Evenwood
Evenwood is a village in County Durham, in England. It is situated to the south west of Bishop Auckland. It is in the civil parish of Evenwood and Barony, which has a population of 2,534[1] falling to 2,455 at the 2011 Census.[2] A former coal mining village, the major pit, Randolph Colliery with its associated coke ovens, was worked between 1893 and 1962, and at its peak in 1914 employed over 1000 men.[3] Etymology and nameThe name Evenwood is of Old English origin. The first element in the name is efen ("even, level") + wudu ("a wood"); equivalent to modern English even + wood and meaning "level woods".[4] As a namesakeEvenwood is the namesake of Evenwood in West Virginia - the only settlement so-named in the United States - the parents of that community's founders, lumbermen John and Thomas Raine, having emigrated to the US from the County Durham village in 1849.[5][6] GovernanceAn electoral ward in the name of Evenwood exists. This ward stretches west to Woodland with a total population of 8,114.[7] References
External linksMedia related to Evenwood at Wikimedia Commons
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