Trimdon Labour Club

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Former namesTrimdon Working Men's Club
StatusClosed
TypeConstituency Labour Club
Location22 Front Street South
Trimdon
County Durham
TS29 6LZ[1]
Trimdon Labour Club
Trimdon Labour Club is located in County Durham
Trimdon Labour Club
Trimdon Labour Club
Location within County Durham
Former namesTrimdon Working Men's Club
General information
StatusClosed
TypeConstituency Labour Club
Location22 Front Street South
Trimdon
County Durham
TS29 6LZ[1]
Coordinates54°42′05″N 1°25′47″W / 54.7015°N 1.4296°W / 54.7015; -1.4296
Opened1993
Closed2010

Trimdon Labour Club was a bar and local branch of Sedgefield Labour Party in the village of Trimdon, County Durham in England. It opened in 1993, as a conversion of a former working men's club.[2] It was the local Labour Club of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who lived in nearby Trimdon Colliery.

The village green in Trimdon; the Labour Club is nearby

Trimdon Labour Club opened in its former state as a working men's club in 1919, serving beer to mineworkers from a barrel in a farmer's cottage.[3] It fell into disrepair in the 1980s, before the local Constituency Labour Party took on the running of the club.[2]

It was opened in its repurposed state in 1993 by former Labour Leader Neil Kinnock, with the help of a £350 loan from Sedgefield Labour Party.[4] A year later, in 1994, then-Shadow Home Secretary and MP for Sedgefield Tony Blair announced that he would stand to be Leader of the Labour Party. He succeeded, replacing John Smith, who had died suddenly of a heart attack.[5]

Rise to fame

Demise

References

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