings and fetters still fastened to the
walls and central pillar; the beautiful little chapel,
with its finely-ornamented arches; the little chambers
in the thickness of the walls; the well, 94 feet deep,
sunk through the solid masonry into the rock beneath;
the arrow slits in the walls; the stones in the roof
scored with frequent bolts from the besiegers’
crossbows, one of which bolts is firmly embedded in
the wall opposite one of the narrow windows; the ancient
weapons and armour all these breathe of
the days when the Red King’s castle took its
part in the doings of our hardy ancestors in those
stormy times in which they lived and fought.
The last time the old Keep was called
upon to act as fortress and refuge in time of war
was in Stuart days, after the ten weeks siege of Newcastle
by the Scottish General Leslie, Earl of Leven, in 1644,
when brave “Governor Marley” and his friends
held out in the castle for a few days longer, after
the town was taken. In memory of this stout defence
and long resistance King Charles gave to the town its
motto Fortiter defendit triumphans,
which Bates gives as having originally been Fortiter
defendendo triumphat “She glories
in her brave defence.”
Two of the original fireplaces still
remain in the Castle, and there are besides many objects
of great interest which have been bestowed there from
time to time for safe keeping; and many more are to
be seen at the Black Gate, formerly the chief entrance
to the Castle Hall and its surroundings. The
Great Hall of the Castle, in which John Baliol did
homage to Edward I. for the crown of Scotland, stood
on the spot now covered by the Moot Hall. The
Black Gate, the lower part of which is the oldest
part of the building, which has many times been altered
and repaired, is now used as a museum. There
were nearly a dozen rooms in it, and not so many years
ago the Corporation of Newcastle let these out in
tenements, until this building also was rescued from
degradation by the Newcastle Society of Antiquaries,
who took down most of the dividing walls, and converted
it into a museum. Here may be seen stored many
sculptured stones, altars, and statues, which have
been brought from the various Roman stations in the
north.
Around the walls of one room are to
be seen facsimiles of the famous Bayeux tapestry;
there is also a model of the Castle as originally
built, and there are many more exhibits and loans of
the very greatest interest.
Of the walls of Newcastle only fragments
remain, the most considerable portion being found
between Westgate Road and St. Andrew’s Churchyard;
here are also remains of several of the watch-towers
that stood at intervals around the walls the
Heber Tower, the Mordaunt or Morden Tower, and the
Ever Tower. Between the two first named towers
may be seen a little doorway, walled up, once used
by the Friars, who obtained from Edward II. permission
to make the doorway in order that they might the more
easily reach their gardens and orchards outside; but
they had to be ready to build it up at a moment’s
notice on the approach of an enemy. One of the
towers the Carliol or Weaver’s Tower was
pulled down to make room for the Central Free Library,
opened in 1881. Many little fragments of the
Castle wall are to be seen near the High Level Bridge,
incorporated in other walls, as far as the South Postern
of the Castle, which is said to be the only remaining
Norman postern in England and is the oldest remaining
part of the Castle.
The old streets of Newcastle are fast
disappearing to make room for the ever-increasing
needs of commerce; at the moment of writing it is being
proposed to pull down more of the historic street called
the Side, to make room for new printing offices.
At the head of this curious old street, which curves
downward from the Cathedral to the river, stood the
birthplace of Cuthbert Collingwood, who was to become
Admiral Lord Collingwood, and second in fame only
to Nelson himself. Both this house and the one
where Thomas Bewick had his workshop, near the Cathedral,
have gone to make room for new buildings.
At the foot of this street, where
it curves to the river front, is the Sandhill, facing
the Swing Bridge. Here are several old houses
remaining, with many-windowed fronts, looking out on
the river. One of these was the house of Aubone
Surtees, the banker, whose daughter Bessie, in 1772,
stole out of one of those little windows, and gave
herself into the keeping of young Jack Scott, who was
waiting for her below. The adventurous youth
became Lord Chancellor of England, and is best known
as Lord Eldon; his brother William became Lord Stowell,
and was for many years Judge of the High Court of
Admiralty.
