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Blaydon Burn

Blaydon Burn Upper Brickworks

Last Updated:

2 Aug 2024

Blaydon Burn

This is a

Brickworks, Gas Retort Works

54.955070, -1.742254

Founded in 

1810s

Current status is

Partly Preserved

Designer (if known):

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Now used as an MOT centre

I do bang on about bricks a little bit (a lot), but it's certainly warranted down at Blaydon Burn. These buildings you see were part of one of the most famous brickworks in the region.

What you're looking at is Cowen's Upper Brickworks on the Winlaton end. Joseph Cowen, who we've discussed extensively, used clay dug out locally to produce the famous "COWEN" bricks.

Cowen first built up the works here in the 1810s, with their own brick gas retort works standing up here alongside the brickworks. There were eventually two sites - here and closer to the Tyne at Blaydon. For clarity, a gas retort works is literally where the coal is heated for gas. Cowen set it up here to light his own factory, but ended up building around it for further brick production.

It ended up being a vast and intricate complex of railways and coal mines all the way down to the Tyne. These bricks became well known for their resistance to high temperatures, and became well known internationally. They were exported across the empire and can still be found around the world, but more notably here in local buildings and terraced rows with their distinctive light buff.

Operations continued into the 60s when the clay eventually dried up as well as cheaper competition. The halcyon days of Blaydon Burn can still be remembered through these ancillary buildings as well as the partially preserved drift mines, scattered bricks and railway trackbed down the valley.

The railway you see on those maps was opened in 1842. It only took 6 months to build and was thought to be incredibly impractical by others but by Cowen a necessity to link colliery and brickworks to the depot on the Tyne. It was designed in part by a Mr G G Bell (a man I can find nothing on), and built with no accident whatsoever.

It was built on the lands of PE Townley who was, surprisingly, accommodating - probably because of Cowen's prowess.

Listing Description (if available)

Local clay was used for the manufacture of bricks in Cowen's two brickworks. The upper brickworks closed some time ago but the lower works (HER ref. 3434) continues production. The upper works were situated about two miles south of the lower works on higher ground, and were connected by a private railway. The brickworks were established about the year 1730 (70 years before that, fireclay was worked at Blaydon Burn and manufactured into bricks at Paradise on the north side of the Tyne). Joseph Cowen took over the Blaydon Burn Pit and Works in 1819. The works comprised two sets of firebrick works and retort making works. Workers cottages were provided at both sites. Some buildings may survive at the upper works site. - Sitelines

The dramatic industrialisation of the valley. There was a waggonway pre-1850s, but really beefed up once it was expanded predominantly into the brickworks. The gas retort building was eventually absorbed into the wider complex. You'll also see the railway was modernised and double tracked throughout, with the above ground links to the Victoria Drift and Mary Drift severed.

The 1915 map shows ongoing transition at the site. Mary Pit was only accessible by foot, and it appears the Victoria Drift is no longer in use above ground though some ancillary buildings still remain. An aerial tramway was constructed between the railway sidings and a coal depot on Burn Road. Since the surveying of this map, Winlaton's housing has expanded into these fields.

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Legacy Buildings of Blaydon Burn's Upper Brickworks in 2024

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The Upper brickworks around the 1920s. Unknown original source.

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The "Blaydon Burn High Works", which appears to be looking north east. Unknown original source.

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