Wearside stories you may have missed this week
- Published
Forty years ago, Sunderland band Toy Dolls took a quirky children's song, Nellie the Elephant, and transformed it into a punk rock anthem.
The track's story is about far more than just a catchy tune though, for it was a contender to be Christmas number one in 1984.
Originally written in the 1950s, Nellie the Elephant had long been a well-loved children's song.
When Toy Dolls dropped their punk-infused cover, however, it became a sensation, selling more than 530,000 copies and reaching number four in the charts.
Nellie the Elephant really did pack a festive punch that year!
Soup kitchen 'overwhelmed' by appeal response
The boss of a soup kitchen which had been struggling for funds said she had been "overwhelmed" by the response to its Christmas appeal.
Sunderland Community Soup Kitchen set a target of £10,000 to provide Christmas dinner and gifts to the city's homeless.
The target was reached in four days and the charity is now hoping the final total will exceed £20,000.
CEO and founder Andrea Bell said: "It's just been so lovely this Christmas, I am so grateful to the people of Sunderland."
Prison has mould and 'mushrooms' growing on walls
A whistleblower has revealed officers working at a prison housing some of Britain's most notorious offenders are dealing with damp, mould and crumbling ceilings.
Photographs taken inside HMP Frankland, near Durham, and seen by the BBC show problems throughout the jail where inmates include Soham murderer Ian Huntley and serial killer Levi Bellfield.
Responding to the images, Phil Hannant, who sits on the Prison Officers Association's National Executive Committee, said "infrastructures are failing".
The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said it was trying to improve conditions by investing £220m in prison and probation service maintenance in the current financial year, and up to £300m in 2025-26.
Ex-miner lights cathedral's Christmas tree
A former miner lit a cathedral's Christmas tree to mark the 40th anniversary of the 1984 strike.
Durham Cathedral's 17ft (5m) tree was illuminated by Jackie McCowliff during the annual Lighting of the Tree and Blessing of the Crib.
He hung a miner's safety lamp on the tree, assisted by 16-year-old Sally Lockey from the Durham Miners' Association Band.
The Reverend Canon Michael Hampel, precentor at the cathedral, said the anniversary allowed people to remember "the hurt of the past and the need to believe that the light of hope comes into our lives even at the darkest times".
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