Opposite the old houses of the Sandhill,
close to the river bank, is the old Guildhall, greatly
altered in appearance from the time when John Wesley
preached from its steps to the keelmen and fishermen
of the town. It was here that a sturdy fishwife
put her arms round him, when some boisterous spirits
in the crowd threatened him with ill-usage, and, shaking
her fist in their faces, swore to “floor them”
if they touched her “canny man.”
This spot, where the Swing Bridge
unites the lower banks of the stream, seems always
to have been the most convenient point for crossing
the river, for the present bridge is the fifth that
has spanned the Tyne at this point: Hadrian’s
bridge, Pons Aelii; a mediaeval bridge destroyed by
fire in 1248; the Old Tyne Bridge, swept away in the
flood of 1771; the successor of this, which was found
too low to allow of the passage of such large vessels
as were able to sail up the Tyne after the deepening
of the river bed; and the present Swing Bridge, which
is worked by hydraulic machinery, the invention of
Lord Armstrong. We do not know how long Hadrian’s
bridge lasted, but William the Conqueror, when returning
from his expedition into Scotland in 1071, was obliged
to camp for a time at “Monec-cestre,”
as the Tyne was in flood, and there was no bridge.
Some ancient houses are to be found
in Low Friar Street, one of which, with winged heads
and dolphins carved on it, is said to be the oldest
house in Newcastle. Turning up an opening on the
west side of this street, all that is left of the
ancient Blackfriars’ Monastery may be seen;
some of its rooms are used as the meeting places of
various Trade Guilds, and the rest form low tenement
houses, in the walls of which are many Gothic archways
and ancient window-openings built up. Over the
door of the Smith’s Hall is a carving of three
hammers, and the inscription:
“By hammer and hand
All artes do stand.”
This Hall was formerly the Great Hall
of the monastery; and here Edward Baliol did homage
to Edward III. for his crown of Scotland. Nun
Street, leading out of Grainger Street, reminds us
of the days when the Nunnery of St. Bartholomew stood
in this part of the town, and the Nun’s Moor
was part of the grounds belonging to the establishment.
In High Friar Street, which was not then the dilapidated
lane it now appears, Richard Grainger was born.
Another part of the town which has
fallen from its former high estate is the Close, which
lies along the river front, westward from the Sandhill.
Here, at one time, lived many of the principal inhabitants
of Newcastle Sir John Marley, Sir William
Blackett, Sir Ralph Millbank, and others equally important;
and here, too, was the former Mansion House of the
city, where the Mayors resided, and where they could
receive distinguished visitors to the town. Amongst
those who have been entertained there were the Duke
of Wellington and the first King of the Belgians.
But in 1836 the Corporation of Newcastle sold the house,
with the furniture, books, pictures, plate, and everything
else it contained.
Eastward from the Sandhill is Sandgate,
immortalised in the “Newcastle Anthem” The
Keel Row. Its present appearance is very different
from the green slope and sandy shore of former days;
the keelmen, too, have vanished, and their place in
the commercial economy of the Tyne is taken by waggon-ways
and coal-shoots. The old narrow alleys of the
town, called “chares,” are fast disappearing;
the best known is Pudding Chare, leading from Bigg
Market to Westgate Road. Many and various are
the explanations that have been offered to account
for its curious name, but the true one does not seem
yet to have appeared.
Pilgrim Street owes its name to the
fact that it was the route of the pilgrims who came
in great numbers to visit the little chapel or shrine
of Our Lady of Jesmond, and St. Mary’s Well.
In Pilgrim Street was the gateway of a stately mansion,
surrounded by beautiful gardens, called Anderson Place,
from a Mr. Anderson who bought it from Sir Thomas
Blackett in 1783. It had been built by another
Mr. Anderson in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, on the
site where once stood the monastery of the Grey Friars;
he, however, had named his mansion “The Newe
House.” In this house Charles I. lived
when a prisoner in Newcastle. Anderson Place
no longer exists, but the Newcastle of to-day has a
constant reminder of its last owners, for Major George
Anderson, son of the Mr. Anderson who purchased it
in 1783, gave to the Cathedral of St. Nicholas the
great bell known on that account as “The
Major” whose deep reverberant “boom”
can be heard for a distance of ten miles. The
bell was re-cast in 1891, and in 1892 a new peal of
bells was consecrated by Canon Gough.
