|

































Underlined Text & Images are used for Hyper-Links to more Relevant
Information
©
Copyright 2006 |
St Mary’s Island
and Lighthouse
|

|
The Lighthouses that surround our
nation are some of the most Majestic Buildings to visit and are often
located on scenic stretches on coastline, St Mary's Lighthouse is no
exception standing proud in the traditional white, on a rocky outcrop which
is cut of from the mainland twice daily at high tide.
|
Visiting the island can be an
enjoyable outing whatever the weather from the car park a walk along the
promenade offers a continuation along the beach to Whitley Bay or Bird
Watching the winter Waders in the wet sanctuary from the Hides provided,
there is also a cliff top walk along the Headland through New Hartley to
Seaton Sluice.
The Lighthouse built in 1898 is 126 feet high, all of
which visitors can climb to enjoy the panoramic view and can be seen for a
distance of up to 18 miles out to sea to warn Sea Farers of the Coastal
Dangers, identifying itself and location by the repeated Unique Signature of
rotational flashing lights.
For nearly ninety years the Island was the home for
two rotating lighthouse keepers and their families, their jobs being to
clean and maintain the Clockwork Lamp & Lens Mechanism which included hand
carrying Paraffin Fuel Oil up the 137 steps to the light.
The light is no longer
operational due to the use of Global Satellite Navigation on Modern Sea
Going Vessels the lighthouse is now a Museum of Marine Life, with rock pools
outside for younger visitors who want practical experience of new knowledge.
|
 |
Monkseaton
& Hillheads
| Monkseaton dates back to at least the
twelfth century, when it was simply known as 'Seton'. This is probably a
derivative of the words 'sea' and 'tun', i.e. the village being near to the
sea, and a 'tun', meaning a hill or rise.
When King Henry 1 granted lands to the Prior of
Tynemouth around 1106, the name was altered to 'Seton Monachorum'. The
prefix 'Monk' is often found in connection with places belonging to
religious houses, and so in this case it became known as Monk Seaton, or
Seaton of the Monks. |

|
|

Garden Cottage
known as Ramsay's Fort which had two Imitation Cannons to ward of the
Invading French
|
Monkseaton Village has been absorbed
into the urban confines of the nearby town of Whitley Bay, its history
pre‑dates that town by many years, and to anyone who resides in Monkseaton,
the place is still referred to as 'The Village'.
The areas that skirt the outer
boundary of Monkseaton to the southeast, are Hillheads (formerly known as
Whitley Hill Heads), along with the villages of New York and Murton to the
south‑west, and Earsdon to the north. |
Although these villages have now been incorporated into
the suburbs of neighbouring Whitley Bay and North Shields, they are still
considered by the local residents as villages in their own right, all of which
have their unique story to tell.
Cullercoats Bay
Cullercoats Bay - Ivan Lindsay
Bay Hotel on the Headland
on the left and the Old Customs
House (White) to the right. Below
in Bay is R.N.L.I. Lifeboat Station below Hotel & Clock Tower,
also in the bay is the Dove Maritime Research Centre
-

-
Tynemouth Long Sands to Cullercoats - Lindsay
Seaton Sluice
|
Leaving Whitley bay traveling north towards Seaton
Sluice one rises to the Deleval Arms Public House on the headland overlooking St
Mary's Lighthouse, an area known as Old Hartley where a there ins a fine Caravan
Site for touring units, followed by a run down to the Sluice once a very active
Coal Port.
One of the local pits in the area to supply the port
with Black Gold was the New Hartley Pit which was located a mile or so inland
past Deleval Hall at New Hartley which was the scene of the
North East of England's worst pit disaster. |

St Mary's Lighthouse from S.Sluice - Ivan Lindsay
|
|
 |
Seaton
Deleval Hall north of Whitley Bay is an English baroque house which was rebuilt
following a fire in 1822 by the architect Sir John Vanbrugh, renowned for Castle
Howard in Yorkshire.
Starlight Castle, the ruins of which area
still visible after a short walk up the sluice from the Harbour was the product
of a wager made by Lord Deleval that he could build a castle for his mistress in
a weekend.
|
We hope you will bookmark us to Watch
This Space grow
|