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Capplebarrow, Longsleddale
Capplebarrow
civil parish:-   Longsleddale (formerly Westmorland)
county:-   Cumbria
locality type:-   hill
locality type:-   boundary feature
locality type:-   parish boundary feature
coordinates:-   NY50760355 (etc) 
1Km square:-   NY5003
10Km square:-   NY50
altitude:-   1683 feet
altitude:-   513m


photograph
Click to enlarge
BXM75.jpg (taken 14.10.2012)  
photograph
Click to enlarge
BXM82.jpg (taken 14.10.2012)  

evidence:-   old map:- OS County Series (Wmd 27 12) 
placename:-  Capplebarrow
source data:-   Maps, County Series maps of Great Britain, scales 6 and 25 inches to 1 mile, published by the Ordnance Survey, Southampton, Hampshire, from about 1863 to 1948.
Marked as Trigonometrical Station. 

evidence:-   old map:- OS 1881-82 New Series (outline edition) 
placename:-  Capplebarrow
source data:-   Map, engraving, area north of Kendal, Westmorland, New Series one inch map, outline edition, sheet 39, scale 1 inch to 1 mile, published by the Ordnance Survey, Southampton, Hampshire, 1881-82.
image
O21NY50B.jpg
"Capplebarrow / 1683"
item:-  JandMN : 61
Image © see bottom of page

evidence:-   descriptive text:- Wilson 1912
source data:-   Guide book, Longsleddale, by F M Wilson, published by T Wilson, Kendal, Westmorland, 1912.
WILSON1.txt
"An extensive view may be had from the top of Capel Barrow, which is not a difficult climb though it is 1683 feet above sea level."

evidence:-   map:- OS Six Inch (1956) 
placename:-  Capplebarrow
source data:-   Map series, various editions with the national grid, scale about 6 inches to 1 mile, published by the Ordnance Survey, Southampton, Hampshire, scale 1 to 10560 from 1950s to 1960s, then 1 to 10000 from 1960s to 2000s, superseded by print on demand from digital data.
image
SINY5003.jpg
"Capplebarrow / 1683"

evidence:-   old newspaper:- Z8900705.txt
placename:-  Capel Barrow
item:-  placename, Capplebarrowbarrow
source data:-   Z8900705.txt
Westmorland Gazette
Transcription from the Westmorland Gazette 5 July 1890 
page 6:-  "... tradition would support the view that Capel Barrow receives its name from the adjacent chapel or church. There are no traces of any chapel or sanctuary on the hill, and, the chapel going back beyond the seventeenth century, by our written records, gives a date sufficiently early to warrant the idea that the name of the hill is derived from the church. ..."
"..."
"And here we may be allowed to add, ... that a local authority makes barrow mean a burial place, but we make it mean a hill or rising ground of any kind as well. Capel Barrow has no traces of having been a place of burial. Most of the places in our country to which we find the word barrow affixed, are elevated, and hence the term."

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