BERWICK ADVERTISER, 11 APRIL 1919

BERWICK PETTY SESSIONS

Before the Mayor (Ald. Plenderleith), A. L. Miller, and A. J. Dodds, Esqs

CHILDRENS’ COURT

A Berwick message boy and three school children, one of whom was a girl, appeared on a charge of having discharged missiles on the New Road, Berwick, to the danger of passengers, on the 3rd April, 1919. They pleaded not guilty.

The Chief Constable said this was one of the cases they were obliged to bring before the Bench, in consequence of the enormous amount of complaints which had been coming in. People using the road near the Old Castle were frequently annoyed by boys throwing stones and bottles down on to the road. He wishes it to be known that if this case was found proven that in future he would ask for a heavy penalty. He was sorry to have to bring these cases forward, but it was necessary for the safety of the public.

BRO 426-145

Complaints had also been received of damage done to the Old Castle, and no less than 25 boys had to be cautioned last week. The four children charged were on the night in question on the embankment near the Railway Bridge, where they had been in the habit on gathering pieces of coal thrown over by the railwaymen. They were raking amongst the stones for the coal, and dropping stones, which rolled down the bank on to the New Road. The fact was they had no business to be there at all, for it was a case of trespass, and they had no business to dislodge the coal or stone.

P.C. Spiers said he saw the four children kicking at the rubble in their search for coal and stones were falling down the embankment and bouncing on the footpath. If anyone had been passing they would certainly have been hit. As he was taking the names of the children a lady and gentleman came up and said it was a disgrace that such thing were going on.

Mr Miller – Is this the first case brought here?

The Chief Constable – Yes. I don’t think the children went deliberately to throw stones, but they had no right to be there at all.

P.C. Cruikshanks generally corroborated the previous witness.

All the children adhered to a statement that another boy had been there sliding down the bank on a carpet, and dislodging the stones, but he had bolted when the police came.

The mayor said the ends of justice would be made by the payment of half costs – 2s 6d in each case- but if the defendants should come back again they would not get off so easily.

SPITTAL NOTES

Whippet racing appears to be coming to the front in the village, as we hear it rumoured that another handicap is shortly to take place in the Side Cutting. On this occasion it is expected that dogs will be forward from the mining villages of South Northumberland. Some good straight-out racing may therefore be expected.

TWEEDMOUTH JOTTINGS

Welcome home to Church Road, Tweedmouth, Trooper Tom Brown, son of the late Mr Alex. Brown, passenger guard, who was killed accidentally at Berwick Station a few years ago. Trooper Brown, who joined the army in 1910, has almost nine years’ service to his credit, seven years of which he has spent in India. Tom took part in some very strenuous fighting in Mesopotamia, and was present at the capture of Bagdad. He was also in the heavy fighting around the neighbourhood of the rivers Tigris and Euphrates. He returns to his regiment, (14th King’s Hussars) on the expiration of his furlough, and as he is on the Reserve for another four years, we trust that he may enjoy the best of good luck, in whatever part of the world he is destined to travel.

LOCAL NEWS

Having once decided to re-open the course the committee of the Magdalene Fields Golf Club are not losing any time in getting started. As will be seen from an advertisement in our columns, play will commence on Good Friday, April 18th, with a stroke competition for gentlemen in the morning, followed by a Mixed Foursome in the afternoon, when tea will be served in the clubhouse. With the exception of the first hole, the course to be played over is practically the same as the “old nine” before its extension to 18 holes in 1915. Meanwhile, of an evening, a good many of the old enthusiasts are to be seen on the course trying to recover their former skill. It is wonderful how easily it all comes back, though judging from the amount of turf removed already the shots have not all been “clean hits.” The Course which was originally opened in June 1903 when the Mayor, Mr A. J. Dodds drove the first ball, was successfully carried on until 1917 when owing to wartime conditions it was thought advisable to close down.

LOWICK

The Parish Council at its meeting on Friday last agreed to reply to a communication from Glendale Rural District Council, that in their opinion more houses for the working classes were required in the village.

