Wallsend
Wallsend is also a suburb of the city of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.Wallsend is a town on the north bank of the
River Tyne in
North Tyneside,
Tyne and Wear,
England. Wallsend literally means the "end of the wall", for it is situated at the eastern end of
Hadrian's Wall, built by the
Romans. The fort of
Segedunum can be seen in outline at ground level and a replica Roman bath-house (not in its original postion) has been constructed.
Wallsend has a history of
shipbuilding and was the home of the
Wigham Richardson shipyard, which later amalgamated to form
Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson, probably best known for building the
RMS Mauretania. This express liner held the blue riband, for the fastest crossing of the
Atlantic, for 22 years.
Other famous ships included the
RMS Carpathia which rescued the survivors from the
Titanic in 1912, and the icebreaker
Krasin (launched as
Sviatogor) which rescued the
Umberto Nobile expedition on
Spitzbergen in 1928, when
Roald Amundsen perished. The story is retold in the movie
The Red Tent, starring
Sean Connery and
Peter Finch.
Charles Parsons launched his revolutionary
Turbinia here in 1884, thus not only revolutionising the navies of the world, but also, through the large-scale production of affordable
electricity, making a significant contribution to the modern age. He features in a
BBC film called
The Inventor of the Twentieth CenturyRussian novelist
Yevgeny Zamyatin worked at Swan Hunter in 1916-17, and used it as background for his great anti-utopian work
We, which was a major influence on
George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-FourWWII ships built here include HMS
Sheffield,
HMS Victorious and the flagship of the Home Fleet,
HMS King George V. All took part in the sinking of the
Bismarck.
The town is home to
Wallsend Boys Club, an
association football club, which has produced many famous players such as
Alan Shearer,
Lee Clark,
Peter Beardsley and
Michael Carrick.
Image:Wallsend platfom 2 01.jpg|Wallsend train station -- with Latin signsWallsend Metro station serves the town and, in honour of the Roman fort, has Latin and English signs.
*
Point Pleasant*
British Library - "Zamyatin in Newcastle"