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Chronicle Live
Chronicle Live
National
David Morton

Newcastle city centre, Clayton Street, and the shop Geordie Girl 35 year ago

As kids, those of us who were brought up on Tyneside probably didn't give a second thought to the origins of Newcastle's street names.

On shopping trips to 'the town', names such as Grainger Street, John Dobson Street and Clayton Street meant very little in all honesty.

It was only when we later took an interest in the history of our wonderful city that those names began to strike a chord.

READ MORE: A lost Newcastle railway station - then and now

This was Clayton Street photographed 35 years ago in 1986.

It was named after John Clayton who, along with builder Richard Grainger and architect John Dobson, in the early 19th century helped shape the Newcastle city centre we know and love today.

All three men have streets named after them, of course.

Clayton was the long-serving Town Clerk and antiquarian who helped ease through various legal issues as Grainger pursued his grand neoclassical building vision.

Mainly consisting of shops and houses, Clayton Street was one of the final parts of Grainger’s radical redevelopment of Newcastle, and was completed by around 1841.

Grainger actually had a family home and offices in the street for some years.

It runs from the city centre, past the Grainger Market down into Clayton Street West, which has a junction with Westgate Road and, further on, a junction with Westmorland Road, near the Central Station.

When it was built, it joined up with Blackett Street, making a formal approach to the original Eldon Square.

Clayton Street, Newcastle, early 20th century (newcastle chronicle)

St Mary’s Cathedral, built in 1844, is the street’s most striking building.

In the 1950s, the street was largely associated with its many clothes and furniture shops.

The popular store Woolworth closed its doors in early 2009.

Clayton Street’s northern stretch sits next to the site of the former 1960s-built Newgate Shopping Centre, which in turn was built on the site of the Victorian-built Empire theatre that was knocked down in 1963 The Maldron Hotel stands on the site today.

For more Chronicle nostalgia, including archive pictures and local history stories, click here to sign up to our free newsletter.

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