fbpx
Wikipedia

Gowbarrow Fell

Gowbarrow Fell (Windy hill) is a low fell in the English Lake District. It is an outlier of the Eastern Fells, standing to the north of Ullswater, bounded on one side by Aira Beck with its waterfall Aira Force. The waterfall is a popular attraction for visitors to the area.

Gowbarrow Fell
Gowbarrow Fell, seen from the summit of Hallin Fell, on the other side of Ullswater
Highest point
Elevation481 m (1,578 ft)
Prominence100 m (330 ft)
Parent peakLittle Mell Fell
ListingWainwright
Coordinates54°35′20″N 2°55′03″W / 54.58881°N 2.91761°W / 54.58881; -2.91761
Naming
English translationWindy hill
Language of nameOld Norse
Geography
Gowbarrow Fell
Location in Lake District, UK
LocationCumbria, England
Parent rangeLake District, Eastern Fells
OS gridNY408219
Topo mapOSExplorer OL5, Landranger 90

In previous centuries the fell was part of a medieval hunting-park, Gowbarrow Park, which belonged to the lords of Greystoke. The fell, along with 750 acres of the park, were bought by the National Trust in 1906.

Topography edit

The fell is a wedge-shaped piece of high ground,[1] about 2 km by 1.5 km in extent. The highest parts are on a short ridge which extends from Norman Crag in the north-west corner (above Thorneythwaite Farm), over Airy Crag, the actual summit (481 m), several other knolls, Green Hill (437 m) and down to Yew Crag in the south-east corner.

A north-east trending ridge parallel to Ullswater continues the high ground over the subsidiary tops of Great Meldrum (437 m), Little Meldrum (404 m) and Watermillock Fell (424 m, unnamed on Ordnance Survey maps) to connect with Little Mell Fell at a col called The Hause (c. 380 m). To the north west another low col (c. 280 m) near Baldhowend Farm connects Gowbarrow Fell to the easterly trending ridge from Great Dodd via High Brow and Cockley Moor.[2]

Gowbarrow Fell is bounded by Aira Beck on the west which separates it from Watermillock Common and the foothills of Hart Side. This flows down from the rolling fells of the Dodds, through the village of Dockray, and then turns south into Ullswater. The beck drops 140 m between Dockray and the lake over a number of waterfalls, including High Force and Aira Force. Aira Force is one of the most photogenic sites in the Lake District. The falls and the main body of the fell are owned by the National Trust. The site has easy access from the A592 road and a series of paths with two stone bridges at the head and foot of the falls make it a popular place with visitors.

To the north the fell is bounded by a basin of low land, drained by tributaries of the Thackthwaite Beck, through the gap between Great and Little Mell Fells, and then via the Dacre Beck into the River Eamont.[2]

To the south the fell is bounded by Ullswater. The southern slopes of the fell are wooded, providing a picturesque backdrop for views over Ullswater. Above this is a fringe of rock, the main feature being Yew Crag at the south-eastern corner of the fell. The woodlands and crags continue eastwards beneath Great and Little Meldrums. The rocky spur of Gate Crags and Birk Crag juts out from Little Meldrum toward the lake. To the east the fell is bounded by lower land which drains directly into Ullswater.[2]

 
Triangulation pillar on the summit of Gowbarrow Fell, with Great Mell Fell beyond

Summit edit

The top of the fell is a broad plateau with a number of small rocky knolls rising above areas of heather and bog.

The summit is the rocky Airy Crag, on which an Ordnance Survey triangulation pillar has been built. This now bears a National Trust plaque, reflecting the ownership of the land. Views from here include the two Mell Fells, Blencathra and the Northern Fells, and the northern parts of the Helvellyn range including the Dodds.[3] This summit is set back to the north of the fell, about 1.6 km from the shore of Ullswater, limiting views of the lake though the fells beyond it and up the Patterdale valley can be seen.

Alfred Wainwright described the summit as "drab".[4] Instead, better views of Ullswater may be had from Green Hill (437 m), the southern summit.[1]

Ascents edit

Gowbarrow Park is owned by the National Trust and is Open Access land. Quite a number of paths lead up and around the fell, and access to the fell may be gained from a number of places around its perimeter. As a result, quite a variety of routes is possible on the fell.

The main National Trust pay-and-display car park on the A592 road (at its junction with the A5091) has facilities and is popular with visitors heading for Aira Force. Two other (free to NT members) car parks along the A5091 road also give access to the waterfall and the fell. From the village of Dockray a public footpath begins opposite the Royal Hotel and gives the shortest route to the summit (1 mile). Another footpath begins at Ulcat Row to the north of the fell.

