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Journey to
Ingleborough
Mr URBAN,
I Have long been an attentive reader of your Magazine, and
have been particulary pleased with that part of your work,
in which the natural curiosities of remarkable places are
described. In your Mag. for July last, (See
p.316) a correspndent from Wakefield expresses a
desire that some person who resides near Ingleborough
in Yorkshire, would communicate to the public an
account of the uncommon curiosities which are found in the
environs of that place. As you have yet published nothing on
the subject, I send you the following account, and hope ot
will at least excite some more able hand to send you a
better.
INGLEBOROUGH is situated in the west riding of the county of
York; the westerly and northerly part of it lies in
the parish of Bentham; the easterly in the parish of
Horton in Pibbledale (sic); the southerly in
the parish of Clapham. It is likewise a part of four
manors. The manor of Ingleton, to the west; belonging
to ----- Parker, Esq; the manor of Newby, to the
co-heirs of the late duke of Montagu; the manor of
Clapham, to Josias Morley, Esq; and the manor
of Austwick, to James Shuttleworth, Esq. It is
a mountain, singularly eminent, whether you regard its
height, or the immediate base upon which it stands. It is
near 20 miles in circumference, and has Clapham, a
church town, to the south; Ingleton to the west;
Chapel in the Dale to the north; and Selside,
a small hamlet, to the east; from each of which places the
rsie, in some parts, is even and gradual; in others, rugged
and perpendicular. In this mountain rise considerable
streams, which at length fall into the Irish Sea. The
land round the bottom is fine fruitful pasture, interspersed
with many acres of lime-stone rocks. As you ascend the
mountain, the land is more barren, and under the surface is
peat-moss, in many places two or three yards deep, which the
country people cut up, and dry for burning, instead of coal.
As the mountain rises, it becomes more rugged and
perpendicular, and is
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