When we think of the water supply provided to the region,
the mighty Kielder Water springs instantly to mind. However, a number of other
reservoirs form part of the intricate network of watery connections that keep
the North-East quenched – with three of the most important crowded into a few
square miles of the Northumbrian countryside about eight miles north of Hexham.
Colt Crag, Little Swinburne and Hallington Reservoirs were
all built a long time before the 1970s creation that is Kielder Water, being
completed, as they were, in 1871 (East Hallington), 1884 (Colt Crag), 1886
(Little Swinburne) and 1889 (West Hallington). Their construction finally
brought to an end centuries of struggle to feed an ever-thirsty Tyneside, all
but banishing the threat, finally, of typhus – to say nothing of the needs of
fire-fighting. Prior to this, glorified ponds on the Town Moor, Arthur’s Hill
and at Carr Hill, Gateshead , struggled
manfully against the booming populations either side of the Tyne .
Between the ‘heyday’ of the aforementioned ‘ponds’ and the
new complex of 1871-89, Whittle Dene Reservoirs (completed 1848), a little to
the SE, carried the responsibility of water supply for the area. And, when
it was ready, the Hallington/Swinburne/Colt Crag supply was bolted onto the
Whittle Dene system before being piped to Newcastle
and Gateshead . The network was further
extended in 1904 when Catcleugh Reservoir near the Scottish border was brought
into use. And then, seventy years later, there was Kielder.
The really quite amazing (and largely hidden) system of
tunnels, pipes and aqueducts that connect these large expanses of fresh water
both to each other and their points of service was the result of the work of
the Newcastle and Gateshead Water Company… and is one of the hidden wonders of
the Great North-East.
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