A track from The Hause, where some car parking is possible, gives access from the east via Great Meldrum. Another approach from the east is the Kirkstile footpath, from the minor road above Watermillock church. This path runs below Little and Great Meldrum, through the conifer plantation in Swinburn's Park, and then contours along the steep eastern and southern slopes of the fell, giving delightful views over Ullswater on its way to Aira Force.

It is also possible to approach from the south, from a very tiny layby on the A592 road, and up Yew Crag.[2][3]

Geology edit

The rocks of Gowbarrow Fell were formed during the Ordovician period, roughly 460 million years ago. Two major groups of Ordovician rocks are represented on and around the fell: the Skiddaw Group and the Borrowdale Volcanic Group.[5]

On the lower ground around the southern and eastern edges of the fell, faulting has exposed an inlier of mudstones from the Skiddaw Group.[5] These rocks of the Tarn Moor Formation were formed in deep seas when occasional slides of coastal sediments were redeposited at greater depth.[6]

The higher ground of the fell is composed of flows of andesite lava, belonging to the Birker Fell Andesite Formation, a part of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group.[5] These rocks are part of a thick succession of lava sheets found around the western and northern sides of the Lake District. They were formed by eruptions of mobile lava from shallow-sided volcanoes. They are a little younger than the Skiddaw mudstones, which they overlie.[6]

The oldest of the volcanic rocks, at the base of the Birker Fell formation, occur uniquely on Little Meldrum and to the south of it, along the western edge of Birk Crag. These belong to the Little Meldrum Tuff Member, and were formed as volcanic ash, some with droplets of lava among it, was thrown out of volcanoes during explosive eruptions of viscous and highly gaseous magma. The result is tuff and lapilli-tuff, with volcanic pyroclasts from the Skiddaw Group.[6]

Names edit

Gowbarrow Fell: 'Fell' seems to have been a later addition to the fell's name, which was recorded as Golbery (about 1250) and Golebergh (1294). This probably means 'windy hill' from Old Norse gol, 'a gust of wind, a breeze', and Old Norse berg, 'a rocky hill'.[7]

Fell is a local dialect word with several meanings, from either Old Norse fell, 'hill, mountain', or Old Norse fjall, 'mountainous country'. Fell is very common in Lake District place-names, some of which are ancient, but many are much more modern.[7]: 397 

History edit

Gowbarrow Fell stands within Gowbarrow Park, a medieval hunting park and part of the lands of Greystoke Manor.

Greystoke was granted to Forne, son of Sigulph, by king Henry I (reigned 1100 to 1135), according to a testament dated 1212. It is not clear whether this was a new grant, or a reconfirmation of Forne's existing holding of lands held by his father Sigulph in pre-Norman times. Forne's daughter Edith was one of Henry I's mistresses, and his son Ivo built the first stone tower at Greystoke Castle in 1129.[8]

In a source of 1418 Matterdale was referred to as 'a forest', that is 'a hunting ground.'[8]

The Howard family succeeded to the estate of Greystoke in 1571. The land appears to have remained a hunting ground, for in the late seventeenth century a visitor remarked that it contained more deer than trees.[8] William Hutchinson recorded in 1794 that the Park covered about 2000 acres and was stocked with six or seven hundred head of fallow deer[9] Crosthwaite's map of 1783 shows the boundaries of the park extended from Gowbarrow Hall to Glencoyne Bay.[10] The high stone wall surrounding this land is still in good repair.

A century later, Charles Howard, the 11th Duke of Norfolk, built Lyulph's Tower as a hunting lodge not far from Aira Force, on the site of a former Pele Tower. Its name is probably a form of Sigulph (other variants include Ulf, L'ulf, Lyulph, Ligulf), the ancestral owner of the land, from whom the lake, Ullswater, may also be named.[8]

William Wordsworth walked through the park at Gowbarrow with his sister Dorothy on 15 April 1802. She was struck by the daffodils growing on the west side of Gowbarrow, beside the shore in Glencoyne Bay, and in her Grasmere Journal she wrote: 'When we were in the woods beyond Gowbarrow park we saw a few daffodils close to the water side ... I never saw daffodils so beautiful ...' Her words inspired William to write his poem, I wandered lonely as a cloud (often known as Daffodils) two years later. William also wrote three poems inspired by Aira Force, including The Somnambulist.[11]

