Fountain Inn
Fountain Inn
HER Number
              4830
          District
              Gateshead
          Site Name
              Fountain Inn
          Place
              Gateshead
          Map Sheet
              NZ26SE
          Class
              Domestic
          Site Type: Broad
              House
          Site Type: Specific
              House
          General Period
              POST MEDIEVAL
          Specific Period
              Stuart 1603 to 1714
          Form of Evidence
              Documentary Evidence
          Description
              Followers of George Fox who visited Tyneside in 1653 set up a meeting house in Gateshead to escape the jurisdiction of Newcastle. His followers met in an old house in Pipewellgate which later became the Fountain public house. From this time is also said to date the existence of steps leading from Pipewellgate to the river at the foot of Bottle Bank, often referred to as the Quaker Steps. The date of the founding of the Fountain Inn is not known, but it was certainly present by 1825. Also in situ at the time of the painting is a three storey warehouse which stood two building plots to the west of the Fountain Inn. The Fountain is thought to have been pulled down in 1905. By the 1950s a single extensive building, used as office furniture works, covered the sites of the inn and warehouse. This was later used by Fife Engineering.
          Easting
              425230
          Northing
              563610
          Grid Reference
              NZ425230563610
    Sources
              << HER 4831 >>  Pers comm. C. Lofthouse, 1997 
I. Ayris & S.M. Linsley, 1994, A Guide to the Industrial Archaeology of Tyne and Wear, p 39
RCHME, 1995, Town Moor, Newcastle upon Tyne, Archaeological Survey Report, p 22-30
E.M. Halcrow, 1953, The Town Moor of Newcastle upon Tyne, Archaeologia Aeliana, 4, XIII, pp 149-164
          I. Ayris & S.M. Linsley, 1994, A Guide to the Industrial Archaeology of Tyne and Wear, p 39
RCHME, 1995, Town Moor, Newcastle upon Tyne, Archaeological Survey Report, p 22-30
E.M. Halcrow, 1953, The Town Moor of Newcastle upon Tyne, Archaeologia Aeliana, 4, XIII, pp 149-164