Out & About Magazine (North East) January 2018 Edition 25

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Your local interest & advertising magazine | January 2018 | Edition 25 Tow Law, Sunniside, Stanley Crook, Billy Row, Crook, Willington, Wolsingham & surrounding areas

OUT&ABOUT Magazine outandaboutmagazinenortheast

Years gone by pages 6 & 18

History of Crook Market Place with Aaron Cowen - page 12

Local Northern League football fixtures - page 14

Out & About Mag celebrates it’s 2nd birthday!!!!


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Welcome to the January edition of Out & About Magazine, your friendly local interest & advertising magazine. Looking to give your home a new look now that Christmas is over? Take a look at page 4, Keith at K.B. Decorating Services will have your home painted & wallpapered in a flash. On page 7 we have Toronto Lodge who are offering 50% off your food bill when a starter and main course are taken during the first 2 weeks of January & a main course & a drink for £10 for the last 2 weeks of January.

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This month’s Out & About is dedicated to friend of the magazine, Stephen Hope, who sadly passed away in December 2017.

Also on page 14 we have Annmarie’s Childminding who are Ofsted registered and have spaces available now. Don’t forget that for working parents 30 hours funding can be split between a nursery setting and private childminder. Don’t forget to quote Out & About when replying to adverts & lastly we hope you enjoy this month’s edition, here’s to a fantastic and prosperous 2018. Thanks for your continued support!

BOOK YOUR ADVERTISING SPACE TODAY THE DEADLINE FOR THE FEBRUARY EDITION IS WEDNESDAY 24TH JANUARY No design fees if you don’t have your own artwork • Discounts on 3 month bookings • No VAT • Debit & credit cards can be taken in person at Ritchie Coatsworth Photography or over the telephone. Please note: Payment is due at the time of booking. Call us on 01388 417 337 or 7963 635 568 or email us at ads@outandaboutmagazinenortheast.co.uk DISCLAIMER - Whilst we take every care to ensure accuracy in this magazine, we regret that we cannot accept responsibility for any incorrect information. All adverts are accepted in good faith as to their accuracy. The copying of any material within this publication is strictly forbidden without the publishers consent.

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Years gone by...

We want your old pictures!! Send us your old photos of places & people from years gone by and we will publish them. Email them to: ads@outandaboutmagazinenortheast.co.uk

from Coates aged 7, 7th hool 1900. Annie Parker. ret rga Ma by Crook Infants Sc ed row. Image provid left in the 2nd back

St. Catherine’s Church is extended in the 1940s. Image provided by Roy Irvine.

dio is pe Street, our stu the bottom of Ho ael Manuel. ch Mi Looking across to by ed vid ach. Image pro hidden by the co 6

Some old printed items from Paxton’s Printers in Will ington. Provided by Harry Sew ell.

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The Market Place Myth Story by Aaron Cowen

As the council, again look at parking issues in Crook I thought it would be good to look at the history of our Market Places and Village Greens. From the 1600s the Crook/Billy Row area was generally owned by the Wrenn family of Billy Hall and Binchester Hall. The nearest Market was at Wolsingham with a Market Charter having been granted, to the bailiff and inhabitants of Wolsingham, in 1615. This Charter was confirmed in 1667 with the apportionment of a piece of land on which the market and fairs could be held. By Act of Parliament in 1764, the fourth year of the reign of George III, the common of Crook and Billy Row, containing 1500 acres, was divided. Some of this land was reserved for Farrer Wrenn, as compensation for right of soil amongst other things. Compensation was also made to William Belasye as Lord of the Manor of Brancepeth (Crook and Billy Row, was once part of that Parish). After this the main parts of the township became, by successive purchases and transfers, vested in the Russell family of Brancepeth, Robert Duncombe Shafto Esq. M.P., George Hutton Wilkinson Esq. and Ralph Walters Esq. By 1915 the ownership was largely transferred to Pease and Partners. At this time neither Crook nor Billy Row was of any great significance. The greens were nothing more than grazing land for sheep. They were obviously used for recreational purposes since on 11th July 1773, as on Billy Row green, William Dickinson, a boy aged fifteen, whilst playing long bowl, was struck on the head by the ball and died. The land which forms the Market Place in Crook is said to have been given to the “People of Crook” by the land owner. At that 12

