Kibblesworth

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Kibblesworth
County Durham
Kibblesworth Main Street - geograph.org.uk - 135736.jpg
Main Street, Kibblesworth
Location
Grid reference: NZ243567
Location: 54°54’18"N, 1°37’16"W
Data
Post town: Gateshead
Postcode: NE11
Dialling code: 0191
Local Government
Council: Gateshead
Parliamentary
constituency:
Blaydon

Kibblesworth is a village two miles west of Birtley.

Kibblesworth was a mainly rural community until the development of the pit and brickworks and the resulting increase in population. Now, after the closure of the pit, few of the residents work in the village.

The name of the village is from Old English: Cybbles weorþ means 'Cybbel's Enclosure'.

Churches and chapels

Kibblesworth is in the parish of St Andrews, Lamesley. While the area was agricultural, this was the centre of worship for the people of Kibblesworth. After the development of the mining industry, the Primitive Methodist Chapel (1869) and Wesleyan Methodist Chapel (1868),[1] provided social as well as religious life for the village. The present chapel was built by the Wesleyan Methodists in 1913.[2] The Primitive Methodist Chapel has now been converted into flats.

The Colliery

Although there had been coal-mining in the Kibblesworth area from mediæval times, relatively few men were employed in the industry until the sinking of Robert Pit in 1842. From this date the fortunes of the village followed those of the industry with particular black spots during the strikes of 1921 and 1926 and the depression of the 1930s, high spots in the boom of the 1950s and 60s, and eventually closure of the pit in 1974.[3]

The Bowes Railway was used for the transport of coal from Kibblesworth to the River Tyne at Jarrow. The line was started by George Stephenson in 1826 and extended to Kibblesworth when Robert Pit was sunk in 1842. The railway used three types of power - locomotives, stationary steam engines and self-acting inclines. There is now a cycletrack that runs along the former track bed.

Notable buildings and structures

The square at Spout Burn was built to house the miners of Robert Pit. It was demolished between 1965 and 1966, and replaced by old people's bungalows the following year and the Grange Estate from 1973.

Better known as 'the Barracks', Kibblesworth Old Hall was divided up into tenements. The memory survives, in the street named Barrack Terrace. The hall was demolished and replaced by the Miner's Institute in 1934. The area has recently been redeveloped for housing.

In 1855 a short "test tunnel" for the London Underground was built in Kibbleworth, because it had geological properties similar to London. This test tunnel was used for two years in the development of the first underground train; in 1861 it was filled in.[4]

Kibblesworth Hall was for many years the home of the colliery manager. It was demolished in 1973.

The original Kibblesworth School was built in 1875, and closed in 1972. It has since been redeveloped using Lottery funding to house the village community centre known as the 'Millennium Centre'. The present school opened in 1972.[5]

Outside links

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References

  1. Durham Mining Museum
  2. Kibblesworth Chapel
  3. Durham Mining Museum
  4. Bextor, Robin (2013). A History of the London Underground. Demand Media. p. 34. ISBN 1909217379. 
  5. 'Kibblesworth History' - Chronicle Live