We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 55.1404 / 55°8'25"N
Longitude: -1.5213 / 1°31'16"W
OS Eastings: 430612
OS Northings: 582999
OS Grid: NZ306829
Mapcode National: GBR K9T0.F3
Mapcode Global: WHC30.L2S3
Plus Code: 9C7W4FRH+5F
Entry Name: Coal Staithes at Blyth Power Station
Listing Date: 18 December 1986
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1041382
English Heritage Legacy ID: 235891
ID on this website: 101041382
Location: North Blyth, Northumberland, NE24
County: Northumberland
Civil Parish: East Bedlington
Traditional County: Northumberland
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Northumberland
Church of England Parish: Cambois
Church of England Diocese: Newcastle
Tagged with: Building
WANSBECK NORTH BLYTH
NZ 38 SW
6/20 Coal Staithes at
Blyth Power Station
II
Coal Staithes constructed between c.1910-1923 for the North Eastern Railway Company, altered c. 1994.
MATERIALS: timber
The lower level of a set of coal staithes c.375m long of traditional braced timber construction. The structure is formed of substantial timber piles driven into the sea bed carrying a timber deck. The staithes were originally 500m long and comprised three decks with gantries.
HISTORY: Blyth initially developed as a fishing port with ancillary salt pans, but during the later C19 and C20 centuries it became Northumberland's premier coal port and for a brief period in the mid C20 it shipped more coal than any port in Europe. At its peak, the harbour had several sets of staithes, which allowed coal arriving by wagon way and later railway to be dropped from wagons directly into ships. The coal staithes at Blyth power station, known formerly as West Staithes, were the last of the traditional staithes to be built on the River Blyth. Their construction began in c. 1910 for North Eastern Railway Company, but the First World War intervened and they were completed in 1923. The original upper two decks were demolished and the whole structure truncated in 1994/5.
SOURCES:
www.sine.ncl.ac.uk;
www.keystothepast.info;
www.whitehavencoast.co.uk;
S Linsley 'Ports and Harbours of Northumberland', 2005;
N Pevsner 'The Buildings of England: Northumberland', 2nd edition 1992;
Sir N Cossons 'BP Book of Industrial Archaeology', p142, 1993.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings