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High Friarside

Coordinates: 54°54′14″N 1°44′44″W / 54.90389°N 1.74556°W / 54.90389; -1.74556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

High Friarside is a village in County Durham, England classified as a suburban area.[1] It is situated a short distance to the west of Burnopfield.[2]

The placename is variously recorded as Frevejohanside, Frerejonside, and Freresyde meaning "Friar (John’s) hill".[3] There are also localities called Low Friarside and Middle Friarside.

From High Friarside to Low

At Low Friarside there are the ruins of a chapel. The date of the foundation of the chapel (sometimes referred to as a chantry or house, and possibly connected to a hospital) is unknown. However, it was in existence in 1312 when Bishop Kellawe collated John Eryum to 'the house, chapel, or chantry of Friarside (Frerejohanside) near Derwent.'[4] In Bishop Hatfield's Survey (1383), the warden of the chantry of Friarside held a messuage and 22 acres of land in Wolsingham. In 1439 Bishop Neville appropriated it with all its revenues to the chantry of Farnacres after that site had suffered floods and a decrease in finances.[5]

A list of masters of the chantry/chapel include, John Eryum, 1312; Richard de Egglescliffe, 1376 (?) William Thorp, 1376; Oswald, bishop of Whithorn, d. 1417; Robert Frend, 1418; William Cross, 1422; and, John Gare, 1423.[5][6]

The hospital seems to have been demolished in 1450 [citation needed]. However, the chapel survived and with the closure of the chantries in England 1548 it was recorded that Friarside still had one bell perhaps indicating continued usage.[7]

At Middle Friarside there is moat with multiple embankments and ditches.[8]

There was a coal mine, South Garesfield Colliery, also known as Friarside Colliery and North Lintz Colliery that operated 1865-1960 (located to the west of Low Friarside.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "High Friarside, County Durham". British Place Names. Retrieved 30 October 2024.
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 88 Newcastle upon Tyne (Durham & Sunderland) (Map). Ordnance Survey. 2012. ISBN 9780319229989.
  3. ^ Mawer, A. (1920). The place-names of Northumberland and Durham. p. 90.
  4. ^ Hardy, Thomas Duffus (1873). Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense : The Register of Richard de Kellawe, Lord Palatine and Bishop of Durham, 1311-1316. Volume 1. p. 248.
  5. ^ a b Page, William (1905). The Victoria history of the county of Durham. p. 123.
  6. ^ Boutflower, Douglas Samuel (1926). Fasti dunelmenses : a record of the beneficed clergy of the diocese of Durham down to the dissolution of the monastic and collegiate churches. p. 162.
  7. ^ Longstaffe, W. Hylton Dyer. (1970). Early history of Ebchester, Friarside, and Medomsley. Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 2. Vol 2, p.130.
  8. ^ Page, William (1905). The Victoria history of the county of Durham. p. 359.
  9. ^ "South Garesfield Colliery". Durham Mining Museum.

54°54′14″N 1°44′44″W / 54.90389°N 1.74556°W / 54.90389; -1.74556

Further reading

[edit]

Longstaffe, W. Hylton Dyer. (1970). Early history of Ebchester, Friarside, and Medomsley.. Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 2. Vol 2, pp. 125-133.