Once an industrial workplace with collieries and an ironworks, it is now a commuting village for
Newcastle upon Tyne and
Hexham, served by the
Tyne Valley line. The earliest reference to Wylam is in a record of 1158 that records that the settlement belonged to the priory at
Tynemouth. It is thought that
Guy de Balliol, Lord of Bywell, gave Wylam to the priory in 1085. The priors of Tynemouth held lands in the village until the
dissolution of the monasteries in the 16th century. The
Blackett family have had a long association with the village. In 1659 Christopher Blackett acquired the Lordship of the Manor of Wylam on the death of his wife's father, Thomas Fenwick. Following Christopher's death, his second son, John Blackett, took over the estate and purchased additional land in the area, including two farms at Wylam bought in 1685. These farms formed a modest estate and residence for the Blackett family until the third quarter of the 20th century. The Lordship also included mineral rights within the township. This allowed the family to develop the colliery and further increase their prosperity. An article in the
Newcastle Courant of 17 January 1874 entitled "Our Colliery Villages" paints an unattractive image of the village – 'Wylam is the very worst colliery village that we have yet beheld ...'. The colliery has an important place in the history of the development of the locomotive. It is thought that the Wylam waggonway was opened in 1748 and was therefore one of the earliest waggonways in the
North of England. The waggonway linked the colliery to the
staiths at Lemington from where the coal was taken down the
River Tyne on flat bottomed boats called
keels to be loaded on the large coal ships further down the river. Several famous engineers have had links with the village.
George Stephenson was born at a small cottage at Wylam in June 1781.
Timothy Hackworth's father was foreman blacksmith at the colliery and his son was born in the village in December 1786. Hackworth together with
William Hedley and Jonathan Forster were involved in the development of the locomotive engine at the colliery. Perhaps the most famous of the engines to be developed was the
Puffing Billy, which is now housed at
The Science Museum in London, followed closely by
Wylam Dilly which is on display at the
National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. Wylam Railway Museum has lots more information on the village's unique place in railway history and is co-located with Wylam Library and has the same opening hours. The late 18th century was a period of prosperity for the village – the
colliery was thriving and an ironworks, a leadshot manufactury and a brewery were all established in the village. In 1864 the ironworks closed. Four years later the colliery was closed. The brewery ceased to operate sometime in the 1870s. This decline in the industry led to a change in the character of the village. By the 20th century the village was almost entirely a residential settlement. Wylam has approximately 800 households, with a population of 2,100. == Governance ==