The Howard family landscaped Gowbarrow Park during the nineteenth century, planting over half a million trees, building bridges and creating paths around Aira Force. In 1846 they planted an arboretum below the waterfall.[12]

Then in 1906 the National Trust acquired 750 acres of the Park to safeguard it from proposed house building.[12]

The fell is grazed by sheep rather than deer today, but evidence of former deer hunting remains in the substantial stone wall surrounding the fell, as well as old shooting boxes and stalkers' huts.[13]

Image gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Alfred Wainwright (2003) [1955]. A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells Book 1: The Eastern Fells. London: Frances Lincoln. ISBN 0711222274.
  2. ^ a b c d Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 Explorer map
  3. ^ a b Mark Richards (2008) [2003]. Near Eastern Fells. Milnthorpe: Cicerone Press. ISBN 978-1-852845414.
  4. ^ "Wainwright Walk: Gowbarrow Fell". 15 May 2022.
  5. ^ a b c "1:50,000 Geological Maps" (Map). Sheet E029, Keswick (Solid). British Geological Survey. 1999. ISBN 0751832294. - may be viewed on the "Geology of Britain viewer". British Geological Survey. or on the BGS's iGeology smartphone app
  6. ^ a b c "The BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units".
  7. ^ a b Diana Whaley (2006). A Dictionary of Lake District Place-Names. Nottingham: English Place-Name Society. ISBN 0-904889-72-6.
  8. ^ a b c d Family History blog concerning the Grisdale family - retrieved 20 December 2013
  9. ^ William Hutchinson (1794), The History of Cumberland - cited in Diana Whaley (2006). A Dictionary of Lake District Place-Names. Nottingham: English Place-Name Society. ISBN 0-904889-72-6.
  10. ^ Peter Crosthwaite (1783), An accurate map of the beautiful lake of Ulles-water, - available at Guides to the Lakes Accessed 3 February 2014
  11. ^ "Daffodils at Ullswater". Visit Cumbria. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  12. ^ a b "Aira Force". Visit Cumbria. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  13. ^ "Aira Force and Ullswater". National Trust. Retrieved 20 December 2013.

