Ancestry UK

North Tyneside Council Homes

The metropolitan borough of North Tyneside was created in 1974 by a merger of the county borough of Tynemouth along with the borough of Wallsend, part of the borough of Whitley Bay, the urban district of Longbenton and part of the urban district of Seaton Valley, all of which were in Northumberland. The Northth Tyneside counciltook over the operation of the children's homes in the new area. These were initially nine in number but by 1984, just three were still in use — those at Clyde Avenue, Hebburn; at Lanark Drive, Jarrow; and at Owen Drive, West Boldon.

Children's establishments run at some time in their history by North Tyneside Council.


 
  • Family Group Home, 25-26 Wellington Avenue, Wellfield, Earsdon
  • Family Group Home, 15 Annitsford Drive, Fordley§
  • Home for Older Girls, 8 Garth Twelve, Killingworth§
  • Family Group Home, Hillcrest, 144 Queen Alexandra Road West, North Shields
  • Seacrest, Rennington Close, North Shields
  • Home for Older Girls, Croft House, Edwin Grove, Wallsend§
  • Northumberland Village Homes Industrial School for Girls, Norham Road, Whitley Bay


§ indicates homes at some time also run by a borough council.

Records

The involvement of local authorities in the running of children's homes dates from 1930, when they took over the running of the poor relief system previously administered by Boards of Guardians. Surviving records for council-run children's homes may be held in each council's own internal archives. Prior to 1991, however, when a legal requirement was introduced for councils to retain records of children leaving their care, the survival of such records is very variable. Contact details for local authorities in the UK can be found on the website of the Care Leavers Association (CLA). The CLA also provides guidance on accessing childhood care files, which are normally only open to the individuals they relate to.

Locating local authority records has been complicated by the various local government reorganizations that have taken place in recent times, such as the abolition of the London County Council in 1965, and the major nationwide restructuring in 1974 in which many administrative areas were created, amended or eliminated.

Older records may sometimes be placed with the relevant county or borough record office. Many of these repositories have online catalogues of their holdings and also contribute to the National Archives' Discovery database. Note that records containing personal data usually have access closed for a period of fifty years or more.

Older material relating to North Tyneside Council homes may exist at:

Some records relating to council-run homes, for example inspection reports (though not resident lists etc.), are held by The National Archives (TNA). A closure period may apply to these records.

Bibliography