button to main menu   Ford's Description of the Lakes, 1839/1843

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Page 116:-
and on the margin of the river, the celebrated spa issues into day. The strata below the surface mould are said to be disposed in the following order:- First, a course of stratified sandstone, then bituminous shale, which includes a stratum of aluminous schistus, and next porphyry slate, beneath which the sulphurated water issues through a leaden tube, enclosed in a small stone fountain, at the rate of two gallons and a half per minute. The whole height of the precipice is about 90 feet. The strata are intersected by two veins, one upon each side of the sulphurated water, which commencing at the surface, approximate pretty uniformly until they reach the river, at which place they are about 150 yards distant. These veins are composed of calcareous spar and iron pyrites, and contain the above-mentioned strata between them.
This water is remarkably transparent; when poured from one tumbler into another, it sparkles very briskly. To most palates the taste is very agreeable, being somewhat accidulous, and it has generally been found to sit lightly on the stomach. The smell is so strongly impregnated with sulphur as to extend to the distance of several yards. It was originally known by the name of the Holy Well, also by that of Wardrew Spa, the latter name being taken from the tenement and farm on the Northumberland side of the water, and which appears to have been, at one time, the only original place of entertainment. The present mansion was erected in 1752, and is a large and elegantly-
gazetteer links
button -- "Gilsland Spa" -- Gilsland Spa
button -- "Wardrew House (?)" -- Wardrew
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