Westgate Road is another interesting
street; the old West Gate stood near the site of the
present Tyne Theatre, and from this point onward the
street follows, almost exactly, the line of the Roman
Wall.
Some noteworthy houses in Newcastle
are N, Eldon Place, where George and
Robert Stephenson lived in the years 1824-25; N,
St. Thomas’ Crescent, where the celebrated artist,
Wm. Bell Scott lived when he was headmaster of the
School of Art, and to whom Swinburne wrote a fine
memorial poem; the Academy of Arts, in Blackett Street,
built for the exhibition of pictures by those well-known
painters T.M. Richardson and H.T. Parker,
and for a short period the home of the Pen and Palette
Club, which, both here and in its new home at Higham
Place, has entertained many people distinguished in
letters, art, and travel who have visited the town
of late years; and N, Pleasant Row, the birthplace
of Lord Armstrong, which has only recently been destroyed
to make way for the N.E.R. Company’s new
ferro-concrete Goods Station in New Bridge Street.
The list of important buildings in
Newcastle, exclusive of the churches, is a long one;
one of the most prominent is the Library of the Literary
and Philosophical Society, familiarly known as the
“Lit. and Phil.,” which stands at the
lower end of Westgate Road, a little way back from
the roadway. It is built on the site of the town
house of the Earls of Westmoreland; and its fine Lecture
Theatre was a gift to the Society from Lord Armstrong.
It is the centre of the intellectual life of the city
as a whole, apart from the work of the justly famed
Armstrong College, a teaching institute of University
rank. This was formerly known as the Durham College
of Science, and, with the Durham College of Medicine,
forms part of the University of Durham.
Other seats of learning in the town
are the Rutherford College, in Bath Lane, and the
Royal Grammar School, which dates from the reign of
Henry VIII. It was reconstituted by Queen Elizabeth,
and has had many changes of abode. At one time
it occupied the buildings of the Convent of St. Mary,
which covered the space where Stephenson’s monument
now stands. While the Grammar School was located
there, the boys Cuthbert Collingwood, William Scott,
and John Scott, who afterwards became so famous, attended
it; and other distinguished scholars were John Horsley,
author of Britannia Romana, and John Brand and
Henry Bourne, the historians of Newcastle. The
school is now situated in Eskdale Terrace and its
splendid playing fields stretch across to the North
Road.
One of the most interesting buildings
in Newcastle is the Hancock Museum of Natural History,
at Barras Bridge. It contains a matchless collection
of birds, and some unique specimens of extinct species;
also the original drawings of Bewick’s British
Birds, and other works of his. The famous
Newcastle naturalist, John Hancock, presented his wonderful
collection, prepared by himself, to the museum.
Here, too, is a complete set of fossils from the coal
measures, including some fine specimens of Sigillaria.
These are only a few of the treasures contained in
the museum, which was built chiefly through the generosity
of the late Lord and Lady Armstrong, Colonel John
Joicey of Newton Hall, Stocksfield, and Mr. Edward
Joicey of Whinney House.
The new Victoria Infirmary, on the
Leazes, is a magnificent building, and was opened
by King Edward VII. in 1906. It was erected by
public subscription, and when L100,000 had been subscribed,
the late Mr. John Hall generously offered a like sum
on condition that the building should be erected either
on the Leazes or the Town Moor. Arrangements were
made to do so, and another L100,000 given by the present
Lord and Lady Armstrong.
But fine as all these buildings are,
the pride of Newcastle is one much older than any
of them the Cathedral church of St. Nicholas,
with its exquisitely beautiful lantern steeple.
This wonderful lantern was the work of Robert de Rhodes,
who lived in the fifteenth century. The arms
of this early benefactor of the church may yet be seen
on the ancient font. The present church was finished
in the year 1350, says Dr. Bruce; but there was a
former one on this site to which the crypt is supposed
to belong. It has undergone many alterations at
different times, and has sheltered within its walls
many and various great personages.
In 1451, a treaty between England
and Scotland was ratified in the vestry. In the
reign of Henry VII., his daughter, Princess Margaret,
attended mass here, with all her retinue, when she
stayed in the town on her way to Scotland to be married
to the gallant young king James IV. She was entertained
at the house of the Austin Friars, which stood where
now stands the Holy Jesus Hospital at the Manors, near
to the Sallyport Tower. When James I. became
king of England, he attended service here, as he passed
through Newcastle on his way to his southern capital.
