Hello I was born in Cambois in late 1940s.
there's always the mystery of Boca Chica (Little Mouth) - a term used for estuaries across the colonial world, named by their eurocentric "discoverers".
That said, I've often pondered as to its original location and meaning in the history of Cambois.
I was doing some mines/coalfield research and came across this map, published 1864. this is about four? years before the
cambois coal mine was sunk, and colliery cottages - a whole village - was built and populated. It seems that Boca Chica was a "building" maybe approximately where the Ridley Arms was finally built? which was always called
the Willick (=whelk), rather than
the ridleyarms, which was a mouthful by comparison. and maybe out of negative deference to Lord Ridley, who owned the new mine and village.
https://mininginstitute.org.uk/education/archive-teaching-unit/a-general-maps-of-the-coalfield/bells-plans-of-the-northumberland-and-durham-coalfield/bell-blyth-and-warkworth/we also see that Cambois was originally the small group of building (?Browns' Farm) adjacent to the mouth of the Wansbeck.
by mid 1900s, the village contained several thousand souls.