time the owner would have been Farrer Wrenn. However we have all probably heard of the Inclosure Act. Prior to this act some land was categorised as “common”, “waste” or “not in use”. “Common” land was under the control of the Lord of the Manor, but a number of rights on the land (such as pasture, pannage, or estovers) existed for the local people and in some areas these rights still exist today. Pannage is the right to release domestic pigs into the woods, Estovers allows the collection of wood, while pasture rights permit grazing of animals. We can be certain that in the 1700s, Crook and Billy Row Greens were pieces of common land, owned by Farrer Wrenn and William Bellasye of Brancepth Castle. 1787 saw a toll road created from Wolsingham, through Crook and through to Durham City. This road provided an excellent new route to take livestock to the Market in Wolsingham and to return with goods to Durham. The new road was easier but it was a long journey, especially if you were herding sheep, so they would need somewhere to stop for the night. It is not unreasonable to suppose that George Linton realised the potential demand for hospitality services, and built, what is now, the oldest building in Crook; The Horse Shoe Inn. Drovers could take a break or stop the night here while their sheep grazed on the Green. The Enclosure Act of 1773 allowed the enclosure of land and at the same time removed the right of commoners and restricted access. It is likely that Crook Market Continued on the page 16.

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07445 289 457 Local Football Fixtures NL2 = Ebac Northern League Division 2 LC = League Cup AC = E Armstrong Memorial Cup

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Place was, at some point, Common Land, since the 1839 tithe map shows that people had enclosed areas of land, but no one had really claimed the Green itself. Being Common Land does not mean that the land was unowned but if nobody was going to claim it, someone had to look after it. In 1837 we see the “Overseers” for the area being Farrar Morson and Thomas Thompson. The task of overseer in 1867 was passed to Joseph Bell and Peter Campbell. Each year 2 new overseers would be chosen. They were overseers of the poor and were often reluctant appointees and the post unpaid. The overseers role formally ceased in 1834, however some smaller rural areas like Crook kept them as the New Poor Law emerged. Chances are they claimed and used the Market Place as a grazing space and charged a rent to those passing through who grazed their sheep on the land to raising funds to reduce the poor rate. Not surprising then that Market stall holders today are charged for their stall pitch. If the overseers did claim ownership of the Market Place their eventual demise was sealed by the New Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 which transferred control of, and responsibility for, the poor to the Auckland Poor Law Union Workshouse Board of Guardians. With the end of the Poor Law in 1948 the Market would have been looked after from then on, until the present day by Durham County Council. It is interesting that although the area on which the Market now stands is recorded at the Land Registry as the property of Durham County Council, the original market place is not registered to anyone. It is also interesting that Durham County Council, the Commons Registration Authority, do not have any land in the Crook area recorded as Common Land. This is likely to be very surprising to many, who have always believed this land to be common land.

In 1839 we can see just how the village greens were formed, but we also see the lack of buildings around them. 1862 sees Crook making its first attempt to hold an Agricultural Show in the Market Place. We believe the photo shown here depicts this first show. This event was described as a pig ce Crook Market Pla

1862

show rather than an exhibition of various cattle. The show moved the following year to a field where Gladstone Street now stands. Mr John Finley of Quarry House, father of Mr. Thomas Finley, Allotment House, Fir Tree, was the first to use the Market Place for what we now would recognise as Market purposes. He had a wooden building erected, from which he sold meat. This was likely around the year 1858. Certainly by 1890 a trade directory states that Crook had a ‘Well attended Market every Saturday’. SOME OTHER INTERESTING FACTS: In the early 1800s, John Wesley is said to have twice visited and preached on the village green at Billy Row. In 1840 a Parochial School was built. This was what we knew as the Old TSB which was demolished recently. A Mr. Thomas Baker of Elm Park was a former pupil and was an author of many mathematical treatises, he was also the person who identified the method of laying down railway curves. In 1881 Thomas Power O’Connor M.P. addressed a crowd of 3,000 people on the Market Place.

Aaron is a keen amateur historian and one of the admins of the Crook Town and District History Group Facebook group, he is also Chairman of the Empire Electric Palace group. 16

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Winners of the Bentley Bowl pose with their trophy in 1960. Can anyone shed any light on this?

Dawson Street Chapel, note how low the doorway is compared to now. Image provided by Steve Hope.

rs strike in 1921. Roddymoor Mine Roy Irvine. by ed vid Image pro

55. Group contains hool Hall 1950-19 ridge. St. Cuthberts Sc ster & Albert Bainb Fo an Bri , ms llia Wi John Lally, John ert Bainbridge. Photo sent in by Alb

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