Northumbria Specialist Emergency Care Hospital
The Northumbria Specialist Emergency Care Hospital is a hospital specialising in emergency care for sick and injured patients, opened in 2015 in Cramlington, Northumberland, England by the Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust.
Nearby Places View Menu
745 m
Cramlington and Killingworth
Cramlington and Killingworth is a constituency of the House of Commons in the UK Parliament. Further to the completion of the 2023 review of Westminster constituencies, it was first contested at the 2024 general election and is currently held by Emma Foody, a Labour Co-op MP.
1.2 km
Tynemouth Rural District
Tynemouth was a rural district in the English county of Northumberland.
It was created by the Local Government Act 1894 based on the Tynemouth rural sanitary district. It initially contained the following parishes:
Backworth
Bebside
Burradon
Earsdon
East Hartford
Hartley
Holywell
Horton
Longbenton
Murton
Seaton Delaval
West Hartford
Willington
In 1897 the parishes of Backworth, Earsdon, Holywell and Murton became an Earsdon Urban District. A Camperdown parish was created in 1910 from the Weetslade urban district, also taking in part of Longbenton urban district. In 1910 Willington and part of Longbenton were added to the Municipal Borough of Wallsend.
The rural district was dissolved in 1912, being split between the Blyth, Longbenton, Whitley and Monkseaton, Seaton Delaval and Cramlington urban districts.
1.3 km
Cramlington
Cramlington is a new town and civil parish in Northumberland. It is 6 miles (9.7 kilometres) north of Newcastle upon Tyne. The name suggests a probable founding by the Danes or Anglo-Saxons.
The population was 28,843 as of 2021 census data from Northumberland County Council. It sits on the border between Northumberland and North Tyneside with the traffic interchange at Moor Farm, Annitsford, linking the two areas.
The area of East Cramlington lies east of the A189, on the B1326 road that connects the town to Seaton Delaval.
1.4 km
Stonelaw Middle School
Stonelaw County Middle School was a middle school in Cramlington, Northumberland, England, normally referred to as Stonelaw.
Operating under the three-tier system in Northumberland, the school had an intake of pupils aged 10–13. The school was closed when Cramlington Learning Village opened in 2008.
The school had extended classrooms in the form of a Science Laboratory, an Art Room and a Music and Drama Room, all taught by teachers specialising in that subject. The school also had the use of the Sporting Club fields for PE and Games.
The school itself was one block instead of multiple blocks of buildings.
The final headmaster before closure was Mr Andrew Youngs and the acting deputy was Mr Doug Moore.
English
Français