Born in Ushaw Moor? Plus a Murderer Identified
I took a sample of seventy two families that were living in the Ushaw Moor area from the 1891 census - so that I could get some idea of the extent of the incoming labour force that had been attracted by work in a coal mining community. I could then, by and large, pinpoint the areas from which they had originated. My focus was the head of each family, which in almost every case was a male member of the household. The findings were as follows:
41 heads of families – born in County Durham
8 – Yorkshire
4 –Cumberland
4 -Ireland
4 -Northumberland
3-Norfolk
3-Suffolk
2 -Essex
1 -Derbyshire
1-Kent
1-Somerset
So about 57% of them were born in County Durham but clearly a very significant number were not. I am aware that a few families, that are not included in the sample, came from Wales.
MURDER
Thomas Pyle, a widower, had been murdered in 1882, during the time of the very acrimonious Ushaw Moor Miners’ strike. He was a platelayer employed at the colliery and found dead in Redhills, Durham City. At one time he had lived in Witton Gilbert. Some people had suspected that Thomas Westoe was involved in the murder but in fact it had been committed by Peter Bray. Bray was executed in November 1883 for Pyle’s murder. [source Darrell Nixon who had examined the relevant records].
If you have not yet read the account of the strike I recommend it to you. It has everything – murder, pistol shots, a colliery manager that became out of control, a wealthy colliery owner that lived in a castle, a distressed school mistress and a kindly and constructive Catholic priest.
Best regards
Wilf Bell











