UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot

M57 northbound within J2 | Northbound | Road Works

29 August 2025

England squad announcement LIVE: Trent Alexander-Arnold to be DROPPED by Thomas Tuchel, who gives surprise first-ever call-up to midfielder

29 August 2025

Man who killed stranger with ‘tree branch’ jailed for murder | Manchester News

29 August 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » Northumberland farms finally get electricity after 50 years | UK News
News

Northumberland farms finally get electricity after 50 years | UK News

By uk-times.com29 August 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Jo LonsdaleNorth East and Cumbria Investigations

 Shona and Scott Anderson stand next to their son T-jay Anderson. He is about 16 and wearing a blue top with short dark hair. She has ash blonde hair and has a blue flowery top on, Scott is wearing a cap, has a grey top and is about 40. Behind there is a stone wall and a Victorian house

Four generations of the Anderson family have farmed in the Upper Coquet valley without mains electricity

Half a century ago, people living in one of the most remote areas of England made a plea to be connected to mains electricity. Now, at last, some of the current hardy residents can experience joys such as hair straighteners on demand and not having to plan cups of tea.

The farms and cottages of the Upper Coquet valley in Northumberland have always been off grid, reliant on noisy expensive generators.

From a window of one of those farmhouses, Shona Anderson looks out on to a view generations of families in the area thought might never exist.

A row of newly erected electricity poles.

“I was at work and Scott my husband rang and said ‘it’s live, we’re on mains power’ and I hardly dared believe it,” Shona says.

“I keep flicking the lights on and off and thinking ‘that’s mains power’.”

A row of electricity poles stretch across a green valley with a river cutting through the centre of the image

The new line is carried by poles for 7.5 miles (12km) with three miles (4.7km) underground.

Four generations of the Anderson family have lived in the valley, but in recent times Shona, Scott and their three sons have rented a house elsewhere, with Scott returning each day to work on the farm.

There were structural problems with the farmhouse, but they also got tired of a generator that “often broke down”.

“We would sometimes book a caravan somewhere when that happened,” Shona says, “just to have power”.

A road cuts through a valley which is covered with ferns and with a grey sky overhead. The road is very narrow, with signs of patchy repairs done at different times. No person can be seen even though the view stretches way into the distance.

Northumberland National Park Authority initially wanted all the line to be buried to preserve the landscape

“It was like living in the olden days,” her son T-jay adds.

“Having to go out in the dark every time the generator conked out.”

Mains electricity means they are back in the house Scott’s grandmother was born in and he has a legacy to cement.

“I want to build the farm up and see future generations here,” Scott says.

“T-jay wants to take it on and mains power will make life easier for him and those after him.”

Shona Anderson A pole is being put up by a truck with a long extendible arm which is holding it in place. In the distance there is a farm and a telecommunications mast, while desolate hills poke up in the distance.Shona Anderson

The Home Office and Ministry of Defence funded the connection, prompted by the need to power communication masts

The valley missed out on the electrification programmes of the 20th Century.

For many years, the community of fewer than 50 people dotted along a single track road winding into the Cheviot Hills was told a connection would be too expensive.

But when the government decided an electricity supply was needed to three emergency telecommunication masts in the valley, an opportunity arose to connect many of the properties too.

Funds for the project were then found by the Home Office and Ministry of Defence (MoD) which owns the land.

Jaycee Charlton and Katherine Singer who are both in their late 30s are sitting at a farmhouse kitchen table drinking cups of tea and smiling. Katherine has blonde shoulder-length hair and a blue Under Armour top. Jaycee, who has glasses and dark hair, is wearing a white top

Jaycee Charlton and Katherine Singer can now put the kettle on at the same time

The valley is within the Northumberland National Park and its planning authority initially wanted all the lines buried.

A compromise was agreed which saw the construction of nine miles (15km) of overhead line and three miles (4.7km) go underground.

Among the homes connected so far are two that were formerly served by a single generator.

The shared source meant neighbours Jaycee Charlton and Katherine Singer could never boil the kettle at the same time because it would plunge them both into darkness.

“It’s happened” they confirm as they watch an engineer switch their energy supply from the generator to mains.

“Hair straighteners, I wouldn’t dare put them on if the kettle was on too,” says Jaycee.

And now? “You’re not going to have to think so much about all that sort of thing.”

Katherine, meanwhile, is looking forward to being able to go out without worrying about the power going off in their absence.

“It’s a real opportunity to diversify the farm too,” she adds.

An engineer wearing a hi-vis jacket is working next to an electricity meter with a green generator behind him

Most of the farms will keep their generators in case of power cuts

The work was carried out by Northern Powergrid, with the company saying the project posed “unique challenges” and that it had been a “technically complex scheme.”

It said it had given special consideration to the “unique landscape of Upper Coquetdale”, with cables running below ground “wherever possible to preserve the area’s natural beauty and reduce visual impact”.

Harry and Megan Byatt are standing with a child outside a modern, two-storey stone farmhouse next to a single track road. Behind them the Cheviot hills and the house are bathed in late evening sunshine

Harry and Megan Byatt live in one of a handful of properties still not getting mains electricity

Some in the valley have not got rid of the loud chugging of the generator quite yet.

Harry and Megan’s Byatt’s farm was one that was judged too remote and there remain hundreds of other homes in Northumberland still off grid.

“We know we’re the lucky ones, says Katherine.

“But we’re just so grateful to everyone who has worked so hard to make this happen.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

M57 northbound within J2 | Northbound | Road Works

29 August 2025

Man who killed stranger with ‘tree branch’ jailed for murder | Manchester News

29 August 2025

Obama warns ‘all Americans are at risk’ after Trump after threatens to clamp down on his hometown Chicago – UK Times

29 August 2025

A11 northbound between A1307 and A1304 | Northbound | Congestion

29 August 2025

Vincent Kompany laments Premier League’s wealth as Newcastle pip Bayern to Nick Woltemade – UK Times

29 August 2025

A64 westbound between B1248 near Norton-on-Derwent (west) and A1237 near York (north) | Westbound | Congestion

29 August 2025
Top News

M57 northbound within J2 | Northbound | Road Works

29 August 2025

England squad announcement LIVE: Trent Alexander-Arnold to be DROPPED by Thomas Tuchel, who gives surprise first-ever call-up to midfielder

29 August 2025

Man who killed stranger with ‘tree branch’ jailed for murder | Manchester News

29 August 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2025 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version