We are pleased to see home discharged Cpl. J. Ord, Isley Hill Cottages, Beal, and Pte. J. Black, Berryburn Mill, Ancroft.

BRO 515-163 LOWICK VILLAGE c.1920

The weather has been good of late and garden work is now in full swing.

The “flue” [sic] seems to be abating in our village, and we hope there will be no more cases.

One of the largest aeroplanes which has been seen in the neighbourhood came down at the New Haggerston Aerodrome, owing to some engine trouble. This being repaired, the machine continued her journey southward on Thursday, April 3rd. Her weight, it is said, was something like 13 tons. Rumour has it that this was one of the aeroplanes to be used in the forthcoming attempt to cross the Atlantic.

House History

Following the transmission of ‘A House Through Time’ telling the story of a house in Ravensworth Terrace, Newcastle, we have had an increase in interest in house history research. We thought that it may be helpful to provide a few tips to potential house historians:

  • The best place to start is with the deeds to the property. If they are not in your possession they may be in the care of your bank, building society or solicitor. It is very unlikely that the deeds will be held by an Archive Service.
  • If you are able to locate the deeds there may not be a full series dating back to the date that the property was built. There may be an abstract of title – a document that summarises the various transactions on the property. This may refer to earlier transactions where the deeds don’t survive.
  • Old maps can help date the property and date any substantive changes to it. A good starting point is the various editions of Ordnance Survey maps – these can be found online at https://maps.nls.uk/ and  www.old-maps.co.uk. Northumberland Archives holds copies of many historic Ordnance Survey maps and these can be viewed in our searchroom.
  • Other maps sources particularly tithe maps (circa 1840) and the 1910 Land Valuation can provide information about land ownership and occupancy.  This information may lead you to estate records. Northumberland Archives holds records of many Northumberland estates. These can be viewed in our searchrooms.
  • We hold historic planning records dating back to 1856 and it may be possible to locate an original building plan for your property. This involves looking through a planning register to locate a plan reference.  
  •  If you find evidence that your property formed part of a manor you should look for records of that manor. A good place to start is the Manorial Documents register- https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/manor-search. This will tell you what records survive and their location. The records themselves are not available online.
  • Census returns, 1841-1911, can help you locate who lived in your property. These are available online via two commercial sites – www.ancestry.co.uk and www.findmypast.co.uk.

Ancestry can be viewed without charge in our searchrooms and in local libraries.

  • The same sites include a digital copy of the 1939 register for England and Wales – a list of all civilians. This can also be useful in tracing occupancy of properties.   
  • Another useful occupancy source is electoral registers – lists of voters. Electoral registers for Newcastle. 1741-1974, can be found on www.ancestry.co.uk. Northumberland electoral registers are not online but can be consulted in our searchrooms.  
  • There are other sources to support tracing the history of a property – staff are always happy to provide guidance around this. 
  • Copies of almost any items in our care can be provided for a charge.
  • Duty staff are pleased to provide guidance around sources and research strategies but are unable to undertake research for you. If you are unable to undertake personal research  we have a charged for Research Service – see https://northumberlandarchives.com/test/services/research/  

Diocesan Training Home & Refuge For Friendless Girls, Ravensworth Terrace, Newcastle upon Tyne.

The first episode of the ‘House Through Time’ TV programme telling the story of a Georgian terraced house in Ravensworth Terrace, in Summerhill, Newcastle, was shown on 8 April. One of the references in the programme is to three properties in the terrace, numbers 6-8, being established as a Training Home and Refuge For Friendless Girls.  The purpose of the Training Home was to provide domestic skills for women considered to be at risk of falling into sexual promiscuity or prostitution.  Our blog tells some of the story of Diocesan Society for the Protection of Women and Children and its involvement with properties in Ravensworth Terrace.

