Originally built in 1843 it was significantly remodeled in 1889 replacing the original building with a new nave and chancel but retaining the aisles.
The bells were rehung in 1972 and can still be heard regularly today.
Fiddler's Green sits overlooking the River Tyne on North Shields Fish Quay and is a memorial to North Shields fishermen lost at sea.
The plaque on the base reads: “To the fishermen lost in the cold North Sea, and the ones who will be so, I’ll be seeing you all on Fiddler’s Green, be steady as you go."
“For Fiddler’s Green is a place I’ve heard tell, though no one really knows, where the fishermen go if they don’t go to hell, and no Arctic wind will blow.”
Tyne Cot is the largest cemetery for Commonwealth forces in the world located near Ypres.
The name is said to come from Geordies who saw a resemblance between German pill boxes and workers’ cottages.
Opened in 1866 and completed in 1916 which included a lavish Theatre and Concert Hall befitting of the Edwardian age.
In 2003 the Pavilion was destroyed in an arson attack and later that year the concert hall suffered the same fate.
Many restoration projects failed with the pier gradually collapsing leaving only skeletal remains.
Facing north on Brighton Road going toward the town centre.
Redhill grew from a small settlement when, in 1841, a railway station was opened shortening the route from London to Brighton.