© Copyright HelenWilkinson and licensed for
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Situated where it is – a few miles upstream from Newcastle
on the north bank of the Tyne – the settlement of Lemington was ideally placed
to contribute significantly to the economy of Tyneside in its own special way.
It was for centuries the point where many local collieries offloaded their coal
onto waiting boats for export, and the make-up of the terrain thereabouts
triggered the establishment of many other industries. One such speciality was
glass-making, and the one remaining glass cone – a famous local landmark – is
in itself rather special, being one of only four of its kind left in the UK.
Originally, in 1787, four glasshouses were built on the spot,
and four cones were quickly added – the pride and joy of the newly-established
Northumberland Glass Company, who had leased the site from the Duke of
Northumberland. The chimneys’ striking form was designed to draw air up through
underground tunnels to heat the glass to 2000°C . Glass production – originally flat
glass – continued there until 1882, when the site was taken over for a short
while by an ironworks. A depression in the glass industry had led to the
decline, and in fact three of the four cones were demolished in 1837. Only by
chance, it seems, did a single specimen survive into the Victorian era.
The industry picked up again in the 1890s and famous
glassmaker, George Sowerby, reinstated operations at the ‘cone site’ in 1898. In 1906, the General
Electric Company purchased the establishment from the Duke of Northumberland
and the site was expanded and refitted for the production of light bulbs and
tubes. Another refit/expansion took place in 1920, and the manufacture of light
bulbs and related lampware (mainly industrial and technological items) limped
on through the 20th century. The last glass was produced there in
1997.
Lemington glass cone was the last operational glassworks of
its kind, and upon closure all but the giant cone was demolished. A little
prior to this, the structure – the largest of the set at 120ft and said to
contain 1.75 million bricks – was restored and given protected status. It has
since been home to a variety of businesses.
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