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About Consett
Consett is a town in the northwest of County Durham, England.
Consett is a town of 27,000 people, high on the edge of the Pennines in northwest Durham. In 1841, it was a village community of only 145, but it was about to become a boom town. Below the ground was coking coal and blackband iron ore. Nearby was limestone. These were the three ingredients needed for blast furnaces to produce iron and steel.
The town is perched on the steep eastern bank of the River Derwent and owes its origins to industrial development arising from lead mining in the area, together with the development of the steel industry in the Derwent Valley, which is said to have been initiated by immigrant German cutlers and sword-makers from Solingen, who settled in the village of Shotley Bridge during the seventeenth century.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the Derwent Valley was the cradle of the British steel industry, helped by the easy availability of coal from Tyneside, and the import of high quality iron ore from Sweden via the port of Newcastle upon Tyne. However, following the invention of the Bessemer process in the 19th century, steel could be made from British iron ore (which was otherwise too heavily contaminated by phosphorus) and the Derwent Valley's geographical advantage was lost, allowing Sheffield to become the leading centre of the British steel industry.
Governance
Consett is part of the North West Durham Parliamentary Constituency represented by Labour MP, Pat Glass. Prior to this, Hilary Armstrong held the seat since 1987 and "inherited" the position from her father Ernest Armstrong. Before 1983, the town had its own Member of Parliament.
In the 2005 General Election, both Labour and the Conservatives suffered a swing to the Liberal Democrats who are beginning to get a foothold in the Shotley Bridge area. The Liberal Democrats moved from third to second place, although Hilary Armstrong retained a five-figure majority in this safe Labour seat.
Consett was part of Derwentside District Council which has recently been merged into the unitary authority, Durham County Council.
Geography
Consett sits above the rural Derwent valley on the edge of the boundary of County Durham and Northumberland. The Derwent Reservoir is located just west of the town. It is a town with the usual range of amenities, shops, pubs, night clubs, residential areas and industrial estates. There are a number of villages in its immediate surroundings, some are contiguous (for example Shotley Bridge and Blackhill) some are not (for example Moorside and Castleside).
Consett town centre is around 885 feet (270m) above sea level making it only slightly lower than the town of Alston in Cumbria which is said to be the highest market town in Britain.
Economy
Small and medium-sized businesses now provide most jobs in the area. Phileas Fogg Company (County Durham), with its factory on the town's Number One Industrial Estate, were mildly famous for a few years from 1988 for their snack food "Made in Medomsley Road, Consett" television adverts. The Phileas Fogg Company is now owned by KP Snacks as part of United Biscuits.
Since 2000, several new housing developments have taken place on the former steelworks site and surrounding areas. Derwentside College, formerly sited at Park Road, moved to a new campus at Berry Edge in September 2002 and national retailers have moved into Hermiston Retail Park.
Culture
Consett was the first town in the world to have a Salvation Army Corps Band. The band was formed in December 1879 and went out on the streets playing at Christmas. The original band consisted of just four players, bandmaster Edward Lennox and bandsmen George Storey, James Simpson and Robert Greenwood.
Consett is home to the Empire Theatre, one of County Durham's oldest theatres. Recently refurbished, the theatre stages variety acts, plays and a Christmas pantomime. The theatre also screens blockbuster films at times when there are no live performances.
Several pubs have at least taken names that reflect the town's steel-making past - the Works, the Company, and the Company Row. From its bygone days of a steeltown, with a huge reliance on rail, next to where the main railway station used to be is a club named the Station Club, now opposite a health centre. With the steelworks gone, visitors and inhabitants are beginning to realise the beauty of the picturesque views over the Derwent Valley, and Consett is becoming a popular place to live for commuters from Durham and Tyne & Wear looking for a taste of the country.
Sport
There are plans for a new £20,000,000 sports complex, incorporating a swimming pool, regional tennis centre and new football stadium for Consett A.F.C. ("The Steelmen").
Notable people
Alun Armstrong, actor. Born in nearby Annfield Plain, original cast member of Les Misérables, playing Monsieur Thénardier. Also in New Tricks and The Mummy Returns.
Rowan Atkinson, (born January 6, 1955 in Consett, County Durham), star of the Blackadder and Mr. Bean comedy series. Atkinson was born to Eric Atkinson and Ella May, Anglican farmers in the town of Consett.
Alan Campbell, the present MP for Tynemouth and former Home Office Minister for Crime Reduction and Government Whip was born in the town.
Mark Clattenburg. English football Referee.
