Donor : Don Stephenson
Creator : Don Stephenson
Part of the "Hartlepool Public Houses" collection
Location
The Duke of Cleveland, Church Walk, Hartlepool
The former Conservative Club has re-opened as the Duke of Cleveland pub on the Headland.
In the 1800s, the Grade II listed building was the summer home to the first Duke of Cleveland William Henry Vane.
Duke William, known as Harry, was a landowner and politician who lived from 1766 to 1842.
His main residence was the grand Raby Castle but it was Hartlepool where he would come to relax in the summer.
Observers will spot that the building, formerly called Hartlepool House, has no windows overlooking St Hilda’s Church directly opposite on Church Walk.
That is because the Duke is said to have had a disagreement with the then curator of St Hilda’s when the house was built in 1833.
More detail »Old Hartlepool is the original fishing village which existed before West Hartlepool. The origins of ancient town of Hartlepool (Old Hartlepool) can be traced back to ca 647 AD. In the 8th century AD, Bede mentions it (“heopru” – the place where harts (deer) drink). The record goes blank then, and does not reappear until the 12th century. In 1201 King John confirmed a charter owned by Robert Bruce V. The name “Brus” or “Bruce” is still associated with parts of the town.
The fine abbey church of St. Hilda is mainly Early English, dating from 1185, on the site of an abbey which flourished as early as 658 AD. St. Hilda’s still flourishes and stands in a prominent place on the Hartlepool headland, and nearby the ancient town walls (completed ca 1322 as a defence against the twin enemies of the Scots and the sea) can still be seen.
On 8th February 1201, the town was granted its first royal charter by King John. A second royal charter was granted in 1593 by Queen Elizabeth (the First).
Hartlepool was visited several times by John Wesley on his preaching tours … he was certainly in the town in 1757 and 1786.
Old Hartlepool continued its independent existence until 1967, when local government reorganisation created the merger with its young neighbour, West Hartlepool.
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