Clifton, Cumbria Explained

Static Image Name:Old Church, Clifton, Penrith - geograph.org.uk - 81249.jpg
Static Image Caption:Old Church
Country:England
Official Name:Clifton
Type:Village and parish
Coordinates:54.632°N -2.723°W
Population:497
Population Ref:(2011)[1]
Civil Parish:Clifton
Unitary England:Westmorland and Furness
Lieutenancy England:Cumbria
Region:North West England
Constituency Westminster:Penrith and the Border
Post Town:PENRITH
Postcode District:CA10
Postcode Area:CA
Dial Code:01768
Os Grid Reference:NY5326
Pushpin Map:United Kingdom Eden
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in the former Eden District

Clifton is a small linear village and civil parish in Cumbria, England. Historically part of Westmorland, it lies 3miles south east of Penrith.

Geography

The civil parish of Clifton has its western boundary defined by the River Lowther, to the north and east lie the civil parishes of Brougham and Great Strickland, to the south is the civil parish of Lowther. The village of Clifton has a church, primary school, and a pub. Most of the hamlet of Clifton Dykes (on the C3047 road) also lies within the parish. The name of this was shown as Longchimney on the first edition Ordnance Survey map of 1897, and then as Clifton Dikes on the later second edition. The current spelling was settled on more recently.

History

Clifton Dykes has been suggested as the (pre-Roman conquest) centre of the Carvetii, an Iron Age and Roman-period 'tribe', one that possibly led a resistance against Roman forces in 69 A.D. under the leadership of Venutius.[2] This is based upon the evidence of a large (c.7 acre) Iron Age enclosure discovered there, plus assumptions about its strategic importance on the Eden Valley communication routeway. However, this has been disputed: the Carvetii may have always been centred on Carlisle even before the Romans set up Luguvalium and Venutius may not have been Carvetiian.[3]

Clifton Moor Battle

See main article: Clifton Moor Skirmish. Clifton Moor was the site, in 1745, of the final battle in England (and the last battle ever on English soil) between Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Duke of Cumberland.

The story of a local family, the Wybergs, whose property was forcibly sold by Oliver Cromwell in 1652, is told in Sir Walter Scott's novel, Waverley, which also features the battle on Clifton Moor.

St. Cuthbert's church

The local church, St Cuthbert's, contains the graves of 10 men killed in the battle of Clifton Moor. (The Scots dead are, reputedly, buried beneath a tree towards the southern end of the village). Some of the remains of St Cuthbert are also said to be languishing in the church.St Cuthbert's church contains a monument to a local benefactress, Eleanor Engayne, who died about the year 1395 ; according to the Topography and Directory of Westmorland, 1851, the manor of Clifton was given in the reign of Henry II, by Hugh de Morville, one of Thomas Becket's murderers, to Gilbert de Engayne, with whose descendants it continued till their heiress, Eleanor, in 1364, carried it in marriage to William de Wyberg.[4]

Transport

There once were two railway stations, the 1846 Clifton station (later named Clifton and Lowther railway station) was on the Lancaster and Carlisle Railway (now part of the West Coast Main Line WCML), it closed to passengers in 1938.[5]

Another station Clifton Moor station was on the Eden Valley Railway and opened 1863, closing in 1962.[6] Confusingly Clifton & Lowther Station was at a hamlet known as Clifton Moor. The nearest station is now Penrith railway station.

At the boundary with the civil parish of Yanwath and Eamont Bridge where the west coast mainline railway crosses the river Lowther is Hugh's Crag Viaduct (also known as Lowther Viaduct,[7] or Clifton Viaduct[8]) built in 1846.[9]

The M6 motorway now also runs through the parish.

Other

The former Wetheriggs Pottery also is within the civil parish, east of the village.

Clifton Hall is a 15th-century Pele tower.

See also

References

Further information

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parish population 2011. 20 June 2015.
  2. Book: Higham. N.J.. Jones. G.D.B.. The Carvetii. Peoples of Roman Britain. Stroud. Alan Sutton. 1985. ix, 158, p.10. 0862990882.
  3. Ross. Catherine. The Carvetii - a pro-Roman community?. Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. 2012. 12. 3. 55–68.
  4. http://www.stevebulman.f9.co.uk/cumbria/clifton_f.html Clifton
  5. http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/c/clifton_and_lowther/index.shtml Clifton and Lowther
  6. http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/c/clifton_moor/index.shtml Clifton Moor
  7. Opening of the Lancaster and Carlisle Railway Tuesday Last, The Illustrated London News, 19 December 1846, (online reprint), also reprinted in Nineteenth-Century railway history through the Illustrated London news, Anthony J. Lambert, 1984
  8. http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-74221-hugh-s-crag-viaduct-yanwath-and-eamont-br Hugh's Crag Viaduct, Yanwath and Eaton Bridge
  9. http://www.engineering-timelines.com/scripts/engineeringItem.asp?id=892 Lowther Viaduct