Paul Collingwood, England and Durham cricketer, born in Shotley Bridge.
Graeme Danby, is an opera singer born in the town. He is Principal Bass with English National Opera. He also devotes a great deal of his schedule to working with charitable trusts.
Alan Heath - publisher and holocaust historian, now lives in Poland.
Anthony Hutton, Big Brother winner.
Susan Maughan, singer, who reached #3 in the UK Singles Chart in 1962 with "Bobby's Girl".
Bob Murray, kitchen & bathroom magnate and former chairman of Sunderland AFC.
Mathew Tait - England and Newcastle Falcons Rugby Union player. Born in Consett but brought up in the nearby town of Wolsingham.
Steve Thompson, songwriter, producer. website. Born 1952 at the Grove. Served apprenticeship in the steelworks and began performing career at the Freemason's Arms with Consett band, Bullfrog. Later left the Steelworks and the area to begin a successful career in the music industry. Returned briefly in 2000 to the Empire Theatre with a musical entitled Steeltown.
Barry Venison - retired footballer and pundit was born in Shotley Bridge Hospital, although is from Stanley.
Denise Welch, ex-star of Coronation Street and Soldier Soldier drama series. Married to Tim Healy and now starring in Waterloo Road on BBC1 and Loose Women on ITV1.
Keith Strachan born in Consett. Award winning composer and musical theatre director. Compositions include "Mistletoe and Wine" and the theme music for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
Michael Kay is a footballer who plays in the right back position. He currently plays for Sunderland after progressing through their academy and is a former England Under-17 international.
Consett Iron Company (Consett Steel Works)
The Consett Iron Company Ltd was a major United Kingdom industrial undertaking based in the Consett area of County Durham. The company traded as colliery and limestone quarry owners and iron and steel manufacturers[1]. The company was registered on 4 April 1864[2] as successor to the Derwent & Consett Iron Company Ltd. This in turn was the successor to the Derwent Iron Company, founded in 1840. The Consett Iron Company was absorbed into British Steel in 1967.
The company’s seven collieries and various coke ovens passed to the National Coal Board on nationalisation in 1947. The Consett Iron Company itself was nationalised in 1951, becoming part of the Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain, was denationalised shortly afterwards, and renationalised in 1967.
The company closed in 1980 and its works were subsequently removed from the landscape.
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article source: Wikipedia
Consett is a town of 27,000 people, high on the edge of the Pennines in northwest Durham. In 1841, it was a village community of only 145, but it was about to become a boom town. Below the ground was coking coal and blackband iron ore. Nearby was limestone. These were the three ingredients needed for blast furnaces to produce iron and steel.
The town is perched on the steep eastern bank of the River Derwent and owes its origins to industrial development arising from lead mining in the area, together with the development of the steel industry in the Derwent Valley, which is said to have been initiated by immigrant German cutlers and sword-makers from Solingen, who settled in the village of Shotley Bridge during the seventeenth century.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the Derwent Valley was the cradle of the British steel industry, helped by the easy availability of coal from Tyneside, and the import of high quality iron ore from Sweden via the port of Newcastle upon Tyne. However, following the invention of the Bessemer process in the 19th century, steel could be made from British iron ore (which was otherwise too heavily contaminated by phosphorus) and the Derwent Valley's geographical advantage was lost, allowing Sheffield to become the leading centre of the British steel industry.
Governance
Consett is part of the North West Durham Parliamentary Constituency represented by Labour MP, Pat Glass. Prior to this, Hilary Armstrong held the seat since 1987 and "inherited" the position from her father Ernest Armstrong. Before 1983, the town had its own Member of Parliament.
In the 2005 General Election, both Labour and the Conservatives suffered a swing to the Liberal Democrats who are beginning to get a foothold in the Shotley Bridge area. The Liberal Democrats moved from third to second place, although Hilary Armstrong retained a five-figure majority in this safe Labour seat.
Consett was part of Derwentside District Council which has recently been merged into the unitary authority, Durham County Council.
Geography
Consett sits above the rural Derwent valley on the edge of the boundary of County Durham and Northumberland. The Derwent Reservoir is located just west of the town. It is a town with the usual range of amenities, shops, pubs, night clubs, residential areas and industrial estates. There are a number of villages in its immediate surroundings, some are contiguous (for example Shotley Bridge and Blackhill) some are not (for example Moorside and Castleside).
Consett town centre is around 885 feet (270m) above sea level making it only slightly lower than the town of Alston in Cumbria which is said to be the highest market town in Britain.
