Warden Law is a rural civil parish in the Sunderland district of Tyne and Wear, England. Its small settlements are mostly along the B1404 road between Houghton-le-Spring and Seaham, about east of the centre of Houghton and south-west of Sunderland city centre.
The area has several prehistoric burial sites and other neolithic groundworks and remains, largely destroyed by ploughing. The hill at Wrdlau is mentioned in one account of the 10th-century journey of St Cuthbert's shrine which led to the establishment of Durham Cathedral.
The parish had a population of 33 at the 2001 census. Office for National Statistics : Census 2001 : Parish Headcounts : Sunderland Retrieved 2009-09-16 At more recent censuses the population remained less than 100 and therefore details were included in the civil parish of Hetton-le-Hole. In 1872, the population was 73 and Warden-Law was described as a township in Houghton-le-Spring parish, Durham.
It is home to a karting track called Karting North East.
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