A notable landmark in the town is the reconstructed Roman fort and excavations of the ancient
Arbeia Roman
Castra; this form part of the
Hadrian's Wall World Heritage Site. South Shields is also home of the oldest provincial newspaper in the UK, the
Shields Gazette. The town's museum & art gallery, includes a permanent exhibition dedicated to the life and times of Catherine Cookson. From 1985 to 2009, the area marketed itself as
Catherine Cookson Country, which attracted many visitors. There are several trade-related landmarks, including the headquarters, warehouse and factory of the fashion company
Barbour; the
Customs House theatre and arts venue; and the historic Mill Dam riverside. The town hosts traditional, continental and farmers' markets and has high street of shops. Geographical landmarks include The Leas cliff tops and Haven Point as well as the bays of Littlehaven, Sandhaven and
Marsden. Notable buildings in and around the town include: •
St Hilda's Church, thought to be built on the site of
Hilda's seventh-century chapel • The combined Jubilee Clocktower and
Wouldhave Memorial, which stands on Pier Parade alongside "Tyne", Britain's second-oldest preserved lifeboat. • The
National Trust-owned
Souter Lighthouse.
Lighthouses and pier Work on the North and South Tyne Piers was begun in 1854 by the newly formed
Tyne Improvement Commission, for the protection of shipping entering and leaving the river. The principal architect and engineer was
James Walker, until his death in 1862 (whereupon John F. Ure took over). Construction was delayed by storm damage in 1862, which led to parts of the foundations having to be rebuilt. The South Pier was finished in 1895 and its lighthouse was operational that same year (it was equipped with a
third-order fixed optic and a clockwork
occulting mechanism, by
Chance Brothers & Co.). The lighthouse currently displays an occulting
sector light with white, red and green sectors; the green sector is used to indicate safe waters near the coast to the north of Tynemouth, while red indicates an area with numerous wrecks to the east and south of the lighthouse. The pier is long (accessible from South Shields seafront, it is open to the public except in bad weather). It was originally intended that the North (
Tynemouth) Pier and lighthouse would mirror their South Shields counterparts, but a series of breaches and collapses meant that the North Pier was completed much later and to a different design. Following completion of the North Pier, in January 1908 the South Pier Lighthouse was provided with a bell, which sounded once every thirty seconds during foggy weather (in contrast to the
reed fog horn sounded from the North Pier light). On 20 October 2023,
Storm Babet hit the North East Coast with high winds. The pier parapet was also severely damaged. Twelve months later a new dome and lantern were installed on the lighthouse. There is a third lighthouse, just upstream of the pier, on the Herd
Groyne at South Shields (which was constructed in 1861–67 to preserve Littlehaven Beach, then known as Herd Sands, which had begun to be washed away by the change of currents caused by the new piers). This very unusual lighthouse resembling a 1940s sci-fi movie space craft was built by
Newcastle-upon-Tyne Trinity House in 1882 (ownership was passed to the
Tyne Improvement Commission the following year). It consists of an upper hexagonal part (including the lantern) of wood and corrugated iron construction, sitting on twelve cylindrical steel legs. The whole structure is painted red and stands in height. The Groyne shows an occulting light which marks a safe entrance course between the piers, showing white to a vessel approaching from seaward on the correct course, green to a vessel off-course to the north, and red to one off-course to the south. In 1961 the Commissioners installed a groundbreaking system by which the two fog bells would be switched on and off by the
keepers on duty in the Tynemouth Pier lighthouse, using an '
infra-red ray' beamed across the river. This was in turn replaced by a radio link to an automatic fog detector when the latter lighthouse was automated in 1967. At the same time the South Shields lights were themselves fully automated, with the addition of standby
diesel alternators and
automatic lamp changers. In 1999, the white sector of the light was intensified by the addition of a
PEL sector light above the optic, with the same occulting characteristic but a range of 19 nautical miles (rather than 13, as previously). The installation of this powerful light (which is visible during the day as well as by night), rendered the
High and Low Lights of North Shields redundant, and they were therefore decommissioned at the same time. The Herd Groyne lighthouse was refurbished and repainted in 2014, and again (with support from the
Barbour Foundation) in 2024. Both lighthouses continue to act as navigational aids to ships entering the River Tyne, though in 2015 it was stated that the fog bells on the two lighthouses were no longer operational.
Port of Tyne (as successor to the Tyne Improvement Commission) has been 'custodian' of the lighthouses and pier since 1968.
Town halls A prominent landmark is
South Shields Town Hall, built 1905–1910, a sumptuous building "the most convincing expression in the county of Edwardian prosperity". The architect was E. E. Fetch of London. Ornamentation includes several references to the town's nautical heritage: Britannia and other sculpted figures in the pediment above the front entrance, a figure of Mercury atop a globe on the dome of the Council chamber, fountains and nymph lampholders in the forecourt alongside a statue of Queen Victoria. The 145-foot clock tower contains a
Potts chiming clock and five bells, and is topped by a weathervane in the shape of a
galleon. The Old Town Hall, a square building of 1768, provides the centrepiece of the Market Place and closes the vista along King Street. The ground floor is open with arches on each side (and a central pillar which predates the rest of the structure); the enclosed first floor has pitched roof, topped by a wooden bell turret. Originally built and used by the Dean and Chapter of
Durham, it was sold by them to the town Corporation in 1855. ==Education==