Stranton.
In 1951, the last old cottage in Stranton village was demolished. This would have been approximately where Screwfix now stands.
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton. No date on the picture but one of the few pictures I have seen with the windmill in place.
H04008
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton, view of tower and entrance.
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton.
More detail »Copy of very early drawing of Stranton exterior.
More detail »A View of the East end of the church.
More detail »Another view of the East end of the church.
More detail »A view of the North side exterior.
More detail »All Saints Church, Stranton, exterior, south side
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton from the South.
More detail »A stone cross built in to the wall of the church on the inside.
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton. House in centre: Greenbank. West Hall at left. Windmill in centre. Brewery to right.
More detail »A copy of the Christmas Communion from 1934.
More detail »Old map showing the location of All Saints Church, Stranton.
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton interior looking towards the back of the church and the steps up to the belfry.There is now a gallery with further pews in the bell tower area above the existing pews and this was built in the 1990s.
More detail »All Saints Church Stranton interior.
More detail »A picture of the interior of the church.
More detail »Taken before 1986 when the Cameron's Bottling Store was demolished. This area behind All Saints Church Stranton is now railed off and used by Cameron's Brewery.
More detail »Stained glass windows at All Saints Church Stranton.
More detail »Blacksmiths Arms, Stranton, Hartlepool during the 1980s. Premises still open today.
More detail »The Blacksmiths Arms, Starnton Hartlepool today, 2014
More detail »The Bourn Hotel, Stranton.
More detail »The street which was demolished around 1950, ran between Stranton Church and The Causeway public house. The houses were only on the west side of the street as the graveyard wall was on the other side. Cameron's Brewery buildings are now on the site of the houses.
HO4114 & HHT&N 177
More detail »A civic procession outside of Stranton Church with Stockton Street in the background. J. Stanley Miles, West Hartlepool Borough Engineer, is fourth from the left in the procession.
The procession was West Hartlepool Port Centenary 1st June 1947.
HHT&N 373
More detail »'Egbert' the tank being guided into position outside the Forbes Bakery by an Army Officer, while a large crowd looks on.
More detail »'Egbert' the tank being put through his paces outside the Forbes Bakery while a large crowd looks on.
More detail »The home of Colonel J.W. Cameron. After it had been a private home for the Cameron family, it became brewery offices and later Housing Hartlepool offices.
HHT&N 129
More detail »This interesting photograph of Greenbank in 1984 shows the house in the background, the main feature being the pillars on either side of the closed gates.
More detail »Greenbank, Stranton, Hartlepool
It had been a private home for the Cameron family, it became brewery offices and later Housing Hartlepool offices.
More detail »Greenbank. Strenton, Hartlepool
After it had been a private home for the Cameron family, it became brewery offices and later Housing Hartlepool offices.
More detail »Harry Johnson as apprentice standing in the doorway of Griffiths Family Butchers.
More detail »A picture od All Saints Church, Stranton from 1847.
More detail »Taken in 1966 when this was still the main Stockton Road and prior to the building of the dual carriageway into central Hartlepool. The photo is taken from around the Blacksmith's Arms. Foster and Armstrong Anchor Mills on the right was demolished in 1980. The Gaumont cinema, opened in 1919 as The Picture House, is on the left of the picture. The frontage was altered in 1970 when the cinema became Stranton Bingo Club which closed in 1997. To the right of the Gaumont is the Seven Stars public house, again long since demolished.
HHT&N 117
More detail »Some of the buildings which made up Stranton. All Saints Church in the background.
The building in front of All Saints Church is the Causeway Inn which is still in use as a pub.
More detail »The photograph shows the roundabout at Belle Vue Way , Stockton Street and Burn Road. At this time the building with the white side wall was the Fruit Market and although is now occupied by a variety of small businesses is still there today. The large building on the left was Foster Armstrong and beyond that Stranton Bingo (formerly the Gaumont Cinema). The areas where the lorries are parked has for some years been McDonald's restaurant and car park.
More detail »In Vicarage Gardens, Stranton DIY now occupies these premises. For many years it was Stranton Cafe and this image was taken in 1983.
More detail »Stranton Fire Station, Stockton Street which was in use by November 1959 replacing the one in Barnard Street.
More detail »The view looks up Elwick Road and on the right behind the wall is Greenbank, once the home of JW Cameron. Waldon Street is on the right after the wall and across Elwick Road in front of the large building which is now Stranton Social Club. The terrace of houses on the right is Bathgate Terrace, Elwick Road and beyond them on the right is Holt Street, Kilwick Street and then York Road.
The quite regular floods, although a nuisance, were obviously quite an attraction.
HHT+N 36
More detail »Taken from near Causeway Inn looking towards the Bourn Hotel (demolished 1975) with Vicarage Gardens shops on the left.
More detail »A very large crowd presumably an open air memorial service to honour King Edward V11.
HO4017
More detail »From the left, the photograph shows probably West Hall, the farm belonging at the time to William Sotheran, then JW Cameron's home Greenbank, then Stranton windmill, the brewery malthouses and Stranton Church on the right. In the foreground is the New Burn which at that point was not covered in.
Where West Hall once stood is Stranton Social Club, the area of field is now Vicarage Gardens and Greenbank and the church are still there today.
H04120
More detail »The Causeway, Stranton, Hartlepool, taken in the 1980s.
This premises was formerly know as The Causeway Inn.
The premises have extended into what was the off licence on the corner of Church Row and Stranton.
More detail »The Causeway, Stranton, Hartlepool, formerly known as The Causeway Inn
More detail »The Causeway Inn, Stranton, Hartlepool was built in the 1820s although the frontage was rebuilt in 1900. It has held a beerhouse licence since 1862 and although it was called the Tap and Spile from 1988 to 1992, it remains The Causeway to this day. Next to the pub on the Stranton Church side was an off licence shop which has now been intergrated into the pub although it still has a virtually unspoilt shop frontage.
More detail »Picture of a tram coming through Stranton. Date not known. The Causeway can be seen on the left.
More detail »Looking towards Stranton Church and the Causeway Inn, the image shows Vicarage Gardens in flood possibly in October 1900 or 1913 when there were significant floods. The New Burn, which runs through the Burn Valley Gardens was diverted into a new sewer in the 1880s as it was very polluted in the Stranton area. However on this occasion of prolonged rain, the sewer could not cope.
More detail »Vicarage Gardens, Stranton, circa 1970.
More detail »Outside the fire station at Barnard Street, Stranton. Fire engine reg no. EF1085. The Leyland chassis was new in 1920 so the photo will be about that year.
More detail »A rare picture of Westbourne Methodist Church showing the front of the original building without the current group of mature Trees.
The picture is undated but prominent are the trolley bus posts and the houses at the bottom of Westmoreland Street are private homes and not shops as they were later to become. The prominent poster at the Church entrance cannot be read.
The buildings of the building business on the extreme right are now used by a garage business.
More detail »