Official Name: | Stackhouse |
Country: | England |
Region: | Yorkshire and the Humber |
Static Image Name: | Farm at Stackhouse - geograph.org.uk - 1575728.jpg |
Static Image Alt: | A green field with farm buildings and farm equipment, with a small hill behind |
Static Image Caption: | Farm at Stackhouse |
Os Grid Reference: | SD814654 |
Coordinates: | 54.084°N -2.284°W |
Post Town: | SETTLE |
Postcode Area: | BD |
Postcode District: | BD24 |
Civil Parish: | Giggleswick |
Unitary England: | North Yorkshire |
Lieutenancy England: | North Yorkshire |
Stackhouse (sometimes written as Stack House), is a hamlet near to Giggleswick on the western bank of the River Ribble in North Yorkshire, England.
Stackhouse lies on the western side of the River Ribble in north Ribblesdale, opposite Langcliffe, and 2km (01miles) north of Giggleswick. The hamlet is located on the road from Settle to Helwith Bridge via Knight Stainforth. The hamlet is mentioned in the Domesday Book as belonging to Roger de Poitu, though with no resident population.[1] The hamlet was listed as having nearly, and later came under the possession of Furness Abbey .[2] The hamlet has been recorded across the centuries as: Stacuse (1086), Stachus (1285), Stacho(u)ssum, Stakho(u)ssum (1150–70), and Stackhowse (1592). The name derives from Old Norse meaning "the house near, or for, ricks."[3] Sometimes the hamlet's name is written out as Stack House.[4]
The hamlet was previously in the Township of Giggleswick (along with another hamlet called Rome), and in the wapentake of Staincliffe in the West Riding of Yorkshire.[5] The hamlet is now in the civil parish of Giggleswick, in North Yorkshire. James Carr, who came from the hamlet, was a priest at the church in Giggleswick (St Alkelda) and also later founded Giggleswick School.[6] Some of the houses in the village were built for the cotton workers of Langcliffe Mill (opened in 1783) on the opposite bank of the river to Stackhouse, but connected by a bridge.[7] [8]
Both the Ribble Way and Dales High Way long-distance paths run through the hamlet. The village is also on National Cycle Route 68 (The Pennine Cycleway).[9] [10] A footbridge connects the hamlet over the Ribble with Langcliffe on the eastern bank.[11] The footbridge was swept away in a storm of 1953, but was replaced soon afterwards. To the north west of the village, following the route of the footpath to Feizor, several Bronze Age ring cairns are located on the moor.[12] One was excavated in the 19th century revealing human bones and ivory discs.[13] [14]