Bill Quay is situated between Hebburn to the east, and Pelaw to the southwest. It lies on the south bank of the River Tyne, facing Walker. The area is home to Bill Quay Albion Cricket Club, competitors in the Durham Cricket League.
History
During the nineteenth century, Bill Quay was an industrial area catering for chemical works,[2] bottle works, Robson's Paint, and shipbuilding. The area saw an economic upturn at the end of the nineteenth century, when the Co-Operative Wholesale Society (CWS) opened its vast and extensive string of factories along Shields Road. Boutlands,[3] Harrisons[4] and Wood-Skinner[5] were shipbuilders at Bill Quay, with Harrisons being the final shipbuilder on the south bank of the River Tyne to close.
Demography
According to the 2011 Census, the Pelaw and Heworthward has a population of 9,100. The ward is split into three distinct districts:
Bill Quay (population of 1,525) – Located to the east of King George's Field, and to the north of the A185 road.
52.2% of the population are female, slightly above the national average, while 47.8% are male. Only 2.7% of the population were from a black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) group, as opposed to 14.6% of the national population.[6]
Data from the 2011 Census found that the average life expectancy in Pelaw and Heworth is 79.1 years for men, and 81.1 years for women. These statistics compare fairly favourably, when compared to the average life expectancy in the North East of England, of 77.4 and 81.4 years, respectively.[7]
Car ownership is lower than the average in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead (63.5%), and lower than the national average of 74.2% – with 61.1% of households in the Pelaw and Heworth ward owning at least one car.[6]
Bill Quay is served by one primary school, Bill Quay Primary School.[10] In November 2011, the school was rated "good" by Ofsted. Nearby primary schools include St. Alban's Catholic Primary School in Pelaw, and Wardley Primary School and White Mere Community Primary School in Wardley.
Pelaw and Heworth is a local council ward in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead. This ward covers an area of around 1.3 square miles (3.4 km2), and has a population of 9,100.[18] As of April 2020, the ward is served by three councillors: Ian Patterson, John Paul Dilston and Rosy Oxberry.[19] Bill Quay is located within the parliamentary constituency of Jarrow. As of April 2020, the constituency is served by Kate Osborne.[20]
Gateshead Council Local Elections 2019: Pelaw and Heworth[21]
It is also served by the Gateshead Central Taxis bus services 568, which runs hourly between Heworth and Bill Quay, and 515, which runs hourly between Heworth and Hebburn.
Bill Quay Community Farm is an important urban farm, and one of only 16 farm parks nationally recognised by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust in the UK. Breeds included Tamworth pigs, Jacob sheep, Hebridean sheep, Scots Grey hens and Bagot goats.[24] It used to play host to Chickenstock, an annual showcase festival for local Gateshead based bands. Bill Quay Community Farm opened in 1986[25] and closed in September 2019, but later reopened.[24] It is managed by a registered charity.[26]
In fiction
The novel Schoolfrenz by Ray Crowther (ISBN0-9541110-3-6) is set mainly on Tyneside. Bill Quay is mentioned several times and is the location for a murder scene in the book. The author's website (Ray Crowther) contains an extract from Schoolfrenz about Bill Quay, and has photographs of Bill Quay, and the surrounding area.