In the reign of his ill-fated son, Charles I., Newcastle
was occupied by the Scots, under General Leslie, for
a year after the battle of Newburn in 1640; and again
in 1644 was besieged by them for ten weeks. On
this occasion the town nearly lost its chief ornament
and pride the lantern of the church; for
“There is a traditional story,” says Bourne,
“of this building I am now treating of, which
may not be improper to be here taken notice of.
In the time of the Civil Wars, when the Scots had
besieged the town for several weeks, and were still
as far as at first from taking it, the General sent
a messenger to the Mayor of the town, and demanded
the keys and the delivery up of the town, or he would
immediately demolish the steeple of St. Nicholas.
“The Mayor and Aldermen, upon
hearing this, immediately ordered a certain number
of the chiefest Scottish prisoners to be carried up
to the top of the old tower, the place below the lantern,
and there confined. After this, they returned
the General an answer to this purpose, that they would
upon no terms deliver up the town, but would to the
last moment defend it; that the steeple of St. Nicholas
was indeed a beautiful and magnificent piece of architecture,
and one of the great ornaments of the town, but yet
should be blown to atoms before ransomed at such a
rate; that, however, if it was to fall it should not
fall alone; that at the same moment he destroyed the
beautiful structure he should bathe his hands in the
blood of his countrymen, who were placed there on
purpose, either to preserve it from ruin or to die
along with it. This message had the desired effect.
The men were kept prisoners during the whole time
of the siege, and not so much as one gun was fired
against it.”
In 1646, when Charles I. was a prisoner
in Newcastle for nearly a year (from May, 1646, to
February 3rd, 1647), this was the church he attended;
and we may picture him listening perforce to the “admonishing”
of the stern Covenanters. In this connection occurs
the oft-told story of his ready wit, when one of the
preachers wound up his discourse by giving out the
metrical version of the fifty-second Psalm, with an
obvious allusion to his royal hearer:
“Why dost thou, tyrant, boast abroad,
Thy wicked works to praise?”
Charles quickly stood up and asked
for the fifty-sixth Psalm instead:
“Have mercy, Lord, on me, I pray,
For man would me devour.”
The good folk of Newcastle with willing
voice rendered the latter Psalm, doubtless to the
discomfiture of the preacher.
Gray, who published his Chorographia,
or Survey of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, just three years
after this, describes St. Nicholas’ as having
“a stately, high, stone steeple, with many pinakles,
a stately stone lantherne, standing upon foure stone
arches, builded by Robert de Rhodes.... It lifteth
up a head of Majesty, as high above the rest as the
Cypresse Tree above the low Shrubs.”
The church underwent a terrible despoliation
at the hands of the Scots in 1644; but more terrible
still were the injuries it received, a little more
than a century later, from those who ought to have
been its friends. In the years 1784-7 there were
many alterations made in the building, during which
almost all the old memorials and monuments perished,
or were removed; those which were not claimed by the
living representatives of the persons commemorated
being ruthlessly sold, or destroyed; and the brasses
were disposed of as old metal. The modern alterations
and restorations have been more happy in their effect,
and one of the notable additions to the church is
the beautiful carved oak screen in the chancel, the
work of Mr. Ralph Hedley.
There are many beautiful memorial
windows in the church, and many memorials in other
forms to the various eminent North-country folk who
have been connected with Newcastle and its chief place
of worship. The Collingwood cenotaph is the most
interesting of all; the brave Admiral’s body,
as is well known, lies beside that of his friend and
commander, Nelson, in St. Paul’s Cathedral,
but this memorial of him is fittingly placed in the
Cathedral of his native town, within whose walls he
worshipped as a boy. There are two monuments by
Flaxman one of the Rev. Hugh Moises, the
famous master of the Grammar School when Collingwood
was a boy; and the other of Sir Matthew White Ridley,
who died in 1813. Of the newer monuments, those
of Dr. Bruce, of Roman Wall fame, and of the beloved
and lamented Bishop Lloyd, are particularly fine.
