The
History of Corbridge
Click here for Graphics version
Text menu
Home page
Parish history
Your Parish Councillors
Meetings & minutes
The Parish Hall
Community Awards
The Village Plan
Corbridge
Health Centre
Corbridge Village Trust
St Andrew's Parish Church
Market Place Chapel
Corbridge Methodist Church
Frequently asked questions
Join our mailing list
Links to useful web sites
Write to your Council
The
History of Corbridge
The archaeology of the Corbridge parish is dominated by two settlements: namely
the
Roman
garrison town of Corstopitum and the later,
medieval
town of Corbridge, located slightly further east. As with so many river valley
towns, these settlements grew up at crossing points of the River Tyne. The river
valley was also an important route along which communication and movement occurred
from the earliest times and the relatively large number of
prehistoric
sites and finds around Corbridge would suggest that this was an attractive area
to settle for thousands of years before Roman soldiers ever set foot on British
soil.
The earliest evidence for this cross-country route being used dates to
Mesolithic
times. Field walking and chance finds in the vicinity of
Red
House,
Shorden
Brae,
Gallowhill
and
Caistron
Field all help to build a picture of Mesolithic use.
Excavations of the
Roman
town and fort from 1906 to 1914 tended to penetrate only as far as the latest
Roman building and so the pre-Roman occupation of the site has not been thoroughly
investigated. However, in 1952 a
palisaded
enclosure with the remains of a circular hut was recorded beneath the fort
and, on the basis of other parallels, these have been dated to the
Bronze
Age. A
hoard
of bronze implements found at Farnley, and burials from near
Aydon
Fell House and
Dilston
Plains show widespread activity at this time. An unusual
‘coracle
burial’ was found in 1961 that may have contained Bronze Age pottery
and a massive
cup-marked
sandstone block was found within the foundations of the fourth century workshops
at Corstopitum, typical of carved rocks of
Neolithic
date. Taken collectively there are a significant number of sites dating to the
Bronze Age in this area to suggest some sort of settlement. The numbers of Mesolithic
flints found along the valley would also strongly suggest that the area was
used repeatedly by as people travelled across the landscape. There is very little
in between these two phases of occupation, suggesting that settlement here was
still intermittent until Roman times.
Around the
Roman
town of Corbridge, a number of small farmsteads or settlements existed in
more rural locations. At
Thornbrough
Scar a settlement of six
round
houses dating to the second century AD has been excavated. Nearby at
High
Barns, another settlement, now partially destroyed by the main road, also
appears to be Roman in date.
These Roman sites and the
Roman
fort and town at Corbridge lie within a complex frontier zone of which
Hadrian’s
Wall is the best-known element. Also in the vicinity are three
Roman
camps which lie 2km south-east of the Roman fort at Corbridge. The three
camps lie very close to
Dere
Street, the principal Roman road between York and Scotland and their differing
orientations reflect their subtle placing to exploit minor topographical features.
Parts of
Dere
Street have been uncovered in the parish. Although the camps do not survive
as upstanding
earthworks
they remain clearly visible on
aerial
photographs. A further possible
temporary
camp has been identified in the parkland of
Howden
Dene.
The
Roman
station at Corbridge was established sometime after AD85 and it replaced
an earlier fort at
Beaufront
Red House nearby. Evidence from the
Vindolanda
writing tablets now suggests that it may have been known as Coria at that time.
When
Hadrian’s
Wall was built to the north of the
Stanegate
across the Solway-Tyne gap, in the second century AD, forts like Corbridge in
the hinterland behind the Wall became redundant. However, Corbridge also lay
on
Dere
Street and guarded the main supply route north to Scotland, which ran from
York to Corbridge and then up the North Tyne valley, eventually to Newstead.
Thus when Antoninus Pius re-advanced into Scotland and a turf wall, known as
the Antonine Wall, was constructed in AD142 on the Forth-Clyde line, Corbridge
became a significant point on the supply lines of the new frontier and new fort
buildings were constructed there. At the same time other forts on
Dere
Street were re-commissioned and the road was fitted with milestones. Corbridge’s
location at a crossing point on the Tyne and at the junction of two of the principal
Roman roads, the Stanegate and Dere Street, meant that it retained its strategic
importance despite subsequent changes to the frontier. The military
vicus
was enclosed within defences and two separate enclosed compounds were built
in the centre of Corbridge in the third century for the manufacture of arms
and equipment for the army. A significant
civilian
settlement grew up around the military site and extends well beyond the
area where remains are visible. By the mid-second century it was a defended
market town and continued to be occupied until the late fifth century at least.
The remains of a
Roman
bridge that carried
Dere
Street over the Tyne can still be seen in the bed of the river immediately
to the south of the Roman town. Close to the bridge, the remains of an
Anglo-Saxon
watermill
were excavated in 1995. However, the relationship between the collapse of the
Roman infrastructure and the post-Roman settlement is not at all clearly understood.
