Online Encyclopedia

SOUTH SHIELDS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 517 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SOUTH SHIELDS  , a seaport and municipal, county and
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parliamentary borough of Durham, England; at the mouth of the
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Tyne on its- right
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bank, opposite North Shields, on a branch of the North-Eastern railway . Pop . (1901), 97,263 . It is connected with North Shields and
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Tynemouth by steam ferries . The
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principal buildings are the church of St
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Hilda, with a picturesque old tower; the
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town hall in the market-place,
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exchange, custom-house, mercantile marine offices, public library and museum, grammar school, marine school, master-mariners' asylum and seamen's institute . There is a pleasant marine park . The principal
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industries are now the manufacture of glass and chemicals, and
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ship-
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building and ship refitting and repairing, for which there are docks capable of receiving the largest vessels . The Tyne
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dock has a
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water-
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area of 50 acres, the tidal basin of ro acres, and the quays and yards about 300 acres .
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Coal from the collieries of the vicinity is largely exported . . The trade returns of South Shields are included in the aggregate of the Tyne ports (see NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE) . The South Pier at the mouth of the
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river is a massive structure about 1 m. in length, and the North Pier protects the river mouth from the Northumberland bank at North Shields . The parliamentary borough returns one member .

The

corporation consists of a mayor, ro aldermen and 30 councillors . Area of municipal borough, 2044 acres . On elevated ground near the harbour are the remains of a
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Roman fort guarding the entrance to the Tyne, where numerous coins, portions of an altar, and several sculptured memorial stones have been dug up, and testify to its occupation for a considerable period . The site of the old station was afterwards occupied by a fort of considerable strength, which was captured by the Scots under Colonel Stewart on the zoth of March 1644 . The town was founded by the convent of Durham about the
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middle of the 13th century, but on account of the complaints of the burgesses of Newcastle an order was made in 1258, stipulating that no
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ships should be laden or unladen at Shields, and that no " shoars " or quays should be built there . Until the 19th century it was little more than a fishing station . In 1832 it received the
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privilege of returning a member to parliament, and in 1850 a charter of incorporation .

End of Article: SOUTH SHIELDS
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