Brandon, County Durham

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Brandon
County Durham
North End, Brandon - geograph.org.uk - 124427.jpg
North End, Brandon
Location
Grid reference: NZ240396
Location: 54°45’0"N, 1°37’41"W
Data
Post town: Durham
Postcode: DH7
Local Government
Council: County Durham

Brandon is a village in County Durham, standing a short distance to the south-west of the City of Durham.

Brandon originates as one of the seven townships within the ancient parish of Brancepeth, and it grew from a sparsely populated agricultural area into a populous mining district after the establishment of collieries and later coke and fireclay works. Until the 19th century Brandon village, formerly known as East Brandon, was one of the larger settlements in Brancepeth Parish.

History

Brandon was a manor of the mediæval lordship of Brancepeth and as such was possessed by the Neville family, the Earls of Westmoreland, while Holywell, Langley, Littleburn and other such localities were the sites of large freehold gentry houses.

The Northern Rising

After the Northern Rising of 1569, Queen Elizabeth I confiscated Brancepeth Castle and its territories. These were administered as Crown lands until the 1620s and plundered by a series of courtiers and royal lessees. In 1628-29 these lands were conveyed to the City of London, when King Charles I was forced to redeem his debts to the city. The Brancepeth lands were broken up in a series of sales to London merchants and financiers who in turn resold to local buyers at high profits.

The estate to be preserved from such dispersal was Brandon manor, which remained in the hands of its London buyer. A silk merchant, Edward Cropley, bought the whole estate of Brandon manor for £1,700 in 1630, and his family held onto the property till 1710. It was then conveyed to the Earl of Shaftesbury and remained in his family until the 1800s.

William Russell

In 1796 William Russell, a coal owner, retired from mining the Durham Coalfield and spent part of his fortune on buying and restructuring Brancepeth Castle. He set about repurchasing as much as possible of the old lordship broken up in the sales of the 1630s.

In 1806, Russell purchased the Brandon estate from the then Earl of Shaftesbury for £105,000. Russell's granddaughter married into the Irish peerage, and the name Hamilton-Russell and title Viscount Boyne became connected with the district.

Population

In 1801 the population of Brandon and Byshottles together was 522; in 1811, 435; in 1851, 525; by 1881 it had risen to 10,850; and in 1891, it was 14,240. There had been a decline in population during the 1830s owing to the removal of workmen who had been engaged on the rebuilding and enlargement of Brancepeth Castle, with the population falling to 427. The stone for this building work had been quarried in Brandon village, and Sawmills Lane is thought to have been constructed as a more direct route for the carting of stone to Brancepeth.

Industry

The great majority of the local workforce was engaged in agriculture, when the lessee of Brandon's coal seams was as much a farmer as he was a collier. It is recorded that John Shaw was operating a landsale pit in 1836 using a whim-gin, usually employing horses or a bull, to raise the coal to the surface.

The area experienced a dramatic change in the 1850s, as the growing iron and manufacturing industries required coal and coke in ever-increasing quantities and entrepreneurs moved into the area to develop coal mines.

Brandon Colliery railway station in May 1965

Brandon Colliery was developed by the Newcastle firm of Straker and Love, which sank the 'A' shaft in 1856 and the 'C' pit in 1860. In 1894, 1150 men and boys were employed working the Hutton, Busty, and Brockwell seams of coal at this colliery. Brandon Pit house was sunk in 1924. Coal mining finally came to an end at Brandon on 15 March 1968.

The Browney Colliery was created after Bell Brothers of Newcastle and Middlesbrough took a lease and commenced sinking a shaft in 1871. Coal was drawn in 1873 from three shafts working the Brockwell, Busty, and Hutton seams. The firm was taken over by Dorman Long & Co. in 1923. In 1930, 625 were employed at the colliery. In July 1938 the pit closed due to flooding.

The Littleburn Colliery in North Brancepeth was created in 1870 with the engineer shaft sunk to the Busty seam, followed by the merchant shaft to the Brockwell in 1871. In 1931 the company went into liquidation, and the pit was re-opened by Bearpark Coal and Coke Co. on a smaller scale to work the Busty seam, until flooding from the River Browney forced its closure in December 1950.

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