The traditional view is that after the Roman town was abandoned a new
early
medieval settlement was established nearby, on a hill to the east, with
the Roman town being used as a quarry for building stone for the new village.
The true sequence is probably less clear cut and, despite the removal of deposits
which may relate to this period and the fact that excavations have focused strongly
on the military functions of the Roman site,
Anglo-Saxon
material has been recovered from the site of the Roman town. This consists
of two brooches found with 32 glass beads, a small vessel found near a
cist,
a sword scabbard mount, and two
skeletons,
none dating to before AD700. Other objects found from the area under the car
park at the site of the Roman fort, have a probable date of the later fifth
to early sixth century.
Bloody
Acres is reputedly the site of an Anglo-Saxon battle, possibly fought in
AD914. These various pieces of fragmentary evidence are sufficient to indicate
that the site of the Roman town was used in the post-Roman period, although
further research could profitably be carried out into this era in Corbridge.
In AD786, Alduf was consecrated Bishop of Mayo in what was referred to at that
time as the monastery at Corbridge. The
Church
of St Andrew in Corbridge is certainly partly
Anglo-Saxon
and the tower of the church is the only pre-Conquest standing building in Corbridge.
Certain architectural features and the dedication to St Andrew, suggest that
the original foundation may have been in the late seventh century as there are
similarities with other late seventh century churches at Jarrow and Monkwearmouth.
The reference to the church being a monastery is not supported either by the
architecture visible today, nor by excavations in the 19th century.
Corbridge was already a borough when Henry II came to the throne in 1154 and
in 1201 King John granted Corbridge the status of a royal borough. Its location
at the junction of two ancient highways made Corbridge a natural point where
a commercial centre should develop through trade and a
market
place. Corbridge remained at the junction of two major routes for many centuries
and became the destination of new roads as it again became a bridging point
across the Tyne. The main east-west road, the
Carelgate,
was used until the 18th century and carried traffic between Newcastle and Carlisle
via Corbridge and Hexham.
Dere
Street, which later became known as Watling Street, continued in use through
the 12th to the 16th centuries and was a conspicuous feature, which served as
a boundary for every neighbouring estate. It was converted to a turnpike in
1800 but became less important after the construction of the Great North Road.
The discovery of lead in the North Pennines also led to the creation of other
packhorse routes leading to and from Alston,
Stanhope
and Penrith. The remains of a small 14th century
stone
bridge on one of these routes can still be seen on the west bank of the
Devil’s Water. Linked with the discovery of lead and silver, a mint was
created at Corbridge and Carlisle. The importance of Corbridge as a crossing
point on the Tyne was ensured after the old disused Roman bridge was replaced
by a new structure in 1235. This stood on the site of the present
bridge,
which was built in 1674 and was the only bridge on the Tyne to withstand the
floods of 1771.
In the 13th century the town was at its most prosperous and had become the second
largest borough town in the region, next to Newcastle. However, partly as a
result of repeated destruction during the Border Wars at the beginning of the
14th century and population decline after 1349 when the Black Plague took its
toll, the town’s prosperity declined considerably.
Dwellings on individual plots were rebuilt a number of times during this period
of unrest. In 1296 a Scottish invasion led to destruction both at
Hexham
and Corbridge, which was burnt during this raid, reportedly suffering almost
total destruction. The burgesses were given a gift from the king of 40 oaks
to rebuild their houses. There is also evidence of a number of other buildings,
now lost. The earliest documentary reference to the
Chapel
of St Helen occurs in about 1300, when a deed mentions a St Helen's Street.
This chapel was built to serve the
manorial
hall, which was located close by. Despite excavations in the area, the remains
of both buildings have failed to materialise, although a
boundary
wall does contain some
medieval
fabric.
To the south of the
Church
of St Andrew there is another significant medieval building, the
Vicar's
Pele Tower. The tower is mentioned as the vicar's property in a list of
fortresses drawn up for Henry V in 1415. There is no record of its erection,
but it is built in a style of about 1300 and is all of one date. Further medieval
buildings in Corbridge include
Low
Hall, also known as Baxter’s Tower, which is thought to be the oldest
house in the village apart from the Vicar’s Pele. The nucleus of the building
is a medieval tower, three stories high, yet it retains many of its original
features including a vaulted ground floor. Recent interpretations have suggested
a 13th century house stood on the site before the tower was built in the 15th
century. During the medieval period a little
hamlet
or
suburb
grew up on the priory lands around the
prior’s
manor house and
Trinity
Church N8994], now the area known as Trinity Terrace. It lay outside the ditch
that formed the defence and limit of the town.
Burials
associated with Trinity Church have been found in Trinity Terrace on a number
of occasions.
It was probably during the 13 or 14th century that the street pattern that we
see in the centre of the town was first established. At the centre of the town
was, and is, the
Market
Place where markets were held weekly since the reign of King John at the
beginning of the 13th century. The
Old
Market Cross is now set against the churchyard wall 2m east of the
Vicar's
Pele; it is a combination of Roman, 13th century and 18th century build.
