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1873
Harton Colliery Band participated in the Morpeth Brass Band Festival (first verifiable reference to band)
1878
Harton Colliery Band appears to have become defunct
1911
Harton Colliery Band re-emerged when the colliery management 'adopted' the Tyne Dock Temperance Band
1919
Harton Colliery won the British Open Championship
1958
Harton and Westoe Collieries merged and the band changed its name to Harton and Westoe Colliery Band
1968
Harton Colliery closes but the band continues on at Westoe Colliery
1984/5
Miners' strike led to financial, social and internal difficulties, membership dwindled to a handful of players
1985
A 'new start' is made, children are recruited from local schools and re-building begins. Band changes
name to Westoe Colliery Band
1993
Closure of Westoe Colliery is announced. South Tyneside Health Care Trust who kindly agree to support
the band and name changes to the present title
2000
The Band competes in the National Finals at The Royal Albert Hall
2004
Consistent successes see the promoted from the bottom of the Fourth Section to the Championship Section
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This is a band with a very chequered history and an existence in some form or other for over 125 years.
The band is best known as operating under the 'banner' of Harton Coal Company of South Shields. The
first verifiable reference to a 'Harton Colliery Band' comes from 1873 when a band under this name
participated in the Morpeth Brass Band Festival. However, after 1878, no further reference to this band
can be traced and it appears to have become defunct by this date, the reason why is unknown.
In 1911 another band emerged under the same title of 'Harton Colliery Band'. This seems to have been
the Tyne Dock Temperance Band which, some years earlier, had been 'adopted' by the colliery for various
engagements but then changed its name to enjoy the financial support offered by the colliery management.
The Tyne Dock Temperance Band had itself developed from the Harton and District Band which in turn had
started life as the Tyne Dock British School Adult Band.

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The band emerged as a real force after 1913. In February of that year the well-known conductor, adjudicator
and arranger George Hawkins, aged 36, was appointed conductor, and rapid progress was made. This
culminated in 1919 when Harton Colliery Band won the British Open Championship playing a selection from
Benedict's opera, "The Lily of Killarney" and in doing so became the first colliery band to win this premier
award. The band maintained a strong contesting presence over the next thirty years but was perhaps better
known as a concert band, touring widely throughout the United Kingdom under the musical direction of several
conductors but in particuler, Jack Atherton. Famous players of this era include Jack Macintosh, Norman
Ashcroft and Maurice Murphy (then a boy solo champion of Great Britain and now principal trumpet of the
London Symphony Orchestra).
A bombshell came in 1950 when Jack Atherton was appointed bandmaster of the famous Fairey Aviation
Works Band - the 'baby' of the great Harry Mortimer. This was a great honour for Jack Atherton as the Fairey
Band had been Open Champions in 1941, 1942, 1944, 1947 and 1949 as well as National Champions in
1945 when another local band, Horden Colliery, were runners-up.
The departure of Jack Atherton was accompanied by the loss of many fine players which had a devastating
effect on the remaining members. As a result, the 1950s saw the band in the doldrums but, in the mid 1960s,
the band revived and maintained a fairly consistent standard until the miners' strike of 1984/5.
The pressures of the strike, financially, socially and internally caused great difficulties for the band and
membership dwindled to a handful of players. Faced with the imminent collapse of the band, one or two
die-hards recruited children from local schools and a rebuilding programme began. Many of these players
have remained loyal to the band and this, along with a stable committee, has seen the band start from the
bottom of the ladder and re-establish itself as a competent musical organisation.
At this time the band was known as 'Harton and Westoe Colliery Band', a title adopted when both collieries
merged in 1958. However, in 1985, as part of this new beginning, the band adopted the shorter name of
'Westoe Colliery Band'(Harton Colliery had closed in 1968 after 125 years of operation). A new uniform was
purchased and steady progress continued until the surprise announcement was made of the closure of
Westoe Colliery in 1993.
The band was faced with the task of finding new rehearsal facilities and financial support. Thankfully, after
very cordial negotiations, both of these are now provided by South Tyneside Health Care Trust with whom
the band maintains a 'healthy' relationship. In return, the band performs for hospital events including fetes,
fashion shows, church services and patient welfare, and is a popular musical combination within the local community.
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