button to main menu  Clarke's Survey of the Lakes, 1787

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Page 20:-
building, (perhaps burnt and demolished in some of the inroads of the Scots,) and of course not rated as a castle, and that the Duke made the old port (sic) habitable, and added to it those works of defence which are now taken away. The only remains of the castle are a large square building, and several arched cellars, which were probably the dungeons, or keeps. One thing however is remarkable; an arched, subterraneous road leads all the way from the castle to the kitchen-floor of an house in the town, called Dockwray-Hall, the distance being 307 yards. Such subterraneous roads were not unfrequent in these old fortresses, and were doubtless intended for conveying provisions, and preventing surprises.
  Penrith, history
Having finished the description of this town, it now remains to give a sketch of its history, which is unavoidably entangled with the general history of the country, and likewise with the history of England. The town and signory underwent no changes different from those of the whole county till the year 1251; at that time they were given as the 200 librates of land which King Henry III. gave, together with 5000 merks of silver, as a portion with Margaret his daughter, who was then married to Alexander King of Scots. It was given under the title of the Queen's Haim (or Home) Lands. Though it thus became a property to the Scottish Crown, it was only considered as a part of the King's private estate, (for which he did homage or fealty to the King of England, by paying one soar hawk at the city of Carlisle,) and not as being part of the Scots dominions. This appears from an assize held 6. Edward I.; also from an inquisition taken at Carlisle in 21. Edward I. before Thomas de Normanville, the King's Escheator, beyond Trent, A.D. 1292. The jurors there find, that the said manors are worth 200 pounds, and that John Baliol is next heir, and of the age of thirty years.
Edward, however, in the 26th year of his reign, having quarrelled with Baliol, (then King of the Scots,) seized these lands, and gave them to Beck Bishop of Durham, (known by the name of the Fighting Bishop:) He enjoyed them not long, for being summoned to attend a parliament held at Carlisle in the thirty-third year of the same reign, and not appearing, the lands were adjudged to the Crown. In the year 1306, and the thirty-fourth of his reign, Edward gave these lands to the Duke of Britanny: In his family they continued till 11. of Edward IV.; when Ralph de Nevil, (then Duke,) being slain in battle at Barnet, they again reverted to the Crown for want of heirs. They continued in the Crown till William III. gave them to William Bentick Esq; (afterwards Earl of Portland,) his favourite page: In that family they continued till 1784, when his Grace the present Duke of Portland sold them to his brother-in-law the Duke of Devonshire.
This town of Penrith hath several times severely suffered by the inroads of the Scots, particularly in the 19. of Edward III. when 26,000 entered Cumberland, laying waste all before them. They burnt Penrith, with several other villages; carried away all the inhabitants whom they could any way make useful into Scotland, and there publickly sold them to the highest bidder: they likewise carried off 40,000 head of cattle, and committed such barbarities on the defenceless and weak as humanity must shudder at. In the 6. of Edward the II. they likewise made an incursion, and destroyed this town, at which time it is supposed many of the inhabitants hid their money in the walls of their houses; being afterwards either killed or carried away captives, the money was frequently left there; insomuch that an old house is seldom pulled down but some silver and other coins are found. These calamities, joined to a want of water, and great distance from coal, (the nearest being 26 miles land-carriage,) made this town very thin of inhabitants: but in the year 1748 [1468], Bishop Strickland of Carlisle remedied the former of these wants, by purchasing of the owners of certain Mills, (particularly Vaux of Catterlin,) so much of the water of the river Petterell as would flow through the eye of a mill-stone. This he generously, at his own expence, conveyed to Penrith, and the water still continues to flow in the same quantity, and no more. Since the general use of pumps, no town perhaps is better supplied
with
erratum from p.194
for 1748, read 1468.
gazetteer links
button -- "Dockwray Hall" -- (Dockwray Hall, Penrith)
button -- Penrith Castle
button -- "Penrith" -- (Penrith (CL13inc)3)
button -- "Petterell, River" -- Petteril, River
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button missing text, see appendix

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