Outside the town, investment in defensive buildings to provide protection from
border conflict was taking place at
Aydon
Castle in the 13th century. The castle started life as a fortified manor
house with the earliest buildings being timber-framed. They were replaced with
stone buildings in the more troublesome times of the late 13th century, but
in the Scottish wars of the early 14th century, Aydon was the first place to
be attacked. In response to this, fortifications were improved and battlemented
walls provided.
The rural hinterland of Corbridge contained a number of small farming villages,
few of which have survived to the present day. Aydon itself once held two
settlements,
but only one remains today. Other
deserted
medieval villages once existed at
Shildon,
Portgate
with a fortified tower,
Dilston
and
Thornbrough.
The hamlet of
Spredden
was attacked by the Scots in 1391 and today the exact location of this settlement
lost, but may be some
earthworks
close to High Barns. We know from documentary sources that many of these villages
existed in the 12th century, but presumably border unrest, plague and agricultural
improvements, ensured that they could not survive in any substantial form today.
Iron working, an important activity in the
Roman
town, appears to have continued to play a role in the economy of
medieval
Corbridge. Four new forges were entered in to the Provost’s account of
1525 and ironwork was known to be a principal commodity sold at
Stagshaw
Fair, with lists of purchases from the fair in 1298 and 1299 including horseshoes,
nails and ironware. Main Street in Corbridge was formerly called Smithgate because
of the numbers of iron working shops that were located there. The medieval street
name Hidemarket suggests a tanning industry and brick-lined tan-pits are said
to have been found nearby in about 1760.
The market, along with many others, had disappeared before 1663 and the town
had declined virtually to the status of a village in the late 16th century.
Despite the end of hostilities with Scotland, Corbridge did not really grow
until after the opening of the Newcastle to Carlisle Railway in 1835, when the
town expanded a little on the south bank of the river and the historic core
of the town on the north bank became a little more built up. Throughout the
18th and 19th centuries new building in the town continued to replace and adapt
existing properties and it is at this time that the architectural character
of Corbridge that we are familiar with today, was formed. For example,
Monks
Holme located at the eastern end of Main Street, is one of the finest old
houses left in Corbridge, possibly dating to the 16th or 17th century with much
19th century restoration. Nearby is Byethorne House, originally called 'The
Willows', with 20 acres of
gardens,
parkland and woodland overlooking the River Tyne. Hill Street was built
up by the 18th century and many of the buildings on this street date to between
1700 and 1800 and are now
listed
buildings, for example
14
and 16 Hill Street and
18
Hill Street, also known as Heron House.
A former
chapel
is now used as a library and tourist information office at the corner of Hill
Street and Princes Street. It was designed by F Emily who, in 1887, also designed
the
Town
Hall with shops beneath which stands on Princes Street. The former
Primitive
Methodist Chapel in Corbridge dates from 1867.
A town located at the meeting of several roads requires a number of inns for
the traveller. Corbridge had quite a few and a number of these buildings are
still standing today. The
Angel
Inn is a 17th century inn that was extended in the 18th century. It was
formerly called the King’s Head and from 1752 until the opening of the
railway it was the posting inn for Corbridge. The
Wheatsheaf
Inn is a mid-18th century inn that was altered and enlarged in the mid 19th
century. The
Black
Bull Inn in Middle Street, dates to 1765 and 1755, but incorporates earlier
fabric and was a separate house until about 1670. The
Golden
Lion Public House is a mid-18th century inn, which was built with materials
from Dilston Hall in 1768. The
Boots
and Shoes Inn, now demolished was another posting inn which was located
in Water Road (now Front Street) and its name derived from the local industry
of shoemaking.
The principal industries carried on in the town during the first half of the
19th century were shoemaking, lime burning and market gardening. The shoes were
made for the coal and lead miners of the area and many were exported to Shields
and became known as Shields shoes. Numerous orchards were planted about the
town in the 19th century, although they ceased to be profitable. The traditional
iron working also continued in the town, with five smiths recorded in 1855.
It is likely that some local street names were developed from this industry,
such as Filers Row, located at the Market Place end of Middle Street.
Corbridge
Pottery in Milkwell Lane was established in about 1840. Two impressive early
19th century bottle ovens are the most prominent feature here and there is also
a pair of 'Newcastle' horizontal kilns. The pottery closed in about 1910. Lime,
mainly for agricultural improvements was created at a number of
lime
kilns in the surrounding countryside, such as
Thornbrough
and
Aydon
Quarry. A
paper
mill was established south of the town at Dilston. The archaeological interest
of the area carries on up to more modern times. The lychgate of St Andrew's
Church in Corbridge was built in 1919 as a World War I memorial.
| Disclaimer - Please note that this information
has been compiled from a number of different sources. Durham County Council
and Northumberland County Council can accept no responsibility for any
inaccuracy contained therein. If you wish to use/copy any of the images,
please ensure that you read the Copyright
information provided.
|