gowbarrow, fell, windy, hill, fell, english, lake, district, outlier, eastern, fells, standing, north, ullswater, bounded, side, aira, beck, with, waterfall, aira, force, waterfall, popular, attraction, visitors, area, seen, from, summit, hallin, fell, other, . Gowbarrow Fell Windy hill is a low fell in the English Lake District It is an outlier of the Eastern Fells standing to the north of Ullswater bounded on one side by Aira Beck with its waterfall Aira Force The waterfall is a popular attraction for visitors to the area Gowbarrow FellGowbarrow Fell seen from the summit of Hallin Fell on the other side of UllswaterHighest pointElevation481 m 1 578 ft Prominence100 m 330 ft Parent peakLittle Mell FellListingWainwrightCoordinates54 35 20 N 2 55 03 W 54 58881 N 2 91761 W 54 58881 2 91761NamingEnglish translationWindy hillLanguage of nameOld NorseGeographyGowbarrow FellLocation in Lake District UKLocationCumbria EnglandParent rangeLake District Eastern FellsOS gridNY408219Topo mapOSExplorer OL5 Landranger 90 In previous centuries the fell was part of a medieval hunting park Gowbarrow Park which belonged to the lords of Greystoke The fell along with 750 acres of the park were bought by the National Trust in 1906 Contents 1 Topography 2 Summit 3 Ascents 4 Geology 5 Names 6 History 7 Image gallery 8 ReferencesTopography editThe fell is a wedge shaped piece of high ground 1 about 2 km by 1 5 km in extent The highest parts are on a short ridge which extends from Norman Crag in the north west corner above Thorneythwaite Farm over Airy Crag the actual summit 481 m several other knolls Green Hill 437 m and down to Yew Crag in the south east corner A north east trending ridge parallel to Ullswater continues the high ground over the subsidiary tops of Great Meldrum 437 m Little Meldrum 404 m and Watermillock Fell 424 m unnamed on Ordnance Survey maps to connect with Little Mell Fell at a col called The Hause c 380 m To the north west another low col c 280 m near Baldhowend Farm connects Gowbarrow Fell to the easterly trending ridge from Great Dodd via High Brow and Cockley Moor 2 Gowbarrow Fell is bounded by Aira Beck on the west which separates it from Watermillock Common and the foothills of Hart Side This flows down from the rolling fells of the Dodds through the village of Dockray and then turns south into Ullswater The beck drops 140 m between Dockray and the lake over a number of waterfalls including High Force and Aira Force Aira Force is one of the most photogenic sites in the Lake District The falls and the main body of the fell are owned by the National Trust The site has easy access from the A592 road and a series of paths with two stone bridges at the head and foot of the falls make it a popular place with visitors To the north the fell is bounded by a basin of low land drained by tributaries of the Thackthwaite Beck through the gap between Great and Little Mell Fells and then via the Dacre Beck into the River Eamont 2 To the south the fell is bounded by Ullswater The southern slopes of the fell are wooded providing a picturesque backdrop for views over Ullswater Above this is a fringe of rock the main feature being Yew Crag at the south eastern corner of the fell The woodlands and crags continue eastwards beneath Great and Little Meldrums The rocky spur of Gate Crags and Birk Crag juts out from Little Meldrum toward the lake To the east the fell is bounded by lower land which drains directly into Ullswater 2 nbsp Triangulation pillar on the summit of Gowbarrow Fell with Great Mell Fell beyondSummit editThe top of the fell is a broad plateau with a number of small rocky knolls rising above areas of heather and bog The summit is the rocky Airy Crag on which an Ordnance Survey triangulation pillar has been built This now bears a National Trust plaque reflecting the ownership of the land Views from here include the two Mell Fells Blencathra and the Northern Fells and the northern parts of the Helvellyn range including the Dodds 3 This summit is set back to the north of the fell about 1 6 km from the shore of Ullswater limiting views of the lake though the fells beyond it and up the Patterdale valley can be seen Alfred Wainwright described the summit as drab 4 Instead better views of Ullswater may be had from Green Hill 437 m the southern summit 1 Ascents editGowbarrow Park is owned by the National Trust and is Open Access land Quite a number of paths lead up and around the fell and access to the fell may be gained from a number of places around its perimeter As a result quite a variety of routes is possible on the fell The main National Trust pay and display car park on the A592 road at its junction with the A5091 has facilities and is popular with visitors heading for Aira Force Two other free to NT members car parks along the A5091 road also give access to the waterfall and the fell From the village of Dockray a public footpath begins opposite the Royal Hotel and gives the shortest route to the summit 1 mile Another footpath begins at Ulcat Row to the north of the fell A track from The Hause where some car parking is possible gives access from the east via Great Meldrum Another approach from the east is the Kirkstile footpath from the minor road above Watermillock church This path runs below Little and Great Meldrum through the conifer plantation in Swinburn s Park and then contours along the steep eastern and southern slopes of the fell giving delightful views over Ullswater on its way to Aira Force It is also possible to approach from the south from a very tiny layby on the A592 road and up Yew Crag 2 3 Geology editThe rocks of Gowbarrow Fell were formed during the Ordovician period roughly 460 million years ago Two major groups of Ordovician rocks are represented on and around the fell the Skiddaw Group and the Borrowdale Volcanic Group 5 On the lower ground around the southern and eastern edges of the fell faulting has exposed an inlier of mudstones from the Skiddaw Group 5 These rocks of the Tarn Moor Formation were formed in deep seas when