Toft Hill, County Durham

  • Etherley
Unitary authority
  • County Durham
Ceremonial county
  • County Durham
Region
  • North East
CountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townBISHOP AUCKLANDPostcode districtDL14Dialling code01388PoliceDurhamFireCounty Durham and DarlingtonAmbulanceNorth East UK Parliament
  • Bishop Auckland
List of places
UK
England
County Durham
54°38′56″N 1°45′11″W / 54.649°N 1.753°W / 54.649; -1.753

Toft Hill is a hilltop village in County Durham, in England straggling along the A68, a few miles to the west of Bishop Auckland and adjoining the village of High Etherley. An ancient site of defensive settlement and used by the Romans, the name of Toft Hill is possibly of Norse or Angle derivation and means "Hill Hill".

The village is underlaid by coal measures and saw expansion in the 19th century mining boom under the coal-owning Stobart family. The various drifts of their Carterthorne Colliery formed large extended galleries beneath the village. In recent years much of the village's archaeology has been swept away by open cast mining.

In 2023, Durham County Council began surveys for a new A68 bypass to reroute traffic around Toft Hill, to reduce the number of large vehicles passing through the village.[1]

References

  1. ^ Edgar, Bill (12 May 2023). "Durham Council begins surveys for A68 bypass at Toft Hill". Northern Echo. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via ProQuest.


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