• CONTACT US if you have any problems registering for the forums.

North East Barnard Castle, County Durham - its ruined castle and church

Barnard CAstle 2.jpg


Barnard Castle, or Barney as it is affectionately called by the locals, is a thriving small market town at the mouth of Teesdale. Although it has a Morrisons behind the market place, it still manages to retain many small family owned shops. It still has a weekly market as well s monthly farmers market. There are plenty of places to eat as well as some good antique shops.

Barnard CAstle.png


GlaxoSmithKlein have a large factory on the edge of the town and is a major employer.

The town grew up round the Norman castle which stands high on a bluff at the top of the town overlooking the river.

IMGP5579.jpg


The town still retains its wide main thoroughfares that were traditionally used for the market as well as cobbled streets, twisting lanes and narrow passageways.

P8311022.jpg


It still has a medieval feel to it.

Barnard CAstle 3.jpg


At the bottom of Horse Market, the broad main shopping street, is the Market Cross or butter mart. The octagonal building dates from 1747 and was built to replace the old tollbooth. Butter and other dairy produce was sold from the ground floor, while the upper room was used as a courthouse. Originally the base was closed off with heavy wooden shutters. It now serves as a roundabout.

BC Market Cross.jpg


Close by is St Mary’s Church which was built at the same time as the castle.

BC Church.jpg


At the opposite end of the town near the castle is the Methodist Church. This was built in 1894 and was able to seat nearly 600 worshippers.

P8311020.jpg


The elaborate drinking fountain at the bottom of Gallowgate dates from 1874 and is fed from an underground spring. It was paid for by public subscription. The cattle market was originally held here and the fountain was designed to be used by both man and beast. It stopped being used in 1992.

P8311016.jpg


On the edge of the town is the amazing mock French Château built in the mid C19th by John and Josephine Bowes who lived in nearby Streatlam Castle and had links to the Bowes Lyons family, to hold their eclectic collection of fine art, porcelain, furniture and paintings. The Bowes Museum is a major tourist attraction drawing visitors in to the area.

We always enjoy visiting Barney with its stone buildings and slab roofs. It has very much the feel of an upland town and is gateway to some of the best scenery in England with Stainmore, Teesdale and Weardale all within a short distance.



IMGP5587.jpg
 
Last edited:
The Castle

The castle at Barnard Castle is one of the largest castles in the north of England, set high above the River Tees.

IHT015.jpg


Guy de Baliol was granted land here by William Rufus and built a wood and earthwork fortification. This was soon replaced by a stone castle. When John Baliol, King of Scotland was defeated by Edward I, ownership of the castle passed to the Nevilles, Dukes of Warwick and then by marriage to Richard III. The estate was forfeited to the crown after the unsuccessful Uprising of the North in the C16th. It eventually passed into the ownership of the Vane family who used stone from Barnard Castle to rebuild Raby Castle, leaving it a ruin.

The castle is made up of four wards and surrounded by a curtain wall with towers.The oldest buildings are in the Inner Ward and had a protective ditch. Outside this was the smaller Middle Ward with the Constable Tower acting as a gateway. To the east of the Inner Ward was the larger Town ward. These were separated from the Outer Ward by another massive ditch. The castle was protected to the west by the cliff above the river. To the east, there was another protective ditch outside the curtain wall.

P8310946.jpg


P8310953 copy.jpg


The Outer Ward to the south was the largest and contained the Market Gate which was the main entrance from the town. This contained the manorial farm and the chapel containing the tombs of the Baliol family. In the mid C14th the outer ward was abandoned apart from the chapel, making the castle smaller and cheaper to run. Now all that remains are a few bumps in the ground and views across to the town.

P8311008.jpg


The main entrance now is through the north gate into the Town Ward. This originally had a barbican with drawbridge and guard house, with another room above.

IMGP5576.jpg


The Town Ward is still surrounded by the curtain wall which stands to nearly its full height.