Near the east end of the church, which
was raised to the rank of a Cathedral in 1881, is
hung a large painting by Tintoretto, “Christ
washing the feet of the Disciples”; this was
presented to the church by Sir Matthew White Ridley
in 1818. There are many more things of interest
in the Cathedral, but mention must be made of a wonderful
MS. Bible, incomplete, it is true, but beautifully
written and illuminated by the monks of Hexham, and
other manuscript treasures carefully kept in the care
of the authorities.
The oldest church in the town is St.
Andrew’s, supposed to have been built by King
David of Scotland at the time when that monarch was
Lord of Tynedale, in the reign of King Stephen.
It suffered greatly in the struggle with the Scots,
whose cannon, planted on the Leazes, did it great
damage, and some of the fiercest fighting, at the final
capture of the town, took place close by, where a
breach was made in the walls. In such a battered
condition was it left that the parish Registers tell
us that no baptism nor “sarmon” took place
within its walls for a year (1645). But a marriage
took place, the persons wedded being Scots, who, we
learn from the same authority, “would pay nothing
to the Church.”
In the church is buried Sir Adam de
Athol, Lord of Jesmond, and Mary, his wife. It
is supposed that this Sir Adam gave the Town Moor to
the people of Newcastle, though this has been disputed.
A fine picture of the “Last Supper,” by
Giordano, presented by Major Anderson in 1804, hangs
in the church.
St. John’s Church ranks next
to St. Andrew’s in point of age; there are fragments
of Norman work in the building, and it is known to
have been standing in 1297. To-day the venerable
pile, with its age worn stones, stands out in sharper
contrast to its environment than does any other building
in the town, surrounded as it is by modern shops and
offices. The memories it evokes, and the past
for which it stands, are such as the citizens of Newcastle
will not willingly let die; and when, a few years
ago, a proposal was made for its removal, the proposition
aroused such a storm of popular feeling against it
that it was incontinently abandoned.
All Saints’ Church was built
in 1789, on the site of an older building which was
in existence in 1296, and which became very unsafe.
Here is kept one of the most interesting monuments
in the city the monumental brass which
once covered the tomb of Roger Thornton, a wealthy
merchant of Newcastle, and a great benefactor to all
the churches. He died in 1429. He gave to
St. Nicholas’ Church its great east window; but,
on its needing repair in 1860, it was removed entirely,
and the present one, in memory of Dr. Ions, inserted;
and the only fragment left of Thornton’s window
is a small circular piece inset in a plain glass window
in the Cathedral. He gave much money to Hexham
Abbey also.
Besides the famous men already mentioned
in connection with the town, Newcastle possesses other
well-known names not a few. In the Middle Ages,
Duns Scotus, the man whose skill in argument earned
for him the title of “Doctor Subtilis,”
owned Northumberland as his home, and received his
education in the monastery of the Grey Friars, which
stood near the head of the present Grey Street.
He returned to this monastery after some years of
study at Oxford; in 1304 he was teaching divinity in
Paris.
Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London
in the reign of Edward VI., whose Northumbrian birthplace
at Willimoteswick has already been noted, received
his early education at the Grammar School in Newcastle,
and on going to Cambridge was a student at Pembroke.
We are told he was the ablest man among the Reformers
for piety, learning and judgment. As is well
known, he died at the stake in 1555.
William and Elizabeth Elstob, who
lived in Newcastle at the end of the seventeenth century,
were learned Saxon scholars, but were so greatly in
advance of the education of their times that they met
with little encouragement or sympathy in their labours.
Charles Avison, the musician and composer,
was organist of St. John’s in 1736, and afterwards
of St. Nicholas’.
It was he to whom Browning referred in the lines
“On
the list
Of worthies, who by help of pipe or wire,
Expressed in sound rough rage or soft
desire,
Thou, whilom of Newcastle, organist.”
These lines have been carved on his
tombstone in St. Andrew’s churchyard. He
is best known as the composer of the anthem “Sound
the loud timbrel.”
Mark Akenside, the poet, was born
in Butcher Bank, now called after him Akenside Hill.
His chief work “The Pleasures of Imagination,”
is not often read now, but it enjoyed a considerable
reputation in an age when a stilted and formal style
was looked upon as a true excellence in poetry.
Charles Hutton, the mathematician,
was born in Newcastle in 1737. He began life
as a pitman; but, receiving an injury to his arm, he
turned his attention to books, and taught in his native
town for some years, becoming later Professor of Mathematics
in the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich.
