scrap car for money

Call now

0300 1000 277


To Scrap Your Car,
Complete This Form.

Your subscribe request has been sent!

Scrap a car for cash in Stockton on Tees, sell your car for scrapping in Stockton on Tees

We can scrap your car legally in Stockton on Tees, free collection and disposal, scrap a car and get cash today!

Stockton began as a small village belonging to the Bishop of Durham. Sometime in the 13th century (the exact date is not known) the Bishop made the village of Stockton into a borough. In the Middle Ages most peasants were serfs, halfway between slaves and free men. The Bishop freed the serfs of Stockton and craftsmen came to live in the new town. The Bishop had a residence in Stockton called the Castle (although it was really a fortified manor house). From 1310 Stockton had a market. (In those days there were very few shops and if you wished to buy or sell anything you had to go to a market). Stockton grew into a busy little port exporting wool and importing wine (the drink of the upper class). However even by the standards of the time Medieval Stockton on Tees was a small town with a population of only around 1,000. Stockton did not grow any larger in the 16th century.

In 1642 came civil war and in 1644-46 Stockton was occupied by the Scottish army. After the civil war the Bishops Castle was destroyed by parliamentarians to prevent it ever falling into royalist hands. However in the late 17th century Stockton on Tees began to flourish. There had been a shipbuilding industry in Stockton since the 15th century and in the late 17th century and the 18th century the industry prospered. There was also a sail making industry and a rope making industry. Another industry in 18th century Stockton was brick making. The port of Stockton also flourished. However much of the trade was coastal. In those days it was much cheaper to transport goods by water than by road and so many goods were taken by ship along the coast of England from one port to another. Goods imported into Stockton included wine and raisins, coal, glass and household goods. Goods exported included wool, butter, bacon and lead. In the early 18th century the writer Daniel Defoe said that Stockton on Tees had greatly increased in size lately. It probably had a population of about 2,000. Another writer said that ‘Stockton was a few years ago all thatched houses, now of brick with sash windows. It has a spacious, paved High Street, very clean.’

The Town House was built in 1735. About 1760 another writer described Stockton: (I have changed his words slightly to make them easier to read) Stockton is finely situated and most beautifully laid out. The principal street is about 50 yards broad with a town house and market in the middle of it and it is a quarter of a mile long. Two streets are parallel with it from the east for about two hundred yards and there are three or four streets, which lead from it to the quays. Beyond the church (handsome and well built) is a bowling green with buildings on three sides of it.’ Yet another writer described Stockton on Tees as ‘a neat, well built market town with a considerable trade.’ The first theatre in Stockton opened in 1766 and the first stone bridge across the Tees was built in 1769. Then from the end of the 18th century the industrial revolution changed Stockton from a small and quiet market town into a flourishing centre of heavy industry. From the late 18th century there was an iron working industry in Stockton. In the 19th century it boomed. Shipbuilding also prospered. A large engineering industry also grew up in the town. Stockton grew rapidly. By 1851 it had a population of 10,000 and by 1900 of 51,000. Industry in Stockton on Tees was greatly boosted when the Stockton and Darlington railway opened in 1825. It made it easier to bring coal to factories in Stockton. However the port declined as business now moved down river to Middlesbrough. Like all 19th century cities Stockton was unhealthy. In 1832 there was an outbreak of cholera and 126 people died. Another outbreak in 1849 killed 20 people.

However conditions in Stockton improved during the 19th century. In 1820 an Act set up a body of men called Commissioners with responsibility for lighting and cleaning the streets. From 1822 Stockton-on-Tees was lit by gas. Preston Hall was built in 1825. Furthermore a hospital opened in Stockton in 1862. A public library opened in 1877. Steam trams began running in the streets of Stockton on Tees in 1881. In 1897 electric trams replaced them. Ropner Park opened in 1883. Victoria Bridge was built in 1883. In the 1920s and 1930s the first slum clearance took place in Stockton and the first council houses were built. The trams were replaced by buses in 1931. In the early and mid 20th century Stockton on Tees was still dominated by the engineering industry. From the 1920s there was also a chemicals industry in the town. However in the late 20th century manufacturing industry contracted severely. Fortunately the service industries grew and today they are the main employers. Preston Hall Museum started in 1953. Much of Stockton town centre was rebuilt in the 1960s. The Green Dragon Museum opened as an art gallery in 1968. It was converted later. Castlegate Shopping Centre opened in 1973. The University of Teeside was formed in 1992. The Open Technology Centre opened in 1998. Princess of Wales Bridge was built in 1992. Tees Barrage opened in 1995. Today the population of Stockton on Tees is 178,000.

How A Car Is Scrapped

We will collect the scrap car from Stockton on Tees or the surrounding area and dispose of it through our nationwide network of 23 fully licensed Authorised Treatment Facility (ATF) Sites who will scrap your car in line with End of Life (ELV) Legislation, and provide you with a Certificate of Destruction which we file online with the DVLA. So you can rest assured your car has been scrapped legally.

For a hassle free fast way to scrap your car in Stockton on Tees please complete the fields in the form to the right and we will provide an instant online scrap car price with the choice to accept and arrange scrapping or decline our scrap car offer.

Should you have any queries, then please contact a member of our team on 03001000277 to discuss your scrap car collection and what cash payment you will receive, or alternatively contact us and let us know your scrap a car for cash query.

Raw2K ATF sites utilise the advised environmental disposal methods/process as per ELV/ATF Guidelines and legislation.

Raw2Ks operations are focused upon lowering our waste and increasing recycling, therefore providing us with a controlled and reduced sustainability impact wherever possible. A scrap car is much greener than an abandoned car and the owner is paid cash for scrapping their car.

Scrap Metal Dealers Act 2013 Important Information


Get the best price
in an instant

Best Price Paid For Your Scrap Car

Using our online quote form you can find out the best price paid for scrapping your car in an instant.

Free nationwide car
collection service

Convenient car pickup service

We have a network of collection partners throughout the UK waiting to collect your car at a time that's convenient for you.

Responsible
car recycling

Plus you're helping charitable initiatives

All our vehicles are scapped in Authorised Treatment Facilities (ATF's) and proceeds go towards helping vulnerable and marginalised people.

All official
paperwork sorted

Hassle free car scrapping

We complete all the necessary paperwork on your behalf and provide you with an official Certificate of Destruction (COD) required by law.

Car scrapping
near you

Scrap your car locally

With a network of Authorised Treatment Facilities (ATF's) and collection partners throughout the UK, you can be sure we offer a car scrapping service local to you.

Our customers
love us!

Friendly Service

We price ourselves on the level of service we offer to our customers, making sure the entire process is convenient and hassle free.

Our customers love us

The best scrap car service

"Thankyou so much for the care and speed that you gave me for scrapping my car. I'd had her a long time and was sad to see her go, but the guy who removed the car was so professional about it, it was easier than I thought. I would definitely recommend you to anybody in the future." Les & Jackie Eales