County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company Limited

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County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company Limited
Company typePublic company
IndustryElectricity generation and supply
Founded1900
Defunct1933
FateTake over
SuccessorNewcastle-upon-Tyne Electric Supply Company
ServicesElectricity

The County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company Limited supplied electricity to users in the County of Durham in northeast England. Supplies were provided from 1901 until the company was absorbed into the Newcastle-upon-Tyne Electrical Supply Company in 1932.

See below for County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company.

History[edit]

The County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company Limited was registered on 19 April 1899. It obtained legal powers for the supply of electricity on the south of the River Tyne, which included engineering works and collieries.[1] Electricity was bought in bulk from the County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company. It was distributed from about 24 substations throughout the supply area. The total connections, units sold and profits were:

County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company operations[1][2]
Year Connections, Horse-Power Electricity sold actual, MWh Electricity sold projected, MWh Profit
1901 568.2
1902 25,26.3
1903 3,630.8
1904 4,437.6
1905 6,500 £14,200
1906 13,200 13,000 £26,000
1907 20,757 20,000 £45,500
1908 29,366 37,000 £57,500
1909 35,024
1910 39,070
1911 43,525
1912 54,525


In 1915 electric current was supplied at:[3]

  • 3-phase, AC, 40Hz, 5,750 & 2,750 V
  • 3-phase, AC, 40Hz, 440 & 240 V
  • DC, 480 & 240 V

Directors[edit]

Until 1905 the Distribution company was run from London by the British Electric Traction Company. In 1905 the board of directors was reconstituted under local management.[2] This had been facilitated by the financial difficulties of Emile Garcke’s company.[4] The Newcastle-upon-Tyne Electric Supply Company (NESCo) purchased the Distribution Company and County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company. The companies were physically connected through cables running across the High Level Bridge across the Tyne.[4]

The directors in 1905 were:[2]

The Distribution Company offered shares on the stock market, such as £500,000 in 1905.[2]

The board in 1915 comprised:[1]

  • John Theodore Merz (chair)
  • John Hobart Armstrong
  • Sir Lindsay Wood
  • William Leonard Madgen
  • Robert Patrick Sloan

The company was dissolved in 1933 under the provisions of the North-Eastern Electric Supply Act 1932 (22 & 23 Geo. 5, c. xxxii).[5]

County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company[edit]

County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company
Company typePublic ccompany
IndustryElectricity generation and supply
Founded1900
Defunct1933
FateTake over
SuccessorNESCo
ProductsElectricity

The County of Durham Electric Power Supply Company was incorporated in 1900. Supply of electricity commenced in December 1901 to an area of 250 square miles. Current was bought in bulk from NESCo and other undertakings and was supplied to the County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company Limited.[1]

Directors[edit]

The board, in 1915, comprised:[1]

  • John Hobart Armstrong (chair)
  • John Theodore Merz
  • Sir Lindsay Wood
  • William Leonard Madgen
  • Robert Patrick Sloan

The company was dissolved in 1933 under the provisions of the North-Eastern Electric Supply Act 1932 (22 & 23 Geo. 5, c. xxxii).[5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Garcke, Emile (1915). Manual of Electrical undertakings, 1914-15 Vol 18. London: Electrical Press Limited. pp. 340–343.
  2. ^ a b c d "County of Durham Electrical Power Distribution Company Limited". The Times. 7 April 1905. p. 13.
  3. ^ Electricity Commission (1925). Electricity Supply 1920-22. London: HMSO. pp. E156-59, F388-93.
  4. ^ a b Hannah, Leslie (1979). Electricity before nationalisation. London: Macmillan. pp. 31–2. ISBN 0333220862.
  5. ^ a b "North-Eastern Electric Supply Act 1932" (PDF).