|  | Page 20:- rebuilt, and many new streets erected during late years. The 
whiteness of the houses is greatly enlivened by the number  
of poplars which grow about them, the long range of hanging  
gardens on the west, and the sloping meads and plantations  
on the east, where the Kent washes the skirts of the town,  
and is crossed by three good bridges. The completion of the  
canal to Lancaster, in 1819, gave a powerful impulse to the  
building spirit of the inhabitants, which still continues to 
extend the limits of the town, and to improve its general  
appearance and accommodations.
 
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|  | The chief objects of interest are the castle, of which four  
broken towers and part of the outer wall still remain. In  
1813, the foundations were strengthened and skirted with a  
thriving plantation, enriching the view from the town. This  
fortress, the seat of the Barons of Kendal, and birth-place  
of Catherine Parr, stands on the east side of the Kent, upon 
a hill composed of rounded stones, embedded in a black sandy 
cement. It is well worth visiting, both from the beauty of  
its commanding situation, and from the interest always  
excited by the venerable relics of former days. Opposite the 
castle, on the west side of the town, is Castlehow-hill: on  
this eminence the inhabitants, in 1788, erected an obelisk  
to commemorate the glorious revolution of 1688. The White  
Hall, a large public edifice, with handsome stone fronts,  
looking into Lowther-street and High-gate, was built in  
1825, from a design by the late Mr. Webster, architect, 
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