Ernest Wilberforce, grandson of the abolitionist William Wilberforce, was appointed the founding Bishop of the newly created Diocese of Newcastle in 1882. Bishop Wilberforce arrived in the Diocese with his second wife, Emily. His first wife, Frances, died of tuberculosis in 1870. The creation of the new Diocese saw a flurry of new church building and a heightened interest in the social and moral welfare of the people of the Diocese. The tone for the latter was set in the speech made by the Duke of Northumberland at the enthronement of Bishop Wilberforce in which the Duke spoke of ‘… the dark shadows of demoralisation and vice which follow in the train of wealth and luxury’ and the necessity to combat these evils.

The early Diocesan Calendars – lists of Diocesan clergy, officials and organisations – are littered with lists of local and national societies and committees with charitable aims, many of them concerned with the wellbeing of females. The Calendar of 1884 carries the following listing:

This is the first reference to the Diocesan Society for the Protection of Women and Children found in the Diocesan Calendars.  An account in The Newcastle Courant of 10 August 1883 records the establishment of the Society the aims of which included ‘… the rescue of women and children from danger, the assistance of those who are poor and friendless and the reformation of such as have fallen into sin.’ The article goes on to record a gift of £1000 entrusted to Mrs. Wilberforce as president of the Society from ‘a lady in the south of England’. This news is accompanied by an appeal for other charitable souls to donate to the cause. By the time of the first annual meeting of the Society in April 1884 it had occupied 6 Ravensworth Terrace and twelve girls were resident there.  Neighbouring properties 7 & 8 were about to be occupied with number 7 to be used as a training home. The nature of the training is suggested in the report – ‘Some of the girls have been rescued from the most terrible surroundings of vice and misery, and have so much improved in intelligence and good conduct, under kind motherly care and discipline that we may reasonably hope that in a few months they will be ready to take a little servant’s situation’. The same report describes the intended functions of each of the three houses. Number 6 was to become a Receiving House where girls stayed for a short period before being placed in the Training Home at number 7. This property went on to include a laundry, another opportunity for girls to learn useful skills. Number 8 was to become a Ladies Boarding House where the girls could use some of the household skills taught in the Training Home. Both the laundry and the boarding house provided an income to the Society.  The lady boarders undertook church work in Newcastle.

There is evidence that the Society arranged the boarding out and emigration of children from Ravensworth Terrace. The same newspaper article reports that three children ‘rescued from the utmost danger in All Saints parish’ have been boarded out with another family.  All Saints was the poorest of the Newcastle parishes and likely to have been the focus of much of the Society’s work. There is also evidence that the Society was organising child migration. We learn from the same report that an unnamed 10 year old ‘little destitute girl’ was ‘emigrated’ and that there are plans for a further two children to emigrate.  Although not stated it is likely that the emigration formed part of the Home Children Scheme and that the children were sent to Canada.  

The Society also sought to bring to court cases where girls under the age of 14 were found to be living in what were described as houses of ill repute. The first case they pursued was that of 11 year old Mary Eliza Orrick who was found to be living in such an establishment in Peel Street, Newcastle. Mary Orrick’s mother was the keeper of the house and Mary and another unnamed girl aged 14 were found soliciting on a nearby street. The Peel Street property was visited several times before the case was brought and it was reported that the police were very aware of the way in which the property was used.  Mary Orrick was removed from her mother’s care and ordered to attend an Industrial School until she reached the age of 16.  

In 1889 some of the functions of the Ravenworth Terrace houses were re-located to Nedderton in Northumberland. Eventually the House of Mercy was re-established on Salter’s Road, Gosforth, becoming known as St. Hilda’s School which in turn became an Approved School in 1941. The School closed in the 1980’s.

Emily Wilberforce’s efforts to improve the lot of fallen women in the Diocese were marked by the naming of the Wilberforce Diocesan Home of Refuge as a tribute to her efforts. The first home for the Refuge was established in 1903 at 124 Westmorland Road, Newcastle. By 1918 the Refuge had moved to 41-43 Jesmond Road and by 1935 to 54 Clifton Road. It eventually became a mother and baby home caring for unmarried mothers and their babies. 

Ernest Wilberforce served as Bishop of Newcastle for fourteen years leaving the Diocese in 1896 to become Bishop of Chichester.  He died in 1907. Emily Wilberforce died in 1941.