P8310951.jpg


This was a place of refuge for the townsfolk and contained the well and a number of permanent buildings, connected with the running of the castle. All are now ruined foundations along the side of the walls, apart from the late C12th Brackenbury Tower that was used both as a living area and also as a store room. It had a fireplace as well as a latrine set into the walls.

P8310949.jpg


P8310948.jpg


On the far side of the north gate and by the ditch is the remains of the Dovecote Tower still with the rows of nesting holes for doves or pigeons. The floor level was dug out below the level of the surrounding ground to allow for the accummulation of droppings, feathers etc. This was used as a fertiliser and also for tanning.

P8311011.jpg


P8311010.jpg


A stone wall separated the Town Ward from the Outer Ward.

P8310966.jpg


The Great Ditch dates from the C12th and separates the Middle and Inner Wards from the Town Ward. The modern wooden bridge is on the site of the original C14th one.

P8310960.jpg


There was a small sally port with a portcullis in the curtain wall that allowed access to the river. The purpose of the small archway in the wall separating the Town and Middle Wards is unclear and it has been suggested it might have been used during ditch maintenance.

P8310976.jpg


The Middle Ward was reached by a bridge across the Great Ditch and linked the three other wards of the castle.

P8310964.jpg


It served as a fortified entry area or barbican through which all visitors to the castle had to pass. It also contained stables and accommodation for the castles officials. The Town and Outer Wards were semi-public areas and used by castle and town to conduct business. Middle Ward controlled access to the Inner Ward and Lord’s residence. Entry from the Town Ward was controlled by a tower. All that remains of this are the latrine shafts which emptied into the moat

P8310958.jpg


The Constable Tower controlled entry from the Outer Ward. It was originally three storeys tall and overlooks the river.

P8310967.jpg


P8310978.jpg


The Inner Ward was the first part of the site to be built. It was protected on two sides by a steep cliff dropping down to the river. On the other sides, it was protected by the ditch.

P8310968.jpg


It has been extended and altered over the years.

P8310970.jpg


In the early C12th, the castle was surrounded by a wooden palisade and entered through a gatehouse tower. There were few buildings.

P8310971.jpg


By the mid C12th the wooden palisade had been replaced by a stone wall and a stone keep had been added.

P8310972.jpg


By the early C13th, the internal buildings were now all stone built . The round tower had been added along with Chamber Block and Great Hall.

P8310973.jpg


By the late C14th, a barbican had been added to the entrance and the Mortham Tower built,

P8310974.jpg


It contained the keep built on top of an earthen motte, on top of a motte, great chamber, great hall and the kitchens. Little now remains of the original gate tower and barbican.

P8310955.jpg


P8310961.jpg


Little now remains of the original gate tower and barbican. Immediately on the left on entering is the remains of the kitchen range - a few foundations and a drain.

P8311002.jpg


P8310981.jpg


Immediately behind these is the remains of the Mortham Tower, which was built in the C14th as a lookout tower. The ground floor was service rooms with buttery, pantry and servery. The upper floors were living quarters with a latrine.

P8310983.jpg


The Mortham Tower abutted onto the Great Hall., which was built over the original timber hall. This was a tall single story building which served as the communal living and dining area and would have had a central open hearth. All that remains now is the outer wall with two large windows.

P8310987.jpg


Next to the Great Hall was the Chamber Block, which was the private family quarters. Again little remains of this. The ground floor rooms would have been dark and may have been used for storage with the private rooms above, reached by an external wooden staircase. The large oriel window is a later addition.

P8310989.jpg


P8311003.jpg


The Round Tower dominates the Inner Ward.

P8311005.jpg


The Undercroft with its stone ceiling and well was mainly used for storage. It has a latrine in the wall near the entrance from the Chamber Block. Steps lead up to the first floor.

