Pier and Ferry, South Shields

Pier and Ferry, South Shields

Image Details

Title Pier and Ferry, South Shields
Date c1910s
Location South Shields
Type Real Photographic
Publisher R Johnston & Son, Gateshead
Series The Monarch Series
Size 138mm x 83mm
Reference Number P194
Further Information In 1852 the Tyne Commissioners were authorised by Parliament to construct piers at the mouth of the Tyne as a way of preventing the shipwrecks and loss of life that was caused by ships trying to navigate across the bar at the entrance to the Tyne in the gales it was exposed to. The foundation stone to the piers was laid on June 15th 1854 by Mr James Cowen. The piers have a base of rubble and a super structure of concrete and built stonework. The stone for the piers was provided by a quarry at Trow Rocks. The building work, which took more than fifty years to complete, was fraught with difficulties with parts of both piers carried away during heavy storms. The lighthouses were first lit on November 11th 1895. The South Pier is 5,170 feet long (110 feet short of a mile). The North Pier is 2,950 feet long. This image appears to be transposed with the ferry landing to the right of the pier rather than the left (See postcard P181 or P195 for comparison)