Elvet

Coordinates: 54°46′33″N 1°34′28″W / 54.775948°N 1.574325°W / 54.775948; -1.574325
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Elvet
Old Elvet Bridge
Elvet is located in County Durham
Elvet
Elvet
Location within County Durham
Population10,175 (2011 Ward)[1]
OS grid referenceNZ2742
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townDURHAM
Postcode districtDH1
Dialling code0191
PoliceDurham
FireCounty Durham and Darlington
AmbulanceNorth East
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
County Durham
54°46′33″N 1°34′28″W / 54.775948°N 1.574325°W / 54.775948; -1.574325

Elvet is an area of the city of Durham, in County Durham, in England. It is situated on the opposite side of the River Wear from Durham Cathedral and forms the south-eastern part of central Durham. Elvet is currently unparished.

Name[edit]

The name Elvet is recorded as Aelfetee in circa 800 AD and in the 12th century as Aeluete and Eluete. It is thought to be Old English in origin, containing the element elfitu ("a swan") + either ēa ("a river") or ēg ("an island"), giving the name a meaning of "swan stream" or "swan island".[2][3] The Swan and Three Cygnets, a public house on Elvet Bridge, is a reminder of the historical name given to this part of the city.

Other attempts at the etymology of Elvet include identification with the epithet Elfed in the name of Madog, a hero in Y Gododdin.[4]

History[edit]

Elvet grew up from two medieval settlements based around Old Elvet and St Oswald's Church and includes Church Street, Hallgarth Street, Whinney Hill and much of Durham University's science site and the Roman Catholic chaplaincy at St Cuthbert's Church. Elvet is home to Durham Prison and Durham Crown Court centre (Court Lane), County Court centre (New Elvet) and magistrates' court (Old Elvet). The Crown Court centre was originally built for the Durham Assizes and is a grade II* listed building.[5][6]

Hallgarth Street[edit]

Elvet House, a former Crown building (c. 1951) in Hallgarth Street, is currently the base for Durham's Jobcentre Plus, Crown Prosecution Service, Driving Standards Agency and Tribunals Service. The County Court vacated its purpose-built 1960's annex to Elvet House in October 2008 to relocate alongside the magistrates' court.

The former priory farm included the former granary called the Tithe Barn,[7] which is grade II* listed;[8] and two former barns,[9] other buildings[10] and a wall which are grade II listed.[11] The Tithe Barn has been dated between 1446[12] and 1449.[13]

Hallgarth House, which is number 77,[14] is grade II listed.[15] The Victoria, formerly the Victoria Hotel, an inn which is number 86, is grade II listed.[16][17]

Numbers 18,[18] 21 to 32,[19] 54 to 56,[20] 58,[21] 59,[22] 67,[23] 68, 69,[24] 70,[25] 73[26] and 75[27] are grade II listed.

Church Street[edit]

Oswald Court is off Church Street. A fire ball is reported to have fallen there during a thunderstorm on 13 July 1884.[28]

New Elvet[edit]

Dunelm House, a grade II listed building, is located on New Elvet.[29]

Old Elvet[edit]

Shire Hall, a grade II listed building,[30] is located on Old Elvet.[31][32] Ustinov College operates three student residences (houses 29, 34 and 38) on Old Elvet; The Swan is unnumbered but located immediately beside 38.

The local Masonic Lodge (Universities Lodge 2352) is at 36. The Masonic Hall was built in 1869. The architect was T C Ebdy.[33]

The Royal County Hotel is a grade II listed building. It has a staircase that was taken from Loch Leven Castle.[34][35] Number 32, which has been used as an Adult Education Centre, is a grade II listed building.[36]

Elvet Methodist Church was begun in 1902.[37][38]

Number 34 is a grade II listed building. It has been used as the Graduate Society Offices.[39] Elizabeth Milbanke and John Bacchus Dykes lived there at different times.[32][40]

The Dun Cow, a pub which is number 37, is a grade II listed building.[41]

Numbers 1,[42] 5, 6,[43] 14,[44] 15, 15A,[45] 17,[46] 18, 19,[47] 19½,[48] 20,[49] 25,[50] 26,[51] 26A, 27,[52] 28,[53] 30,[54] 38,[55] 39, 40,[56] 42,[57] 43,[58] 44, 45, 46,[59] 52,[60] 53, 54, 55 and 55A[61] are grade II listed buildings. Numbers are 47, 48 and 49 are grade II* listed buildings.[62]

Whinney Hill[edit]

Whinney Hill is a street on a hill of the same name in the Elvet area, that name being derived from the whin (gorse) shrub that grows there in profusion. The street runs north–south from Durham Prison and the Durham City Cricket Grounds, on the banks of the River Wear, to the roundabout on the Stockton-on-Tees road near the Durham University science site. The lower site of Durham Johnston Comprehensive School was located on it until September 2009 when the school's sites merged.

Durham's third passenger railway station, Durham Elvet, opened in 1893 at the north end of Whinney Hill, closing in 1954.[63] Its site is now occupied by Durham Magistrates' Court and the university's Parsons Field buildings.

