[Curated by Jeff Singleton for the C&DHI ‘Legends & Folklore’ Exhibition held on 16 April at The Lodge in Blackhill & Consett Park.]
The “Wolf of Allendale” terrorised the area in 1904-1905, killing livestock and evading capture despite numerous hunts and a reward. The wolf’s identity remains a mystery, with one theory about a zoo escapee from Shotley Bridge.

In the winter of 1904 the local newspapers lead with the story “The Wolf of Allendale”. From November 1904 until January 1905 the area around Allendale was gripped with the killing and mutilation of livestock sending the farming community into a fury. Farmers housed all their livestock each night and set up guards, but still the killing went on and over 40 sheep were lost.
The main suspect at the time was a grey wolf which had escaped from Shotley Bridge Zoo, just 3 months earlier. Captain Bain the owner of the Zoo denied it could be his wolf as in his words “it was of no harm to man or beast”, but then what other wolf could it have been?

The Wolf evaded capture on numerous occasions. The first time it avoided a hunting party of over 150 people and later a heavily armed hunt of over 200. It seemed as though nothing could be done. Numerous sightings were made, some stating the beast was Black and Tan some saying Grey and some even saying Dun. With so many variations people began to wonder if there was a family of wolves roaming the area.
A committee was set up and a reward posted for the death or capture but no one was able to track the wolf. Even some famous hound dogs renowned for their tracking skills could not find a trail. Undeterred, the committee finally hired Mr W Biddick, a well known Indian game hunter, who stated that he would find the beast using new scientific lines. Once again even Mr Biddick was unable to track or even come close to finding the animal. The wolf went on to be sighted numerous times but stayed elusive to capture.
In early January 1905 the body of a wolf was found on the railway tracks at Cumwinton in Cumbria, some 30 miles west of Hexham. Captain Bain rushed to the scene, only to profess the beast far too mature to be the cub he had lost, being only four and a half months old and not much of a danger to men or livestock.
Also, a later article in the Hexham Courant stated that the Wolf Committee did not believe this animal to be the Allendale wolf and as far as they were concerned the beast was still at large. By the end of 1905 all reports stopped and the Wolf took its place in local history and folklore.
Shotley Bridge Zoo
In January 1904 approval was given to turn a large house and gardens into a Zoo at Shotley Bridge on behalf of the Consett Iron Company who had an Ironworks in the area. The establishment was opened in April 1905 by an animal dealer named Charles (Chas) Harris.

Reports at the time stated that the Zoo was on 10 acres of land purchased by Mr Harris from Richard Murray JP. The Zoo was conveniently situated next to the Shotley Bridge Railway Station and consisted of of both stuffed and preserved animals as well as an alive animal collection of Goldfish, Pythons, French Frogs, Turtles, Tortoises, Birds, a Baboon, African and Indian Wild Cats, Civets, Mongoose, Deer, Camel, Jackals, Agoutis, Wallabies, Wolf, Wild Boar, Bear and Tropical Birds.
On the day of opening 10,000 people visited with the price of admission 6d and by June 1905 the visitor numbers were up to nearly 12,000 per day.

In October 1904 [when one of his captive Wolves escaped] it was reported that a Captain William Bain was the owner of the Zoo, although adverts for it clearly state that Mr Harris was the Proprietor.
Captain Bain passed away in 1907, aged just 28, and by the end of 1908 the Zoo was no longer viable. It may be that Captain Bain was in fact the owner of the Zoo and upon his death the Zoo “failed”. In March 1909 permission was approved to convert the site back to housing.
The Zoo at Shotley Bridge was only short lived, maybe due to this very incident with the Wolf.
[Shotley Bridge Railway Station closed in 1953]
Additional information from Wikipedia
The Hexham wolf (also called the Allendale wolf or the Wolf of Allendale) was a grey wolf that escaped from a zoo and killed livestock in Hexham and Allendale, Northumberland during the winter of 1904. Conflicting reports label it as being either “black and tan” or “dun”, although it was largely reported as being large and male.
On 10 December 1904, the Hexham Courant ran a story with the title “Wolf at Large in Allendale”, reporting that over the past two to three weeks livestock loss in Hexham and Allendale had become so severe that some farmers were now housing animals in the night. Though it was suspected that the livestock killer was an escaped wolf belonging to Captain Bain of Shotley Bridge, that wolf was too young to pose a threat, and a much larger wolf was spotted by Allenheads school. On 9 December 1904, a grey wolf that had just committed a “great slaughter of a flock of sheep” was tracked for miles but escaped; the next day, he returned to his kill, and a new search party went out to no avail.
The public of Northumberland began, then, to get anxious; sheep were kept inside at night and lights were lit all night; rewards were offered to whoever could kill the wolf. A large meeting of farmers from the area was held on 20 December, chaired by the local MP Maj. Wentworth Henry Canning Beaumont and £5 reward was offered for the wolf’s skin. Subsequently, the Hexham Wolf Committee was set up to help find the wolf. On 29 December 1904, some platelayers found the carcass of an animal cut in two by a passing train and thrown a distance of 40 yards. They buried the animal, but later after discussing it with the Stationmaster at Cumwhinton, dug it up again and bought it back to the station where a member of the Hexham Wolf Committee identified it as a full-grown grey male wolf. Captain Bain declared the wolf too old to be his and it was proclaimed on 7 January 1905 that the wolf found was not the Hexham wolf, who was still at large.By the end of January 1905, interest was waning in stories of the Hexham wolf, newspapers pushing it further back until it disappeared altogether.
In 2014 the Allen Valleys Folk Festival was started and this features the burning of a wooden sculpture of the “Allendale Wolf”.One year the wolf gained Dalek features after a campaign to support the museum of Classic Sci-Fi, who were being threatened by the planning authorities.










