Giant crane at former NEM Works
Giant crane at former NEM Works
HER Number
              9291
          District
              N Tyneside
          Site Name
              Giant crane at former NEM Works
          Place
              Wallsend
          Map Sheet
              NZ36NW
          Class
              Transport
          Site Type: Broad
              Lifting and Winding Structure
          Site Type: Specific
              Cantilever Crane
          General Period
              20TH CENTURY
          Specific Period
              Early 20th Century 1901 to 1932
          Form of Evidence
              Documentary Evidence
          Description
              This crane was formerly listed Grade II* but was delisted in 2017.
Giant cantilever crane, 1909, by Arrol and Stothert & Pitt for North Eastern Marine Engineering Company (HER 5017). Rivetted steel sections. A fixed crane tower, 125 ft high and forty square supports on balanced horizontal jib, 245 ft total length. The jib swings through 360 degrees and has a trolley with the lifting gear moving along the 150ft working section. Designed to lift loads of up to 150 tons with great precision for ship construction/repair. Only 42 of this type of crane were ever built, from 1905. This is the earliest example built in England and one of only two left on the Tyne. Complete with original machinery. Popularly known as a 'hammerhead crane'. See The Engineer August 20 1909, pp 187-9.
The crane was demolished in the 1990s (with the necessary listed building consent) by the Tyne and Wear Development Corporation.
          Giant cantilever crane, 1909, by Arrol and Stothert & Pitt for North Eastern Marine Engineering Company (HER 5017). Rivetted steel sections. A fixed crane tower, 125 ft high and forty square supports on balanced horizontal jib, 245 ft total length. The jib swings through 360 degrees and has a trolley with the lifting gear moving along the 150ft working section. Designed to lift loads of up to 150 tons with great precision for ship construction/repair. Only 42 of this type of crane were ever built, from 1905. This is the earliest example built in England and one of only two left on the Tyne. Complete with original machinery. Popularly known as a 'hammerhead crane'. See The Engineer August 20 1909, pp 187-9.
The crane was demolished in the 1990s (with the necessary listed building consent) by the Tyne and Wear Development Corporation.
Easting
              431220
          Northing
              566170
          Grid Reference
              NZ431220566170
    Sources
              Department of Culture Media and Sport, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 7/182; 
Archaeological Services Durham University, 2012, Hadrian Riverside, Wallsend, Tyne and Wear - archaeological assessment;
Historic England Advice Report, 7 June 2017
          Archaeological Services Durham University, 2012, Hadrian Riverside, Wallsend, Tyne and Wear - archaeological assessment;
Historic England Advice Report, 7 June 2017