Gateshead is a town in Tyne and Wear in north-east England on the south side of the River Tyne opposite Newcastle upon Tyne which covers the North Bank. It is the main settlement in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead. Gateshead and Newcastle are linked by ten bridges .
Gateshead is part of the postal county of Tyne and Wear and historically within the traditional county of County Durham.
In 1553, in the reign of Edward VI Newcastle briefly annexed Gateshead, and made another attempt in 1574.
Ambrose Crowley a Quaker nail-manufacturer moved in 1691 to Winlaton, where he set up furnaces and forges on the River Derwent. The river was ideally suitable for tempering steel as the sword-makers of Shotley Bridge also found. Crowley not only produced high-quality nails, but also iron goods such as pots, hinges, wheel-hubs, hatchets and edged tools. He could also make heavy forgings like chains, pumps, cannon carriages and anchors up to four tons in weight. The Crowley works were a tourist attraction and regarded as the largest manufactory of the kind in Europe.
Crowley founded two model settlements near his works, where his employees and their families lived in socialist fashion, with welfare services provided - a forerunner of Robert Owen’s better-known community at New Lanark in Scotland a century later. There were arbitration courts, sickness insurance, and a resident clergyman, teacher and doctor were employed. North of the bridge at Swalwell are fragments of the Crowley works.
William Hawks, originally a blacksmith, started business in Gateshead in 1747, working with the iron brought to the Tyne as ballast by the Tyne colliers. Hawks and Co. eventually became one of the biggest iron businesses in the North, producing anchors, chains and so on to meet a growing demand. There was keen contemporary rivalry between 'Hawks' Blacks' and 'Crowley's Crew'. The famous 'Hawk's men' including Ned White, went on to be celebrated in Geordie song and story.
In 1854, a catastrophic explosion on the quayside destroyed most of Gateshead's mediaeval heritage, and caused widespread damage on the Newcastle side of the river.
Robert Stirling Newall took out a patent on the manufacture of wire ropes in 1840 and in partnership with Messrs. Liddell and Gordon, set up his headquarters at Gateshead. A world-wide industry of wire-drawing resulted. The submarine telegraph cable received its definitive form through Newall's initiative, involving the use of gutta percha surrounded by strong wires. The first successful Dover-Calais cable on 25 September 1851, was made in Newall's works. In 1853, he invented the brake-drum and cone for laying cable in deep seas. Half of the first Atlantic cable was manufactured in Gateshead. Newall was interested in astronomy, and his giant 25 inch telescope was set up in the garden at Ferndene, his Gateshead residence in 1871.
In 1831 a locomotive works was built by the Newcastle and Darlington railway, later part of the York, Newcastle and Berwick Railway. In 1854 the works moved to a new site and became the manufacturing headquarters of North Eastern Railway. In 1910, locomotive construction was moved to Darlington.
The BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art has been established in a converted flour mill. The Sage Gateshead, a Norman Foster-designed venue for music and the performing arts opened on 17 December 2004. The Brutalist Trinity Centre Multi-Storey Car Park still dominates the town centre. A product of attempts to regenerate the area in the 1960s it is largely derelict but has gained an iconic status due to its appearance in the film Get Carter.
Gateshead is also home to a large number of public art works, including the The Angel of the North, Britain's largest sculpture with a height of 20 metres and a 54 metre wing span. This was a bold step for the council and has succeeded in drawing national attention to Gateshead. It was erected in 1998, and designed by Antony Gormley. It is visible from the A1 road immediately south of Gateshead, as well as from the East Coast Main Line.
Although only about 1% of the population are practicing Jews, there is a significant Jewish community in the borough, the largest in North East England. The community was established at the end of the 19th century when Eastern European Jewish refugees rejected the religious laxity of the Newcastle upon Tyne congregation, and crossed the river to set up a new synagogue. Following the destruction of the centres of Orthodox Jewish scholarship on the European mainland, Gateshead became the largest Orthodox Jewish education complex in postwar Europe, and the most significant outside of the United States and Israel. This can partly be attributed to the arrival of orthodox Jewish refugee businessmen who were fleeing the European mainland during the Nazi era. As a result, Gateshead became an important centre of Torah orthodoxy.
The local rugby union team, Gateshead RFC, is also experiencing success, winning their league (Durham and Northumberland 2) in 2004/2005, and finishing 4th in a very tough Durham and Northumberland 1 league in 2005/2006, with centre David Tate finishing top try scorer in the league with 18 tries, and scrum half/kicker Jonathan Foster finishing second overall top points scorer with 187 points.
The A1 road passes through Gateshead starting from the South it runs past the Angel of the North then past Team Valley and the Metro Centre before crossing Blaydon bridge and into Newcastle. This section is often referred to as the Western Bypass, and is one of the most congested sections of dual carriageway in Europe.
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