John Brand, the antiquary and historian
of Newcastle, was born at Washington, County Durham,
but came to Newcastle as a child. After attending
the Grammar School, he went to Oxford, by the aid of
his master, the Rev. Hugh Moises. He was afterwards
curate at the church of St. Andrew.
Robert Morrison, the celebrated Chinese
scholar, was born near Morpeth, but his parents came
to Newcastle when the boy was three years of age.
He died in China in 1834.
Thomas Miles Richardson, the well-known
artist, was born in Newcastle in 1784, and was at
first a cabinetmaker, then master of St. Andrew’s
Free School, but finally gave up all other work to
devote himself to his art.
Robert Stephenson went to school at
Percy Street Academy, which for long has ceased to
exist. There he was taught by Mr. Bruce, and had
for one of his fellow-pupils the master’s son,
John Collingwood Bruce, who afterwards became so famous
a teacher and antiquary.
Newcastle is not, as most southerners
imagine, a dark and gloomy town of unrelieved bricks
and mortar, for, besides possessing many wide and
handsome streets, it has also several pretty parks,
the most noteworthy being the beautiful Jesmond Dene,
one of the late Lord Armstrong’s magnificent
gifts to his native town. The Dene, together with
the Armstrong Park near it, lies on the course of
the Ouseburn, which is here a bright and sparkling
stream, very different from the appearance it presents
by the time it empties its murky waters into the Tyne.
Besides these there are Heaton Park, the Leazes Park,
with its lakes and boats, Brandling Park, and others
smaller than these; and last, but most important of
all, the Town Moor, a fine breezy space to the north
of the town, of more than 900 acres in extent.
Of statues and monuments Newcastle
possesses some half-dozen, the finest being “Grey’s
Monument” a household word in the
town and familiarly known as “The Monument.”
It was erected at the junction of Grey Street and
Grainger Street in memory of Earl Grey of Howick, who
was Prime Minister at the passing of the Reform Bill.
The figure of the Earl, by Bailey, stands at the top
of a lofty column, the height being 135 feet to the
top of the figure. There is a stairway within
the column, by which it can be ascended, and a magnificent
view enjoyed from the top.
In an open space near the Central
Station, between the Chronicle Office and the
Lit. and Phil., there is a fine statue of George Stephenson,
by the Northumbrian sculptor, Lough. It is a full
length representation of the great engineer, in bronze,
with the figures of four workmen, representing the
chief industries of Tyneside, around the pedestal a
miner, a smith, a navvy, and an engineer. At the
head of Northumberland Street, on the open space of
the Haymarket, stands a beautiful winged Victory on
a tall column, crowning “Northumbria”
typified as a female figure at the foot of the column.
This graceful and striking memorial is the work of
T. Eyre Macklin, and is in memory of the officers
and men of the North who fell in the Boer War of 1899-1902.
Two other noteworthy statues in the town are those
of Lord Armstrong, near the entrance to the Natural
History Museum at Barras Bridge, and of Joseph Cowen,
in Westgate Road.
THE KEEL ROW
As I came thro’ Sandgate,
Thro’ Sandgate, thro’ Sandgate,
As I came thro’ Sandgate,
I heard a lassie sing
“O weel
may the keel row,
The keel row,
the keel row,
Weel may the keel
row
That my laddie’s
in
“O who is like my Johnnie,
Sae leish, sae blithe, sae bonnie;
He’s foremost ’mang the mony
Keel lads o’ coaly Tyne
He’ll set
and row sae tightly,
And in the dance
sae sprightly
He’ll cut
and shuffle lightly,
’Tis true,
were he not mine!
“He has nae mair o’ learnin’
Than tells his weekly earnin’,
Yet, right frae wrang discernin’,
Tho’ brave, nae bruiser he!
Tho’ he
no worth a plack is,
His ain coat on
his back is;
And nane can say
that black is
The white o’
Johnnie’s e’e
He wears a blue bonnet,
Blue bonnet, blue bonnet,
He wears a blue bonnet,
And a dimple in his chin
O weel may the keel row,
The keel row, the keel row,
Weel may the keel row
That my laddie’s in.”