Hurworth Place
{{Short description|Village in County Durham, England}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}
{{Use British English|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox UK place
|country = England
|static_image_name =hurworth place.jpg
|static_image_caption = Hurworth Place and Croft Bridge, from the opposite bank of the River Tees
|coordinates = {{coord|54.483|-1.549|display=inline,title}}
|official_name = Hurworth Place
|population =
|civil_parish= Hurworth
|unitary_england= Darlington
|lieutenancy_england= County Durham
|region = North East England
|constituency_westminster= Sedgefield
|post_town =
|postcode_district =
|postcode_area =
|dial_code =
|os_grid_reference = NZ2931809833
}}
Hurworth Place is a village in County Durham, in England. It lies south of Darlington on the northern bank of the River Tees, opposite the village of Croft-on-Tees in North Yorkshire to which it is linked by Croft Bridge, a Grade I listed structure dating from the 14th century, which marks the county boundary.{{cite web|title=Croft Bridge, Croft-on-Tees|url=http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-350443-croft-bridge-croft-on-tees-north-yorkshi|publisher=britishlistedbuildings.co.uk|accessdate=13 October 2012}} It is part of the civil parish of Hurworth.
Transport
The Great North Road mail coach route, later the A1 road, originally passed through the village, crossing the Tees via Croft Bridge. It was later rerouted, and the road is now designated the A167. The Teesdale Way footpath runs through the village, as does the East Coast Main Line, although there is no longer a railway station.
Amenities
The village has a newsagent, a doctor's surgery, a garage, a pharmacy, and a hair salon. There is a working men's club, and one pub called the Comet, named after a shorthorn bull. There is also a Christadelphian hall.[https://www.ukchristadelphians.org.uk/info.asp?act=ecc&id=73 Darlington Christadelphians]
Rockliffe Hall hotel and spa and the surrounding parkland are owned by Middlesbrough Football Club, and the club's training and sports facilities form part of the complex.{{cite web |url=https://www.rockliffehall.com/discover/history/ |title=The roots of Rockliffe |website=rockliffehall.com}} The 18-hole Rockliffe championship golf course is one of the longest in Europe.{{cite news|last=Formby-Jackson|first=Alan|title=Rockliffe Hall golf course review|url=http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/north-east-sport/golf-north-east/2009/10/12/rockliffe-hall-golf-course-review-84229-24909413/|accessdate=19 October 2010|newspaper=Evening Gazette|date=12 October 2009}} The adjoining village of Hurworth-on-Tees contains further shops, a primary and secondary school, the parish church and a Methodist church, a garden centre, a fish and chip shop and a community centre.
Demographics
{{Main|Demographics of Tees Valley}}
History
Despite being in a different county, the settlement around the Durham end of Croft bridge has sometimes been identified as part of Croft village, rather than with Hurworth-on-Tees immediately to the east. In 1834 Hurworth Place was described as a hamlet in the township of Hurworth, growing rapidly under the influence of the railhead and coal depot; however, in 1901, Charles G. Harper referred to Croft as "straggling on both the Yorkshire and Durham banks of the Tees".{{cite book|last=Harper|first=Charles G.|title=The Great North Road, the old mail road to Scotland|year=1901|publisher=Chapman & Hall|url=https://archive.org/details/greatnorthroadol02harpuoft}} As late as 1960, a long-time Croft resident referred to "the part of Croft which is called Hurworth Place".{{cite web|last=Lumley|first=Edith|title=The Story of Our Village, 1960|url= https://croftontees.co.uk/story-of-our-village-1960-by-edith-lumley/|work=Croft village website|accessdate=16 October 2010}} The village began to develop around the time the railway arrived in 1829,[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42632 'Parishes: Hurworth', A History of the County of Durham], Volume 3 (1928), pp. 285-293. Accessed: 15 October 2010.
and in addition to a coal depot and goods yard, the low ground near the river housed at various times a tar works and two brick and tile works.{{cite book|last=Mackenzie|first=Eneas|title=An historical, topographical, and descriptive view of the county palatine of Durham|year=1834|publisher=Mackenzie and Dent|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hzlNAAAAMAAJ&dq=hurworth+place&pg=PA103|author2=Ross, Marvin|accessdate=17 October 2010|page=103}}
Railway
In 1829 the Croft branch line was built by the Stockton and Darlington Railway Company from Darlington to Croft terminus on the north bank of the Tees in Hurworth Place. Coal was brought by rail from Darlington to the terminus for road transport to destinations in South Durham and North Yorkshire. Lead from the Swaledale lead mines was also brought to Croft terminus for onward rail transport. Passenger services ran at times on the line, but it was largely a goods route.{{cite web|last=Catford|first=Nick|title=Croft|url=http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/c/croft_spa/index0.shtml|work=Disused Stations Site Record|accessdate=16 October 2010}} Workers' houses were built around the terminus.
On 4 January 1841 the main line between Darlington and York opened, incorporating some of the original Darlington-Croft branch line, which had been bought by the main line's developers, the Great North of England Railway. Through Hurworth Place the new line ran, and still runs, a short distance east of the original line, which remained as a branch line to serve the Croft goods yard. In March 1841 a new Croft Station opened on the main line; this was renamed Croft Spa Station in 1896 acknowledging its role in bringing visitors to the popular and established spa over the bridge at Croft-on-Tees. The goods yard, now known as Croft Depot, remained in use until 1964, when it was demolished, the branch line taken up and the site redeveloped for residential use. Croft Spa station closed to passengers in 1969 and the platforms and station buildings were demolished.
References
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