Undercroft.jpg


P8310995.jpg


The Round Tower is now a roofless shell, with a stone stair up through the wall leading to the top. There are good views down onto the rest of the castle from here, as well as the surrounding area.

P8310999.jpg


Beyond the Round Tower was the Bakehouse and Postern Tower.

P8311000.jpg


The Bakehouse was kept separate from the other buildings to reduce the risk of fire. The stone lined pit was either a cold store or a water cistern. The archway gave access to the Prison Tower. Near this was the Postern Tower which gave access to the sally port leading out of the Inner Ward.

P8310990.jpg


P8311007.jpg


This is a splendid castle and well worth visiting. It is tucked round the back of Horse Market and not visible from the town itself. The best views are from the bridge across the River Tees.

website
 
Last edited:
St Mary's Church, Barnard Castle

St Mary’s Church is a large and attractive building on the corner of Newgate and Horse Market, near the Butter Market. It has a tall battlemented tower at the west end with battlemented nave and side aisles.

Church.jpg


The first church was built at the start of the C12th by Bernard Balliol who built the castle. This has been rebuilt and extended over the years and only the north aisle arcades remain of Balliol’s church. The south arcade is early English from about 1300. The north transept was added around 1380 and is decorated style. Richard, Duke of Gloucester, widened and extended the church in 1480 and added the clerestory windows. By the end of the C18th, the church was in a poor state of repair and in need of restoration.

Entry is through the south door under the tower, into a porch which contains a lot of memorials on the walls. The Norman south door is now blocked off and is the disabled toilet...

IMGP5562.jpg


An arcade of round pillars with round arches separates nave and north aisle. The south arcade is later and has octagonal pillars and pointed arches.

IMGP5565.jpg


IMGP5572.jpg


Stained glass windows contain C20th glass.

IMGP5564.jpg


A flight of steps leads up under the pointed chancel arch into the chancel. The carved heads on the arch are thought to be Edward IV and Richard of Gloucester. The Yorkshire rose is carved on the stones round the arch. By the chancel arch is an open carved wood pulpit on a stone base.

IMGP5563.jpg


The chancel feels quite dark weigh its low dark wood roof and panelling around the bottom of the walls. On the north wall is a bread cupboard which was used to store bread to distribute to the poor.

IMGP5571.jpg


The font in the north aisle dates from 1485 and is made from local stone. The carvings have defeated attempts at interpretation and may be emblems of medieval guilds.

IMGP5569.jpg


On the north wall are two recessed arches containing an effigy of Robert Mortham, vicar of the parish and remains of medieval carved grave slabs.

IMGP5566.jpg


IMGP5567.jpg


Near by is a stone carving representing St Anthony with his ‘dancing’ boars. St Anthony was a C3rd bishop and saint who spent time as a hermit in the Egyptian desert. His symbol was a pig, possibly representing the Deadly Sin of gluttony which he had overcome. There is another legend where the boar resisted the Devil’s bidding and defended St Anthony, so it may signify his spiritual purity and resistance of temptation.

IMGP5568.jpg


Website
 
Last edited:
Everyone in the UK would have picked up the reference and 'doing a Barnard Castle' became part of the language. There was a lot of ribbald comment about the person in question who rapidly became despised by all.
 

How to Find Information

Search using the search button in the upper right. Search all forums or current forum by keyword or member. Advanced search gives you more options.

Filter forum threads using the filter pulldown above the threads. Filter by prefix, member, date. Or click on a thread title prefix to see all threads with that prefix.

Recommended Guides, Apps and Books

52 Things to See and Do in Basilicata by Valerie Fortney
Italian Ancestral Journeys by Bryan Schneider
Italian Food & Life Rules by Ann Reavis
Italian Food Decoder App by Dana Facaros, Michael Pauls
French Food Decoder App by Dana Facaros, Michael Pauls
She Left No Note, Lake Iseo Italy Mystery 1 by J L Crellina
Tuscan Traveler, Living in Italy by Ann Reavis

Back
Top