I found this article very interesting.Last paragraphs mention broompark, but also interesting to note that both Broompark and ushaw moor collierys opened at the same time.
THE NORTHERN ECHO
Archive - Friday, 6 February 2004
Discovery of coal on moors leads to development of village
USHAW Moor is a former mining village on the north side of the River Deerness, half way between Durham and Esh Winning.
Centrally located among the mining communities of the Deerness and Browney, roads from neighbouring places converge upon a crossroads at the village centre.
The crossroads was there long before Ushaw Moor came into being, although there was no housing in the 1850s when the nearest structures were Cockhouse
Farm, half a mile west and Broom Hall on a hill to the east.
Ushaw Moor's mining community was born in the second half of the 19th Century on previously empty moorland. Some settlement had come in the early 19th
Century when Ushaw College opened, but this famous institution existed half a century before Ushaw Moor itself.
There had been an earlier farming settlement called Ushaw, first mentioned in 1312. Now gone, it was possibly located where College Farm stands.
Early spellings suggest Anglo-Saxons called Ushaw "Ulfs Shaw" meaning Wolf's Wood but it may be named after Ulf, a man who held land west of Durham in
the 12th Century.
Little is known of early Ushaw, except that a bake-house belonging to the Batmanson family existed here in the 17th and 18th centuries, perhaps where the
college now stands. It was a communal establishment used by the poor and needy for a small fee.
Ushaw's moorland, originally called Middlewood Moor, lay mostly east of the early settlement. For centuries small-scale drift mining was undertaken at nearby
places such as Esh, but in 1755 attempts to reach coal on the moor ended in failure.
In 1858, the Pease family opened a railway through the Deerness Valley to serve the colliery at Waterhouses which stimulated the development of more mines.
After the successful finding of coal, Ushaw Moor Colliery opened about 1870. Its first owners were probably the Holliday family who owned drift mines near
old Esh and Hilltop. By 1873 it belonged to John Sharp but passed to the aristocratic Henry Chaytor of Witton Castle in 1879.
Ushaw Moor's first colliery village developed on the north side of Cockhouse Lane (the B6302), three quarters of a mile west of the present village.
The early colliery village included West Terrace, East Terrace and Double Row while the colliery lay on the opposite side of the road, overlooking the
Deerness. The colliery and terraces were demolished in the 1950s and 1960s and are now empty fields.
Deerness View, a lonely hamlet on the B6302, now stands near the site. This came later, in the mid-20th Century, but the terraces of the first colliery
village lay in the fields to its east.
There had been development of buildings around the crossroads in what is now the centre of Ushaw Moor before the 1890s.
Buildings included a pub called the Flass Inn, but the population was concentrated in the terraces further west.
Cockhouse Lane leads to Esh Winning and Waterhouses, but before those collieries developed it terminated at Flass Hall, a mile east of Ushaw Moor.
The hall's name derives from an Old Danish word, Flask, meaning swamp and has the same meaning as Flass Vale in Durham.
Established in the 1570s, it lies on the site of a medieval farm and is marked on Saxton's map of Durham in 1576.
The hall's first occupant was William Brass who was succeeded by his son, Cuthbert in 1600.
The last Brass at Flass still lived there in 1697 when it became the hall of the Hall family.
By the 19th Century, Flass belonged to Jane Smythe, of Esh Hall, who married Sir Robert Peat, a friend of the Prince Regent.
Robert had serious gambling debts and probably married Jane for money.
Later, they were estranged, partly because of Jane's kleptomaniac tendencies. She chose to live in Sunderland, renting Flass Hall to the Reverend Temple
Chevalier of Esh village while her property at Cockhouse Farm was leased to John Leadbiter of Gateshead.
Flass Hall became a property of the Peases in the 1920s before passing in the 1930s to a local farmer who kept pigs in the house. It was taken over by the
National Coal Board in 1947 and converted into private houses in the late 1960s. Locally it is called "haunted house", but the identity of its spectral
resident, if indeed there is one, remains a mystery.
Broom Hall is another notable hall. Once situated in empty fields east of the village until almost swallowed by Ushaw Moor's housing developments in the
1960s, it belonged to the Batmanson family in the later half of the 16th Century.
Broom Hall is really associated with the little village of Broom to the east. Broom is now called Broompark but this was really the name for an adjoining
colliery village that developed in the 19th Century.
The colliery village has gone and is now occupied by housing development called Cookes Wood, but older parts of Broom including several old farmhouses
remain.
Broompark is only separated from Ushaw Moor by a road and recreation ground. Mining had taken place on a small scale here since the 1300s when its coal was
sold to the Prior of Bearpark. North Brancepeth Colliery Company which also operated Littleburn colliery opened the colliery about 1870 on the site of a
mysterious medieval moat. The colliery closed in 1904 after a major fire from which the miners escaped by means of an old drift.
One intriguing feature of Broompark is the Loves public house. Built in the 19th Century it was originally called Love's Hotel after Joseph Love,
a Durham coal owner who owned a brick foundry. He is thought to have built the pub with his bricks, each perhaps inscribed with the word Love.
* In next week's Durham Memories we look at the troublesome history of Ushaw Moor Colliery.
Published: 06/02/2004
If you have any memories of Durham City, Chester-le-Street, Derwentside or the Durham coast, including old photos or stories of people and places you would
like to share with readers of The Northern Echo, write to David Simpson, Durham Memories, The Northern Echo, Priestgate, Darlington, DL1 1NF or
email David.Simpson@nne.co.uk. All photos will be returned.