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The
parish of Shincliffe was created in 1831 from part of St. Oswald’s in
Durham. With the sinking of the colliery in the late 1830s there
evolved two main communities; the old village of Shincliffe with its
agricultural associations and Shincliffe Colliery.
Today
Shincliffe nestles quietly among wooded hills bordering the river Wear
while the more recently developed High Shincliffe spreads itself
beyond the confines of the old colliery village with distant views of
the Cathedral City to the west and the magnesian limestone escarpment
to the east. On the eastern boundary of the parish is Sherburn House
with its 12th century hospital.
In
1998 a group of people with an interest in the history of Shincliffe
met with a view to promoting research and creating a picture of the
way in which the community has developed. This group became the
Shincliffe Local History Society and now has a membership of some 40
people from the village and surrounding area. The Society holds
regular meetings to deal with its business, to discuss matters of
local interest, and to hear speakers on a variety of subjects.
The
Society has a formal constitution to govern its business and a
committee to help with the running of events.
The
first major project that the Society undertook was the setting up of a
digitised data base which included the archival materials which have
accumulated since the Parish Council Exhibition of 1994, to this has
been added a photographic record of all the buildings and structures
as they existed in the year 2000.
The
database is still being developed but its purpose is to record the
existence of archival materials, their location, a description of
individual items and a computerised image.
Contacts names and telephone numbers are:-
Chairman – Mr. J. Lightley 0191 3847900
Secretary - Mr. W. Hateley 0191 3865916
Shincliffe
Local History Project involved reviewing and organising data
currently held both on a computer and in paper form in order to create
a web site. The group wish to make their photographic and
documentary historical evidence available to the wider community via
the World Wide Web. You can visit the web site at
http://www.durhamweb.org.uk/shincliffe
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