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The Bottleworks
The
Royal Hartley Bottleworks, which once dominated the harbour, was
one of the largest of its kind in England. In 1763 Sir Francis Blake Delaval
obtained Parliamentary approval to develop 10 Hectares of land for his
glassworks. The tradition of Glassmaking in England was well established
at this time both on the Wear, Weald, Hampshire, Staffordshire, and London.
Skills in English glassmaking had been improved in these areas by the
introduction of foreign workers from Normandy and Lorraine in France.
However, Sir Francis Blake Delaval brought his brother, Tom Delaval, from
Germany with trained men from Neinberg to teach the men of Hartley their
glassmaking skills. All the materials necessary were available in the
Delaval estate. Sea sand, Sea Kelp, clay from the links, an abundance
of cheap coal; but more importantly also established sea links and a port
to export the products. The first glass houses were 70 metres long, 15
metres wide and 11 metres to the roof.
As expansion took place these were replaced
by three round coned furnaces which were more efficient, and eventually
six cones dominated the skyline. For administration purposes each cone
was given a name; Gallagan; Bias; Charlotte; Hartley; Waterford and Success.
In 1777 production reached a staggering one million seven hundred and
forty thousand bottles a year. The bottles were sent down the harbour
on narrow gauge railways which ran in tunnels under the complex. To the
west waste slag was tipped onto the 'cinder hills' and to the north bottles
were loaded into Bottle Sloops tied up at the quayside. This system of
tunnels existed until quite recently and were used as air raid shelters
during the 2nd World War by many residents of the village.
The
'City' as Hartley Bottleworks was once known also included a Market
Place, Brewery, Granary, brickyard, Quarry and its workers lived in stone
built houses in Glasshouse Square, Delaval Street, John Street and Hussey
Street. The Delavals catered for their every need including the services
of a doctor whose salary was paid for by 'deductions' from the workers'
wages and it was said at the time that no man could earn money at Seaton
Sluice and spend it elsewhere ! The Glassworks employed numerous trades;
teizors; calkmen; ash shifters, fluxhown; pot makers; finishers; gatherers;
blowers; and many of the family names such as Hornsby, Wilson, Forster,
Long and Thompson are still linked with the village today. Described by
contemporary writers of the day as an 'industrious place' it is not too
difficult to conjure in the mind the scene that presented itself every
day to the people who lived and worked in the 'City"; rising to the
factory bell every morning; waggonways traversing the area in every direction;
noise and dust from coal and bottles being loaded onto awaiting ships
in the harbour and smoke billowing from six furnaces.
Following the closure of Hartley Pit, Seaton
Sluice fell into decline as a seaport, and shipping eventually left for
new docks at Blyth, and the River Tyne. Coal was never again shipped from
the harbour, as a result of which the bottle works suffered. By 1871,
owing to the introduction of modern methods, along with the severity of
overseas competition in the glass trade, the bottle works were finally
closed down and the industrial life of the village effectively ended.
The last bottles to leave Hartley were in 1872 on the 'Unity of Boston'
bound for the Channel Islands.
On December 2, 1896, demolition work began
on the six huge brick cones, which had been a shipping landmark for almost
150 years, and by 1897, the bottle works ceased to exist altogether. The
only remnants of the works are some glass-slag topped walls which mark
the boundary of the old 'city'.
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