Wreighill
Woeful Wreighill
Every city and town, every village and hamlet, across the region have their own
story to tell and history to recall. Of these perhaps the most nostalgic, nay,
romantic, of them all surround the countless 'lost' villages of our land. And of
these near-forgotten communities of the county of Northumberland it seems that
the saddest of them all concerns the cursed township of Wreighill in the parish
of Rothbury, Coquetdale.
Today only a farm bearing the ancient name clings to the lofty prominence to the
north-west of Hepple; the sole reminder of the tragic little village whose name
was once synonymous with death and destruction.
Its roots lie deep in the mists of antiquity. Lying yards to the right of the
Roman road which links the Devil's Causeway to Dere Street, five and a half
miles west of Rothbury, many ancient bones have been discovered high on its
hill. The Romans - invariably occupiers of settlements they had previously
conquered - have left their own faint remains of a camp, too.
For a millennium its progress remained - and still remains - a mystery, indeed
its very existence throughout the Dark and Middle Ages remains in doubt. Suffice
to say that by the late fifteenth century it was known as Wreigh-, or Wreck-Hill
- for reasons I will now attempt to explain.
Being situated on the western most extremity of the Coquet valley the few dozen
inhabitants were frequent victims of the infamous Border reivers. On countless
occasions Scottish raiders descended the Cheviot foothills around the turn of
the fifteenth century only to find the poor village in their way. It became a
way of life for the villagers, and they simply refused to be beaten. Meeting
with such spirited opposition as they had never encountered before the Scottish
freebooters vowed to some day make them pay. Undaunted, the villagers defiantly
stood their ground, but pay they would on the fateful night of 25th May 1412.
On that terrible Wednesday evening a mighty Scottish band appeared over the
horizon and the troubled locals braced themselves again, fearing the worst. A
fierce encounter ensued but, overpowered by numbers and might of arms, the
village was overrun and its inhabitants slaughtered, many being pursued long
into the night until not a soul remained, the village itself being laid waste.
Until this century the phrase "the Woeful Wednesday of the Wreck-hill" was an
oft used simile in those parts to all that pertained to cruel, total and
mindless slaughter. Thus, on account of its fateful existence, the village came
to be known as Wreck-Hill. 'Wreigh' was a convenient enough derivative, and the
reasoning held good for a long while. But this is not the source from which the
village's name is drawn; and the truth, though quite different, remains equally
as morbid.
'Wreigh' is, in fact, derived from the Old English wearg, meaning a felon or
wrong-doer, and Wreigh-Hill, or Felon's Hill, was where such offenders were put
to death - not by hanging but by strangulation! It is likely that nearby Wreigh
Burn was simply named after the village but not impossible that its meaning is
identical to that of Throckley's Wreigh Burn, i.e: the burn where undesirables
were summarily drowned.
By and by, as the violent age of the Border reivers and
that of the moss troopers passed into history, so the village recovered. In
1665, however, came a second great calamity, as the isolated settlement was
tragically and almost entirely wiped out by the Plague. Legend has it that a
small parcel was opened by a Miss Handyside which had been sent by a young
gentleman in London - where, of course, the terrible disease was then raging -
whereupon the deadly pestilence sprung out and spread over the whole village. By
all accounts everyone suffered with only a few hardy folk surviving, who
themselves interred their dead where neither plough nor spade would ever turn
them up. A century later, though, when the potato arrived, the steep slopes
under which the dead lay were put to use and countless brittle bones were
unearthed.
Thankfully, little Wreighill is most recently remembered as being the birthplace
of the once nationally famous mathematical genius, young George Coughran. Born
in 1752, the son of a Wreighill farmer, Coughran showed signs of his
extraordinary talent in his infancy. Thrust uncompromisingly into the fields of
his father's business, where he also excelled, he continued his studies
part-time at every opportunity. He began to correspond with the Newcastle
Courant, anonymously, rousing great public interest and admiration. His identity
revealed, he became the subject of great local and national acclaim, securing
many awards. He became Calculator to the Astronomer Royal (a sort of human
computer) rising to the height of his fame as the country's outstanding genius
of his time before being tragically struck down at the age of 22 by smallpox in
Newcastle in 1774. He was buried in St. Andrew's churchyard.
After the turn of the nineteenth century Wreighill's population never topped 30.
As the Industrial Revolution gathered pace and the masses flocked to Newcastle
for work, the villages emptied. Only the old stayed, and when they died so the
villages died. Wreighill went under for the third and final time, contracting to
a small farm by 1900, which it remains to this day.
Or will the Phoenix rise again? MS
Sources:
Local Historian's Table Book, Vols I & II
(M.A.Richarclson,1841);
Goodwife Hot (G.Watson,
1970);
Various Local Directories.