Economy
Small and medium-sized businesses now provide most jobs in the area. Phileas Fogg Company (County Durham), with its factory on the town's Number One Industrial Estate, were mildly famous for a few years from 1988 for their snack food "Made in Medomsley Road, Consett" television adverts. The Phileas Fogg Company is now owned by KP Snacks as part of United Biscuits.
Since 2000, several new housing developments have taken place on the former steelworks site and surrounding areas. Derwentside College, formerly sited at Park Road, moved to a new campus at Berry Edge in September 2002 and national retailers have moved into Hermiston Retail Park.
Culture
Consett was the first town in the world to have a Salvation Army Corps Band. The band was formed in December 1879 and went out on the streets playing at Christmas. The original band consisted of just four players, bandmaster Edward Lennox and bandsmen George Storey, James Simpson and Robert Greenwood.
Consett is home to the Empire Theatre, one of County Durham's oldest theatres. Recently refurbished, the theatre stages variety acts, plays and a Christmas pantomime. The theatre also screens blockbuster films at times when there are no live performances.
Several pubs have at least taken names that reflect the town's steel-making past - the Works, the Company, and the Company Row. From its bygone days of a steeltown, with a huge reliance on rail, next to where the main railway station used to be is a club named the Station Club, now opposite a health centre. With the steelworks gone, visitors and inhabitants are beginning to realise the beauty of the picturesque views over the Derwent Valley, and Consett is becoming a popular place to live for commuters from Durham and Tyne & Wear looking for a taste of the country.
Sport
There are plans for a new £20,000,000 sports complex, incorporating a swimming pool, regional tennis centre and new football stadium for Consett A.F.C. ("The Steelmen").
Notable people
Alun Armstrong, actor. Born in nearby Annfield Plain, original cast member of Les Misérables, playing Monsieur Thénardier. Also in New Tricks and The Mummy Returns.
Rowan Atkinson, (born January 6, 1955 in Consett, County Durham), star of the Blackadder and Mr. Bean comedy series. Atkinson was born to Eric Atkinson and Ella May, Anglican farmers in the town of Consett.
Alan Campbell, the present MP for Tynemouth and former Home Office Minister for Crime Reduction and Government Whip was born in the town.
Mark Clattenburg. English football Referee.
Paul Collingwood, England and Durham cricketer, born in Shotley Bridge.
Graeme Danby, is an opera singer born in the town. He is Principal Bass with English National Opera. He also devotes a great deal of his schedule to working with charitable trusts.
Alan Heath - publisher and holocaust historian, now lives in Poland.
Anthony Hutton, Big Brother winner.
Susan Maughan, singer, who reached #3 in the UK Singles Chart in 1962 with "Bobby's Girl".
Bob Murray, kitchen & bathroom magnate and former chairman of Sunderland AFC.
Mathew Tait - England and Newcastle Falcons Rugby Union player. Born in Consett but brought up in the nearby town of Wolsingham.
Steve Thompson, songwriter, producer. website. Born 1952 at the Grove. Served apprenticeship in the steelworks and began performing career at the Freemason's Arms with Consett band, Bullfrog. Later left the Steelworks and the area to begin a successful career in the music industry. Returned briefly in 2000 to the Empire Theatre with a musical entitled Steeltown.
Barry Venison - retired footballer and pundit was born in Shotley Bridge Hospital, although is from Stanley.
Denise Welch, ex-star of Coronation Street and Soldier Soldier drama series. Married to Tim Healy and now starring in Waterloo Road on BBC1 and Loose Women on ITV1.
Keith Strachan born in Consett. Award winning composer and musical theatre director. Compositions include "Mistletoe and Wine" and the theme music for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
Michael Kay is a footballer who plays in the right back position. He currently plays for Sunderland after progressing through their academy and is a former England Under-17 international.
Consett Iron Company (Consett Steel Works)
The Consett Iron Company Ltd was a major United Kingdom industrial undertaking based in the Consett area of County Durham. The company traded as colliery and limestone quarry owners and iron and steel manufacturers[1]. The company was registered on 4 April 1864[2] as successor to the Derwent & Consett Iron Company Ltd. This in turn was the successor to the Derwent Iron Company, founded in 1840. The Consett Iron Company was absorbed into British Steel in 1967.
The company’s seven collieries and various coke ovens passed to the National Coal Board on nationalisation in 1947. The Consett Iron Company itself was nationalised in 1951, becoming part of the Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain, was denationalised shortly afterwards, and renationalised in 1967.
The company closed in 1980 and its works were subsequently removed from the landscape.
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article source: Wikipedia