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ON RIGHT FROM PENRITH.

From Ambles.

From

Penrith.

ON LEFT FROM PENRITH.

Glencoyn House, an old pic- 11 cr. Glencoyn Beck. 12 A promontory from Birk Fell

turesque farm house belonging to Mr Howard.

Stybarrow Crag. This rock merely allows room for the road between it and the lake. The dale landers,headed by a Moun

sey,

Enter Westmorland.

once made a successful 10 cr. Glenridding Beck. 14

stand against a troop of Scottish mosstroopers at this place. The leader was thereafter styled King of Patterdale,a title borne for many years by his descendants.

Bilberry Crag.
Patterdale Hall

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terminates the second reach. The first island, House Holm.

Glenridding House, Rev. H. Askew.

This stream takes its rise in Keppel Cove and Red Tarns, which lie near the summit of Helvellyn. That mountain may be ascended through this glen.

Place Fell, with a patch of cultivated ground on which are two farm houses lying at its base, has a striking effect on the opposite shore.

A mountain road, practicable only for horsemen and pedes trians, conducts through Grisedale into Grasmere.

There is a good inn at this place, which, if the Tourist have time, should be made his head quarters for some days, as there is much to see in the neighborhood.

Road into Martindale across Deepdale Beck.

The road is now through flat meadows on the banks of the stream, to another branch,' which flows from Brother's Water.

Hartsope Village. Hayes Water, a tarn well known to 18 the angler, lies between High Street and Grey Crag, two miles above Hartsope. Angle Tarn in the same neighbourhood is noted for the superior flavour of its trout.

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High Hartsope.

Enter the common and climb the pass of Kirkstone.

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The summit of the pass is 3 fenced in by the Red Screes on the right, and Woundale Head on the left. The large block of stone

whose Church-like frame Gives to the savage Pass its namestands on the right of the road. The Romans are supposed to have marched through this depression on their way northwards from the station at Ambleside. Near the summit, a road diverges on the left into the valley of Troutbeck. At the point of deviation, a small inn) has lately been erected. In the descent, which is excessively steep, the views of Windermere and the vale of Ambleside are very fine. Wansfell Pike is on the left, Loughrigg Fell on the right of the vale.

AMBLESIDE.

Inns---Salutation, Commercial, and White Lion.

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How beautiful the vale below; 24 Nor can he guess how lightly leaps The brook adown the rocky steeps. WORDSWORTH.

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Clifton Hall, a farm-house, 233

an ancient turretted mansion.

Here are the gates leading to the Earl of Lonsdale's magnificent Park of 600 acres, and to the Castle.

Hackthorpe Hall, also a farm- 21 house. The birth-place of John first Viscount Lonsdale. The Lowther family have immense 19 possessions in the neighbourhood.

Shap, anciently Heppe, a long 16 straggling village. The remains of an abbey, founded in 1150, are a mile to the west on the banks of the Lowther. Only a tower of the Church is standing, but it appears to have been 14 at one time an extensive structure. A road turns off at Shap to Hawes Water, six miles.

Wastdale Head, a granitic 12 mountain, from which blocks, of immense size, have been carried, by some extraordinary means, into Lancashire and Staffordshire, in one direction, and to the coast of Yorkshire in another, upwards of 100 miles from the parent rock. In order to enter Yorkshire, they must have been drifted over Stainmoor, 1400 feet in elevation.

Low-Bridge House, Richard Fothergill, Esq.

Three miles north of Kendal from Otter Bank, a beautiful view of that town, with the Castle Hill on the left. is obtained.

PENRITH.

cr. Eamont Bridge.

Enter Westmorland.

cr. Lowther Bridge.

Clifton Vill.

Hackthorpe Vill.

Thrimby Vill,

Shap Vill. Inns, Greyhound, King's Arms.

Shap Toll Bar.

Over the elevated moorish tract called Shap Fells.

Steep descent_under Bretherdale Bank to

Carleton Hall, John Cowper,

1 Esq.

The Eamont and Lowther are tributaries of the Eden, before entering which they form a junction.

13 Brougham Hall, the Windsor

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of the North. In the vicinity is Brougham Castle, a fine ruin, the property of the Earl of Thanet, a descendant from "The stout Lord Cliffords that did fight in France."

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Shap Spa, a medicinal spring which annually draws a crowd of visitors, is a mile to the east in the midst of the moor. The water is of nearly similar quality to that at Leamington. There is an excellent hotel in the vicinity of the spring.

This is the last stage to Kendal.

Whinfell Beacon, 1500 feet.

Hollow through which the Sprint from Longsleddale flows. This narrow and picturesque vale commences near Garnett Bridge, and runs six miles northwards, between steep and rocky declivities. A path at its head crosses Gatescarth Pass, having Harter Fell on the left, and Branstree on the right, into Mardale, at the head of Hawes Water.

Benson Knott, 1098 feet.

St. George's Church.

XII. LONDON TO LANCASTER AND CARLISLE, BY RAILWAY, 300 Miles. 71

ON RIGHT FROM LOND.

From

Carlisle.

From

London.

ON LEFT FROM LOND.

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From London, by N. Western Railway (Trent valley line), to STAFFORD (p. 242). Thence, by Warrington, to

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To Manchester, 163 m. 1121 Newton Bridge St. on 1881

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Liverpool and Manchester line (p. 238).

Thence, by North

Golborne St.

Union Railway, to

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Junction of lines from Birmingham, 29 m., and Shrewsbury, 29 miles. To Liverpool, 14 m.

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Golborne Hall, and Haydock Hall, T. Legh, Esq.

New Hall, Sir J. Gerard, Bart.

Winstanley Hall, M. Bankes, Esq.

Standish Hall, C. Standish, Esq.

7 m. distant is Lathom House (Lord Skelmersdale), occupying the site of the ancient house, 1981 which, under the command of the heroic Countess of Derby, successfully resisted the Parliamentary forces during a siege of 3 months.

Euxton Hall, W. J. Anderton, Esq.

Shaw Hall, containing a museum of natural history, and some curifrescoes brought from Herculaneum.

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2061 ous

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WIGAN is an ancient town, situated near the little river Douglas, on the banks of which the Saxons were defeated by King Arthur. It is noted for its manufacture of cotton goods, and its large brass and pewter works. The vicinity also abounds with cannel coal. Wigan has two churches, of which All-Saints is old, and contains tombs of the Bradshaigh family, ancestors of the Earl of Crawford

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