Sockburn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For Sockburn in New Zealand, see Sockburn, New Zealand

Sockburn is a village in County Durham, in England. It is situated at the bottom of a loop of the River Tees, south of Darlington. Today, there is not much there apart from an early nineteenth-century mansion, a ruined church and a farm house built in the late eighteenth century. It is a site of great antiquity, Higbald, Bishop of Lindisfarne having been crowned there in 780 or 781 and Eanwald, Archbishop of York, in 796. For many centuries, the estate was in the hands of the Conyers family. In medieval times a Sir John Conyers is said to have slain a dragon that was terrorising the district. The stone under which the dragon was reputedly buried is (or at least until recently was) still visible, and the falchion with which it was slain is in Durham Cathedral Treasury. As Sockburn was the most southerly point in the Durham diocese, the sword was ceremonially presented by the Lord of the Manor to each new Bishop when he entered his diocese for the first time at the local ford or the near-by Croft-on-Tees bridge. This custom died out in the early nineteenth century, but was revived by Bishop Jenkins in 1984, the Mayor of Darlington doing the honours. The Conyers family died out in the seventeenth century, and their manor house fell into ruin. The estate came into the hands of the Blackett family, industrialists from Newcastle. A new farm house was built in the late eighteenth century. In 1799, this was occupied by Tom Hutchinson, who is said to have once bred a seventeen and a half stone sheep, and his sisters Mary and Sara. They were distant relatives of the family of William Wordsworth. He lodged with them for six months in 1799, and eventually married Mary. His friend Samuel Taylor Coleridge also stayed there, and fell in love with Sara, but he was already married; his feeling for Sara found expression in his poem "Love", which contains references to the church and the dragon legend.

A new mansion was built around 1835 and the church was closed and allowed to become dilapidated, presumably because the occupant wanted a fashionable picturesque ruin in his grounds. A new church for the locals was built at his expense across the river at Girsby. In about 1870, another member of the Blackett family erected a footbridge some way north of the house, to enable the faithful to access their church without using a ford near the house.

Another literary association is with Lewis Carroll, the author of Alice in Wonderland. His father was sometime rector at Croft-on-Tees, and it is said that the legend of the Sockburn dragon provided the inspiration for his poem Jabberwocky.