1
Looking along Front Street
View SW up Front Street, the main street which runs through the village. The short row opposite is Bowes Terrace, named after one of the principal coal owning families in this part of Co Durham. Dipton was a prime example of a colliery village back in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Image: © Robert Graham
Taken: 20 Mar 2019
0.04 miles
2
Delight Row & Wordsworth Gardens, Dipton
Image: © Andrew Curtis
Taken: 7 Jan 2011
0.06 miles
3
Open space on Front Street, Dipton
This open area in the centre of the village is used as a playing field. The gap in the built up area gives great views to the NW across the Derwent Valley. The building on the right is Dipton Manor Care Home, which was built recently on the site of the old Bute Arms pub.
Image: © Robert Graham
Taken: 20 Mar 2019
0.07 miles
4
Dipton Manor Care Home, Front Street, Dipton
The 70 bedroom Care Home was built by North-East Comedian, Bobby Pattinson, on the site of the former Bute Arms public house which was badly damaged by fire in 2007. It opened in the new year of 2013. The home caters for people with dementia as well as provide ordinary nursing care and provides extensive views over the Derwent Valley as far north as the Cheviot Hills.
The rear of the new building is shown here
Image
Image: © Andrew Curtis
Taken: 26 Oct 2013
0.07 miles
5
Dipton Manor Care Home, Front Street, Dipton
The front of the building is shown here
Image
Image: © Andrew Curtis
Taken: 26 Oct 2013
0.07 miles
6
Delight Court, Dipton
Modern housing at Dipton.
Image: © Oliver Dixon
Taken: 28 Feb 2014
0.10 miles
7
Aladdins Church
Second-hand furniture shop housed in an old church on Front Street, Dipton.
Image: © Oliver Dixon
Taken: 27 Jan 2022
0.12 miles
8
Front Street, Dipton
The very busy A692.
Image: © Oliver Dixon
Taken: 27 Jan 2022
0.14 miles
9
The track of Catchwell Road, Dipton
The track is on the line of the old Pontop Pike waggonway. The waggonways were laid out in this area as early as 1728. Horses were used to pull chaldron waggons along wooden rails of a usual gauge of 4 feet, transporting coal from the many pits around Pontop Pike towards staithes on the nearby rivers. A chaldron is a unit of dry measure which was 36 bushels for coal. The waggonways consisted of two tracks laid side by side, the main way and the bye way. The main way carried the full wagon down gradient, and then on the bye way, the horse pulled the empty wagon up gradient.
There is a detailed essay here http://www.pontvalley.net/cms/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=26
Image: © Andrew Curtis
Taken: 7 Jan 2011
0.15 miles
10
Path east of Dipton
The site of Vane Pit is overgrown on the left. This coal mine was opened in 1740.
Image: © Andrew Curtis
Taken: 7 Jan 2011
0.17 miles