South Shields: Exhibition to Commemorate the 200th Anniversary of the St Hilda’s Pit Disaster

St Hilda's Pit Head Henry Robson Way, South Shields

From Sue King St Hilda's Pit Head has been restored by the Tyne and Wear Restoration Trust and is now used as a community centre, focussing on the arts. There is an exhibition there of paintings by local artists to commemorate the pit disaster when 51 men and boys were killed.  Both building and exhibition […]

Tyneside Irish Centre: Book Launch: New Edition of SHAFTED: The Media, the Miners’ Strike and the Aftermath

Tyneside Irish Centre 43 Gallowgate, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom

The first edition of Shafted was published on the 25th anniversary of the miners’ strike. So much has happened over the last decade: cabinet paper revelations on the government’s role in the strike; the establishment of the Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign; and a renewed interest in the Women Against Pit Closures pit camps set […]

Newcastle City Library: The North East of England African Association presents The Windrush Story with Music & Poetry

Bewick Hall Newcastle City Library, Newcastle upon Tyne

Opened by Chi Onwurah MP Performance by Khadijah Ibrahim (Author & Poet)  Presentation by Edwina Forde & Dr Prevatt Goldstein  Includes refreshments – bookings at

Newcastle City Library, Book Launch: Tyneside Song From Blind Willie to Bobby Nunn

Bewick Hall Newcastle City Library, Newcastle upon Tyne

Dear friend and colleagues, As many of you will know, Blind Willie Purvis was the earliest-known named vernacular songwriter in Newcastle, and he became an iconic figure among middle-class people by the 1820s, while Bobby Nunn was the earliest-known semi-professional songwriter for the town’s working-class people from 1829. I will be launching my Tyneside Song […]

NELHS Second Tuesday at Redhills: Huw Beynon will speak on “‘The Little Dictator’ and ‘The Three Musketeers’: The NUM Durham Area at a time of Nationalisation and Cold War”

The Miners' Hall, Redhills, Durham Flass Street, Durham City

In 1937 Orwell visited a coal mine in Lancashire and was exhausted by the time he had walked to the coal face. He marvelled at the endurance of the miners and wrote of how you could “easily drive a car right across the north of England: and never once remembered that hundreds of feet below... […]

St Nicholas Cathedral, Newcastle: Commemoration of the 1995 Bosnian Genocide

St Nicholas Cathedral St. Nicholas Sq, Newcastle upon Tyne

From Smajo Beso of Newcastle’s Bosnian Community You are warmly invited to Newcastle’s St Nicholas Cathedral on Thursday 11 July at 6.30pm to remember the victims and survivors of the single largest atrocity mass killing on European soil since the Second World War. This year marks the 24th anniversary of the Bosnian genocide, in the town […]

Tyneside Irish Centre: Peter Coe’s The Road to Peterloo

Tyneside Irish Centre 43 Gallowgate, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom

This is the story of the Peterloo Massacre told through many of the ballads that were written at the time, please book at https://peterloo.eventbrite.co.uk There is also a guided walk on Newcastle's Campaign for the Vote, starting at Grey's Monument which you can join on Sunday at 2.30pm, £5 for adults, £3 for over 60s […]

NELHS First Tuesday: Val Scully will talk about Writing Historical Fiction in the North East

Old George Inn Old George Yard, Newcastle

In this illustrated talk, Val will describe researching for her two novels set in the North East:  My Name is Eleanor and Molly Bowes.  Having begun with eighteenth-century Gibside, her interests evolved to encompass the wider nineteenth-century social history of the area.  She will discuss the processes involved in writing historical fiction with a didactic purpose. […]