CARTER'S WELL
Low Fell
Nowadays, Carter's Well is a cast iron pump with a spring handle and domed cap (not working) located on Durham Road, Low Fell, Gateshead.
At least, that's its current public face - there was, and apparently still is, more to it.
Once a mere spring "oozing out of a hillside", where in summer people had to watch all night and take water up with a saucer, the water supply to the well was substantially improved when a drift was excavated in this direction from Sheriff Hill Colliery and water was found in old coal workings. Thomas Wilson, chairman of the local committee at the time, described the well in his poem "Pitman's Pay" -
"No other spring wiv it can vie;
it is a tap that ne'er runds dry -
a cellar where a rich supply suits every rank and station.
And it awd age myekes tipple fine,
wors mun, aw think, be quite devine;
for it's a batch of Adams wine we gat at the Creation".
Another verse reads:
"The reet ower the Fell and by Cairter's famed well,
where the witer like wine ye see a'ways runnin',
and is better by far then the poor blashy yel,
folks get in Newcassel or even in Lunnon".
In another poem Wilson praises the well once more:
"Upon their vicars pant they dwell,
a varry muddy waiter,
compared wi' canny Carter's Well,
se famed for drinking waiter…
here [at the Sovereigh Public House near to the well] oft wor drouthy lads will meet,
and sit till they be fuddled;
and then the Well's the place at neet,
for lasses getting cuddled".
At least, that's its current public face - there was, and apparently still is, more to it.
Once a mere spring "oozing out of a hillside", where in summer people had to watch all night and take water up with a saucer, the water supply to the well was substantially improved when a drift was excavated in this direction from Sheriff Hill Colliery and water was found in old coal workings. Thomas Wilson, chairman of the local committee at the time, described the well in his poem "Pitman's Pay" -
"No other spring wiv it can vie;
it is a tap that ne'er runds dry -
a cellar where a rich supply suits every rank and station.
And it awd age myekes tipple fine,
wors mun, aw think, be quite devine;
for it's a batch of Adams wine we gat at the Creation".
Another verse reads:
"The reet ower the Fell and by Cairter's famed well,
where the witer like wine ye see a'ways runnin',
and is better by far then the poor blashy yel,
folks get in Newcassel or even in Lunnon".
In another poem Wilson praises the well once more:
"Upon their vicars pant they dwell,
a varry muddy waiter,
compared wi' canny Carter's Well,
se famed for drinking waiter…
here [at the Sovereigh Public House near to the well] oft wor drouthy lads will meet,
and sit till they be fuddled;
and then the Well's the place at neet,
for lasses getting cuddled".
In 1824, when Durham Road was built, two long cobbled approaches were built to the well from the road to allow cattle to drink from it.
Carter's Well was Low Fell's main source of water until the Newcastle and Gateshead Water Company supplied the village with a water supply in the late nineteenth century. Gateshead Council closed the well in 1895 having found a sample to be contaminated with foreign bodies.
The old well itself is on a lower level below Durham Road - a stone archway built into retaining wall of Durham Road.
An inscription below the arch says "Carter's Well 1856". There's said to be a substantial vaulted space under Durham Road through the springhead opening.
Local residents were supposed to have formed formed the Friends of Carter's Well, with a view to getting funding to improve the setting of the well, develop a garden and seating area.
You can see something of this old well-house from a back lane - Well Lane - but at the time of my last visit all was fenced off and a closer view denied.
Carter's Well was Low Fell's main source of water until the Newcastle and Gateshead Water Company supplied the village with a water supply in the late nineteenth century. Gateshead Council closed the well in 1895 having found a sample to be contaminated with foreign bodies.
The old well itself is on a lower level below Durham Road - a stone archway built into retaining wall of Durham Road.
An inscription below the arch says "Carter's Well 1856". There's said to be a substantial vaulted space under Durham Road through the springhead opening.
Local residents were supposed to have formed formed the Friends of Carter's Well, with a view to getting funding to improve the setting of the well, develop a garden and seating area.
You can see something of this old well-house from a back lane - Well Lane - but at the time of my last visit all was fenced off and a closer view denied.