Dorothy Forster (1686-1767)
She
became the Northumbrian heroine of the 'Fifteen when, with the help
of a blacksmith friend, she cleverly engineered her brother Tom's escape
from Newgate. The story, which has become entrenched in Northumbrian
folklore, tells of her courageous journey to London through snow and
ice, riding pillion with the blacksmith from Adderstone, near Bamburgh.
After Tom's escape, and in order to outwit the authorities, she pretended
that her brother had died abroad and organised that a coffin filled
with sawdust should be placed in the Forster Vault at Bamburgh. 'The
Lord Crewe Arms' in Blanchland is a property traditionally associated
with Dorothy and her brother Tom. In Jacobite times this house belonged
to their aunt, Lady Dorothy Crewe, the wife of Lord Nathaniel Crewe,
Bishop of Durham.

Lord Crewe Arms in Blanchland