Life on Wearside in 1983 - Nine great Sunderland Echo stories to transport you back in time
and live on Freeview channel 276
Hundreds of jobs were on the way thanks to the rise of Dewhirst’s but the shipyards and the pits were in demise.
Elsewhere, Washington women were setting up their own sewing business.
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Hide AdAnd two telly stars made a big impression during their visits to the area.
Let’s find out more, Chris Cordner reports.
*The Tyne and Wear Save Our Shipyards campaign was taken to Westminster with a mass lobby of MPs.
A 72-strong delegation of councillors and union representatives went by special train from the North East to get the message over about the crisis facing the industry in 1983. Did you work in the shipyards and what are your memories of it?
*A familiar landmark disappeared from a County Durham village.
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Hide AdNCB contractors pulled down the massive colliery southern winding wheel which stood over Blackhall for decades. Which pit did you work in?
*There was better news on the work front when it was announced that Sunderland was to get 300 new jobs in the clothing trade with the development of a £2m-plus factory by IJ Dewhirst.
The company applied for planning permission for the new factory at Leechmere Industrial Estate, Sunderland, not far from its Pennywell operation.
*A group of workers who were made redundant from a Washington clothing factory set up their own co-operative sewing business.
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Hide AdThe women worked at Almantex factory on the Hertburn industrial estate which closed with the loss of 135 jobs in 1983.
But 14 of the women from the factory and a male colleague planned to move into a factory in Hendon and form their own company called Class One Ltd.
*Welsh comedian Max Boyce got in some training for a daredevil television show when he visited the Strang riding centre in Washington.
*And the star of television’s popular One Man And His Dog programme was also in Washington - but without his famous companion.
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Hide AdPhil Drabble was the guest at the annual meeting of the Tyne and Wear South Federation of Women’s Institutes.
Phil, who is the son of the local doctor, told how he was allowed out with the gamekeeper on a local landowner’s estate.
After tea with the squire, he would meet friends and sneak back to the estate at night - as a poacher.
*Sunderland woman Ethel Towers revealed in 1983 how she may have set a record.
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Hide AdAt the age of 23, Mrs Towers, who was retired when she revealed her story 39 years ago, cycled alone from John O’Groats to Land’s End.
This could well have been the first time the journey was done by a woman on her own.
*Sunderland drama student Julia Taylor had great news of her own in 1983. She was only one of eight girls from all over the country to accepted for RADA.
*At the other end of her career was Elizabeth Wolfe who retired from Thompson Park Nursery.
The Echo caught up with her as she said goodbye to some of the pupils.
What are your memories of 1983? Tell us more by emailing [email protected]