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England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Northumberland => Topic started by: Heidolow on Thursday 02 October 25 23:08 BST (UK)
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Hi,
I'm looking for anyone who either currently or previously resided/ resides in Aldborough Street in Blyth.
I have the 1921 Census for 39 Aldborough Street as it appears my ancestors lived there at one point. Upon checking Google maps, number 39 no longer seems to exist. I get the impression that a lot of the properties on that street were previously flats and have since been converted into houses.
Essentially, I'm trying to figure out which property used to be number 39, and am wondering if anyone has any insight or photos of Aldborough Street from the past that may shine a light?
Many thanks!
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As you know, lot of the houses were evidently two separate flats at one point. Although usually the two flats are given the same number (e.g; downstairs would be 51A, upstairs would be 51B) I think each flat has been given its own individual number here.
So as if you were facing Collingwood St, the door numbers on the left side are the odd ones.
This map shows that Number 39 was downstairs and number 41 Aldborough St was upstairs. Number 41 is now a single house instead of flat.
https://maps.nls.uk/view/210277990
https://maps.app.goo.gl/Xg7nbosd1W1sGCF38
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As you know, lot of the houses were evidently two separate flats at one point. Although usually the two flats are given the same number (e.g; downstairs would be 51A, upstairs would be 51B) I think each flat has been given its own individual number here.
So as if you were facing Collingwood St, the door numbers on the left side are the odd ones.
This map shows that Number 39 was downstairs and number 41 Aldborough St was upstairs. Number 41 is now a single house instead of flat.
https://maps.nls.uk/view/210277990
https://maps.app.goo.gl/Xg7nbosd1W1sGCF38
Hi,
That's actually really helpful, thank you so much for the links :)
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Happy to help :)
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In this region many "houses" were actually built as two flats, known as Tyneside Flats. In plan, they appear larger than the average terraced house in industrial towns. Many have two front doors, one leading directly to a staircase, with another staircase at the back to a shared yard.
A friend of mine owned a pair of these and lived upstairs, using the downstairs flat as an office and storage for a business. They had two consecutive numbers.
ADDED: In the Google reference in reply #2, you can see a pair of front doors on the opposite side of Aldborough Street. Some other houses appear to have altered frontages.
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In this region many "houses" were actually built as two flats, known as Tyneside Flats. In plan, they appear larger than the average terraced house in industrial towns. Many have two front doors, one leading directly to a staircase, with another staircase at the back to a shared yard.
That is really interesting! I didn’t know they had a specific name or were only in the North East.
I grew up in a flat as described, we were in the upstairs. Our door number was still a 1/2 number instead though.