|  | Accident near  
Hawkshead 
 May 13. A few nights ago three gentlemen set off from 
Hawkeshead, to go to a place near Ulverston,  
in Lancashire: soon after they got upon the road, which is  
in some parts very indifferent, and in general very uneven,  
two of them proposed to gallop their horses to a certain  
distance, of a few paces, for a trifling wager. They were  
riding at full speed, when, coming to a place called Foss  
Bridge (about 6 miles from Hawkshead), at the bottom of a  
steep hill, both horses ran with such violence against the  
dry parapet wall of the bridge as to break it down; both, of 
course, plunged into the stream, the bed and sides of which  
are rock. One of the gentlemen (a young man of the name of  
Taylor) was killed upon the spot, as also was his horse. The 
other one had one of his thighs broken, and the leg  
shattered in a dreadful manner. The third person, whom they  
had left at some distance behind, passed the bridge soon  
afterwards, without perceiving what had happened; but not  
long after, the discovery was made by a man travelling that  
way, who was alarmed by the groans of the survivor, whom,  
with the dead body of his companion, he found in the  
horrible situation above described.
 
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