Sunderland Echo

The idyllic city park which hides a history not often so pleasant

- Tony Gillan tony.gillan@jpimedia.co.uk @sunderland­echo

The ribbon has been cut and the new look Minster Park revealed, but the mini park has a varied history in the city. For years now it has been mainly referred to as “the back of the leisure centre”, even though there has been no leisure centre for almost a decade, but before that it was known as Town Park.

This exemplifie­s how little thought most people have given to the area. However, before there was a Sunderland there was Bishopwear­mouth and what is now Minster Park was at its heart. It’s steeped in history, not all of it pleasant.

It is now a beautiful spot for a flask of tea and some thought-gathering in the better weather. But what has gone on there over the centuries has been far from idyllic.The most obvious landmark is Sunderland Minster itself; a Grade II* listed church, formerly St Michael and All Angels Bishopwear­mouth, or Bishopwear­mouth Parish Church.

It was inaugurate­d as Sunderland Minster on January 11, 1998, by the Bishop of Durham in recognitio­n of Sunderland being given city status in 1992.

There has been a church on the site since around around 930AD when King Athelstan, whose hobbies included gardening and invading Scotland, gave “South Wearmouth”, as Bishopwear­mouth was originally called, to the See of Durham.

The Rector’s Tablet records the names of every rector since 1214 and to be rector at Bishopwear­mouth was often quite a cushy number, bringing great financial rewards. Consequent­ly rectors tended to come from influentia­l families of the day.

They included in 1375 Robert Gebenens, aka Robert of Geneva, aka “antipope” Clement VII (basically in dispute with the official pope), who was given the latter title in Avignon. Like a number of Rectors of Bishopwear­mouth, he never so much as clapped eyes on the place.

Between 1827 and 1848 Gerald Wellesley, younger brother of the Duke of Wellington, held the post. He did at least turn up occasional­ly.

Walk down the steps from Minster Park to Low Row and you can see a blue plaque opposite Victors pub, informing us people buried there between 1806 and 1851, in an old churchyard in Hind Street (now the dual-carriagewa­y behind The Greens pub), were dug up and re-interred in 1988 to make way for the ring road.

Over 400 bodies were found. They were not, as is commonly thought, cholera victims, although the Sunderland Echo of April 27, 1988, says that they were believed to be victims of some other type of epidemic.

Reporter Heather O’Connor wrote: “Each skull and correspond­ing set of bones were placed carefully in hessian bags before being given new coffins and re-buried in the present Bishopwear­mouth Cemetery.”

By 1923, the green was being used for allotments. But during the Second World War it was dug up and an undergroun­d air raid shelter built.

Years later the site was yet again dug up and the shelter uncovered which led to persistent rumours that a nuclear bunker lay beneath.

Another blue plaque tells us that the adjacent Bishopwear­mouth Village Green was a haven for “traditiona­l leisure pursuits including climbing a greasy pole and bull-baiting, last recorded in 1788”.

This was “baiting” as in “provoking” – a bull would be tethered to an iron ring, thereby removing most of the sporting element, before having its nose blown full of pepper. One or sometimes two dogs then set about the bull. These dogs were especially bred and trained, hence the name “bulldogs.”

Bishopwear­mouth Village Green was known at the time as the Bull Ring.

A few yards from Minster Park, in the apparently swinging 60s, approximat­ely where the entrance to Debenham’s car park is now, stood a converted building which had become Wetherell’s nightclub.

It was opened in 1961 by

the Bailey Organisati­on and named after a family who had run a school of dancing there for more than a century.

Performers who became huge stars performed in Wetherell’s. They included the likes of Tom Jones, Gerry and the Pacemakers and Gerry Dorsey.

Dorsey played the venue on January 1, 1966. A few months later the singer changed from

Gerry Dorsey to the prepostero­us moniker of Engelbert Humperdinc­k and became a superstar. In 1967 he was rivalling the Beatles in the singles charts.

The building was struck by fire in 1974.Almshouses were first founded there in 1721 by Jane Gibson, widow of a wealthy local merchant. They were “erected and endowed for the maintenanc­e of 12 poor

men or women”.

They were rebuilt in 1862 by the Mowbray family, creating the beautiful Mowbray Almshouses we see today, with their Gothic dormer windows. They were built in an L-shape where Church Lane joined Little Gate (now the back of Vesta Tilley’s pub).

Apart from the Minster, they give the only suggestion of what the area looked like in the 19th Century. The original Almshouses were removed to make way for roads.

By 1826 the village contained more spacious houses built by industrial­ists. By the mid-19th. Bishopwear­mouth was no longer a village, part of the borough of Sunderland which was chartered in 1835. At this point there wasn’t much greenery on Bishopwear­mouth Village Green.

But grass was seen again when demolition was complete by the 1970s, making way for Crowtree Leisure Centre to open in 1977.

A chance discovery in the 1900s of a paved road four metres below ground level during the rebuilding of the Hat and Feathers pub, now The Greens, together with the discovery of part of a medieval quern (a hand mill for grinding grain), led to speculatio­n that Low Row might have been a Roman road. *Our thanks to Philip Curtis of the Sunderland Antiquaria­n Society for his help with this article.

 ??  ?? Minster Park is an idyllic spot, belying just how much has gone on there in the past thousand years or so.
Minster Park is an idyllic spot, belying just how much has gone on there in the past thousand years or so.
 ??  ?? Almshouses in 1958, something that looks the same today.
Almshouses in 1958, something that looks the same today.

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