References[edit]

  • Margot Johnson. "Elvet" in Durham: Historic and University City and surrounding area. Sixth Edition. Turnstone Ventures. 1992. ISBN 094610509X. Pages 16 to 18.
  • Keith Proud. "Heart of the City". Northern Echo. 20 May 2011.
  • Francis Frederick Johnson. Historic Staircases in Durham City. City of Durham Trust. Durham. 1970.
  1. ^ "Ward population 2011". Archived from the original on 14 July 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  2. ^ Mawer, Allen, The Place-Names of Northumberland and Durham (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1920), p. 71.
  3. ^ "Key to English Place-names - Elvet, Durham". University of Nottingham. Retrieved 8 February 2024.
  4. ^ Mark Reginald Wakeford, 'The British Church and Anglo-Saxon Expansion: The Evidence of Saints' Cults' (unpublished Ph.D. theses, Durham University, 1998), pp. 17-19.
  5. ^ List entry 1322878
  6. ^ For the courthouse used by the Crown Court, see Nikolaus Pevsner, "Assize Courts, Court Lane", The Buildings of England: County Durham, Penguin Books, 1953, (The Buildings of England, volume 9), p 128 [1]; Elizabeth Williamson (ed), "Crown Courts", The Buildings of England: County Durham, Second Edition, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1983, Corrected reprint, 1985, p 227; "The New Assize Courts at Durham" (1869) 27 The Builder 553 (10 July); "The New Assize Courts at Durham" (1869) 17 The Building News 489 (24 December), see also p 34 (9 July); The Illustrated Guide to Durham and Its Vicinity, G M Watt, 1888, p 139 [2]; "Criminal incompetence left £7.3m* bill". Northern Echo. 10 August 2011.
  7. ^ Heritage at Risk. List entry 48798.
  8. ^ List entry 1120616
  9. ^ List entry 1323279
  10. ^ List entry 1323278
  11. ^ List entry 1160063
  12. ^ Roberts, "A Preliminary Roof Typology for the North East of England c. 1200–1700" (2008) 39 Vernacular Architecture 27 to 49 [3]; Johnson, Durham: Historic and University City and surrounding area, 6th Ed, 1992, p 18
  13. ^ Arnold and Howard, "The Tithe Barn, Elvethall Manor, Hallgarth Street, Durham", 2010, report number 59
  14. ^ Joseph Bascom St. John, The Europa World of Learning, Globe and Mail, 2005, p 1951.
  15. ^ List entry 1323282
  16. ^ List entry 1381263
  17. ^ Stables, "Victoria Inn", A-Z of the City of Durham, 2019; Dodds, "Victoria Inn Public House", Durham City in 50 Buildings, 2019, chapter 41; Richardson, Durham Cathedral City from Old Photographs, 2009, section 5.
  18. ^ List entry 1120615
  19. ^ List entry 1120617
  20. ^ List entry 1160068
  21. ^ List entry 1323280
  22. ^ List entry 1310711
  23. ^ List entry 1120619
  24. ^ List entry 1310715
  25. ^ List entry 1323281
  26. ^ List entry 1160089
  27. ^ List entry 1120620
  28. ^ "Thunderstorms" (1884) 13 The Electrician 220 (19 July 1884)
  29. ^ List entry 1477064
  30. ^ List entry 1310562
  31. ^ Nikolaus Pevsner, "Shire Hall, Old Elvet", The Buildings of England: County Durham, Penguin Books, 1953, (The Buildings of England, volume 9), p 128; Elizabeth Williamson (ed), "Old Shire Hall", The Buildings of England: County Durham, Second Edition, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1983, Corrected reprint, 1985, p 226
  32. ^ a b Margot Johnson. "Old Elvet" in Durham: Historic and University City and surrounding area. Sixth Edition. Turnstone Ventures. 1992. Page 18.
  33. ^ "A New Masonic Hall for Durham" (1869) 27 The Builder 20 (2 January); "Durham" (1869) 17 The Building News 467 (17 December); Elizabeth Williamson (ed), The Buildings of England: County Durham, Second Edition, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1983, Corrected reprint, 1985, p 253
  34. ^ List entry 1121376
  35. ^ Charlie Emett. "Walk 1: Durham City: The Royal County Hotel". Pub Walks in County Durham & Teesside. Countryside Books. Newbury, Berkshire. 2005. ISBN 1853069124. Pages 9 and 10.
  36. ^ List entry 1322879
  37. ^ Michael Richardson. Durham City from Old Photographs. Amberley Publishing. 2009. p 46
  38. ^ "Wesleyan Church, Durham" (1903) 85 The Builder 499 Google Books
  39. ^ List entry 1121413
  40. ^ William Whellan & Co. History, Topography, and Directory of the County Palatine of Durham. Whittaker and Co. Ave Maria Lane, London. Galt and Co. Ducie Street, Exchange, Manchester. 1856. p 206.
  41. ^ List entry 1121414
  42. ^ List entry 1121400
  43. ^ List entry 1322876
  44. ^ List entry 1121401
  45. ^ List entry 1121402
  46. ^ List entry 1322877
  47. ^ List entry 1160498
  48. ^ List entry 1121403
  49. ^ List entry 1160540
  50. ^ List entry 1121409
  51. ^ List entry 1121410
  52. ^ List entry 1160628
  53. ^ List entry 1121411
  54. ^ List entry 1121412
  55. ^ List entry 1310454
  56. ^ List entry 1322880
  57. ^ List entry 1121415
  58. ^ List entry 1310463
  59. ^ List entry 1322881
  60. ^ List entry 1121417
  61. ^ List entry 1160700
  62. ^ List entry 1121416
  63. ^ "Subterranea Britannica - Durham Elvet Station". Retrieved 17 March 2008.