occasional slides of coastal sediments were redeposited at greater depth 6 The higher ground of the fell is composed of flows of andesite lava belonging to the Birker Fell Andesite Formation a part of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group 5 These rocks are part of a thick succession of lava sheets found around the western and northern sides of the Lake District They were formed by eruptions of mobile lava from shallow sided volcanoes They are a little younger than the Skiddaw mudstones which they overlie 6 The oldest of the volcanic rocks at the base of the Birker Fell formation occur uniquely on Little Meldrum and to the south of it along the western edge of Birk Crag These belong to the Little Meldrum Tuff Member and were formed as volcanic ash some with droplets of lava among it was thrown out of volcanoes during explosive eruptions of viscous and highly gaseous magma The result is tuff and lapilli tuff with volcanic pyroclasts from the Skiddaw Group 6 Names editGowbarrow Fell Fell seems to have been a later addition to the fell s name which was recorded as Golbery about 1250 and Golebergh 1294 This probably means windy hill from Old Norse gol a gust of wind a breeze and Old Norse berg a rocky hill 7 Fell is a local dialect word with several meanings from either Old Norse fell hill mountain or Old Norse fjall mountainous country Fell is very common in Lake District place names some of which are ancient but many are much more modern 7 397 History editGowbarrow Fell stands within Gowbarrow Park a medieval hunting park and part of the lands of Greystoke Manor Greystoke was granted to Forne son of Sigulph by king Henry I reigned 1100 to 1135 according to a testament dated 1212 It is not clear whether this was a new grant or a reconfirmation of Forne s existing holding of lands held by his father Sigulph in pre Norman times Forne s daughter Edith was one of Henry I s mistresses and his son Ivo built the first stone tower at Greystoke Castle in 1129 8 In a source of 1418 Matterdale was referred to as a forest that is a hunting ground 8 The Howard family succeeded to the estate of Greystoke in 1571 The land appears to have remained a hunting ground for in the late seventeenth century a visitor remarked that it contained more deer than trees 8 William Hutchinson recorded in 1794 that the Park covered about 2000 acres and was stocked with six or seven hundred head of fallow deer 9 Crosthwaite s map of 1783 shows the boundaries of the park extended from Gowbarrow Hall to Glencoyne Bay 10 The high stone wall surrounding this land is still in good repair A century later Charles Howard the 11th Duke of Norfolk built Lyulph s Tower as a hunting lodge not far from Aira Force on the site of a former Pele Tower Its name is probably a form of Sigulph other variants include Ulf L ulf Lyulph Ligulf the ancestral owner of the land from whom the lake Ullswater may also be named 8 William Wordsworth walked through the park at Gowbarrow with his sister Dorothy on 15 April 1802 She was struck by the daffodils growing on the west side of Gowbarrow beside the shore in Glencoyne Bay and in her Grasmere Journal she wrote When we were in the woods beyond Gowbarrow park we saw a few daffodils close to the water side I never saw daffodils so beautiful Her words inspired William to write his poem I wandered lonely as a cloud often known as Daffodils two years later William also wrote three poems inspired by Aira Force including The Somnambulist 11 The Howard family landscaped Gowbarrow Park during the nineteenth century planting over half a million trees building bridges and creating paths around Aira Force In 1846 they planted an arboretum below the waterfall 12 Then in 1906 the National Trust acquired 750 acres of the Park to safeguard it from proposed house building 12 The fell is grazed by sheep rather than deer today but evidence of former deer hunting remains in the substantial stone wall surrounding the fell as well as old shooting boxes and stalkers huts 13 Image gallery edit nbsp Gowbarrow Fell seen from the opposite shore of Ullswater nbsp Part of the fellside on Gowbarrow Fell nbsp On top of Gowbarrow Fell looking towards Airy Crag nbsp The summit of Gowbarrow Fell with trig point nbsp View of Ullswater from the cairn on Green Hill nbsp The footpath beneath Green Hill nbsp The remains of an old shooting lodge nbsp The memorial seat on Gowbarrow Fell The inscription reads A thank offering 1905 nbsp The view of Ullswater from Gowbarrow a photochrom print nbsp Aira Force another photochrom printReferences edit a b Alfred Wainwright 2003 1955 A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells Book 1 The Eastern Fells London Frances Lincoln ISBN 0711222274 a b c d Ordnance Survey 1 25 000 Explorer map a b Mark Richards 2008 2003 Near Eastern Fells Milnthorpe Cicerone Press ISBN 978 1 852845414 Wainwright Walk Gowbarrow Fell 15 May 2022 a b c 1 50 000 Geological Maps Map Sheet E029 Keswick Solid British Geological Survey 1999 ISBN 0751832294 may be viewed on the Geology of Britain viewer British Geological Survey or on the BGS s iGeology smartphone app a b c The BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units a b Diana Whaley 2006 A Dictionary of Lake District Place Names Nottingham English Place Name Society ISBN 0 904889 72 6 a b c d Family History blog concerning the Grisdale family retrieved 20 December 2013 William Hutchinson 1794 The History of Cumberland cited in Diana Whaley 2006 A Dictionary of Lake District Place Names Nottingham English Place Name Society ISBN 0 904889 72 6 Peter Crosthwaite 1783 An accurate map of the beautiful lake of Ulles water available at Guides to the Lakes Accessed 3 February 2014 Daffodils at Ullswater Visit Cumbria Retrieved 3 February 2014 a b Aira Force Visit Cumbria Retrieved 3 February 2014 Aira Force and Ullswater National Trust Retrieved 20 December 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gowbarrow Fell amp oldid 1118602412, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.