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

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Page 85:-
and I never so much as dreamed of rain till it came perpendicularly upon my head: I attempted to run from it, but in vain, no shelter was near; near indeed must any have been that could have been of the smallest service, for in a few minutes I was completely drenched as if I had been laid to steep: patience, therefore, was my only resource; accordingly, patiently or perhaps obstinately, I sat myself down and bid it defiance. I think I need hardly add, that such an attack might prove too violent for a delicate constitution.
The prospects among these mountains are every where grand, but as they consist of nothing but rocky and uncultivated scenes, I scarcely think them worth the excessive labour of the journey: besides, in travelling from Keswick to Ambleside you have prospects of the precise same kind; you see the same number of small lakes, but with advantage of better roads and higher mountains.
  Goldscope Mine
It is not amiss, indeed, to take a ride into Newlands, to see Goldscope, or rather I would call it Gold-Scalp, and other places, where those once very valuable mines of copper were. Denton says they were wrought in King Henry the VIII's time: Nicholson and Burn say they were discovered in Queen Elizabeth's time by Thomas Thurland, and Daniel Hetchletter a German of Augsburg, (see Cambden, p.523.) which occasioned a suit between the Queen and Thomas then Earl of Northumberland, Lord of the Manor. In regard of the Queen's prerogative, (there being in these mines more gold and silver than copper or lead,) they were, by ancient law, the property of the Queen. Up in the Defendant's putting in a demurrer in law, it was agreed, that where the gold and silver extracted out of the copper or lead was of greater value than the copper or lead, it was then a Royal mine: But by the act 1st of William, no mine of copper, tin, lead, or iron shall from henceforth be deemed a Royal mine, provided that the gold or silver extracted be disposed of at the King's mint within the Tower of London: But smuggling of the metal arising to a great height, and disputes arising, another act was passed the 5th of William, cap. 6. wherein the owners of mines shall enjoy them; provided, nevertheless, that the King may have the ore of any mine, paying to the proprietors for the same, (the tin-ore within the counties of Devon and Cornwall excepted,) within thirty days after the ore shall be raised, and before it be removed, the following prices, viz. For every ton of copper sixteen pounds, for tin and iron forty shillings a ton, for every ton of lead nine pounds. Some authors say that these mines were then so valuable that they served the whole kingdom, and much of it was also exported. In the civil wars in 1650 and 1651 the smelting houses were destroyed, and most of the miners either killed or followed Oliver Cromwell: afterwards the Dutch, who came with William Prince of Orange, began the work again, and partly repaired the mills; the work was very rich, which caused the two acts before-mentioned to be passed, but the Dutch were driven from it in 1715, and it is now entirely lost, though Mr Gilberts has been lately at the expence of clearing the old level, but without effect.
  Buttermere
Buttermere is a small chapelry, consisting of about sixteen or eighteen families, who each of them keep a few sheep as in Borrowdale, and all the mountainous parts; the men mostly work at the blue-slate quarries, which here are carried on to a great extent. This lake of Buttermere has the best fish in it of any, (Ulswater only excepted,) viz. charr and trout for potting, but not very plentiful; here also are some grey-trout, such as in Ulswater, none other of the lakes have them. The right of fishing belongs entirely to the Earl of Egremont, the Lord of the manor.
Buttermere is a chapel of ease under Lorton, though Lorton is but a chapel of ease under Brigham. Lorton consists of four townships, viz. Lorton, Brakenthwaite, Wythop, and Buttermere; each of which townships send one chapelward unto Lorton, besides their own for Wythop and Buttermere have each a chapel, Brakenthwaite none. Nicholson and Burn, in their Cumberland history, p.62, says, that one Radulphus Lindsay gave to
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button -- "Buttermere" -- Buttermere
button -- "Goldscope" -- (Goldscope Mine, Above Derwent (CL13inc)2)
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