Cark In Cartmel
Cark In Cartmel photos (15 available)
Cark In Cartmel maps (2 available)
Cark In Cartmel books (7 available)
Kendal - A History and Celebration
Hardback
So You Think You Know? Kendal
Hardback
Penrith Photographic Memories
Hardback
- 5 photos on Cark In Cartmel appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Cark In Cartmel
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Cark In Cartmel and Cumbria
Cark In Cartmel memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Cumbria below.
Cumbria memories
Feathers in our hair
My aunt and uncle went to live in Flookburgh in the early 1950s. My mum, brother and myself went to stay with them on holiday. I can't remember where we got the coach to but my uncle laughed when we got off the coach with paper carrier bags with our clothes in (no suitcases for us in those days). The road was a country lane (going down the road at the side of the cross) towards the sea. I remember there was a farm on the right hand side where we used to buy milk and further along on the left was their little house (it could have been a bungalow). We went to Humphrey Head where we collected sea gull ...read more here
A memory of Flookburgh contributed by Dianne Littlewood
home
I have lived in the pretty village of Cartmel all my life and I love the quiet, calming atmosphere we have here. Once a friend and myself used to walk through the village with a nanny goat called Nancy and her 2 kids, we'd arrive in the square and rest at the market cross with the goats playing on the "fish slabs" which caused a lot of amusement to the visitors, who in turn must have thought we were slightly mad! Near by is the stately home of the Cavendish family, Holker Hall, once upon a time the Duke of Edinburgh used to compete in the carriage driving trials here and on the sunday himself and The Queen went to ...read more here
A memory of Cartmel contributed by Sharon Dance
Family connections.
The gentleman with the scythe over his shoulder was my grandfather. His name was Joseph Jackson, born in 1849 at Bootle in Cumberland. He spent most of his life as a tenant farmer, first at Canleton Farm near Egremont also in Cumberland. He then moved to Lane Ends Farm at Haverthwaite in what was then Lancashire owing to subsidence of the land due to iron ore mining from the nearby Florence Mine. He retired from farming in 1919 to Penny Bridge where he spent the rest of his life.
A memory of Greenodd contributed by Mr J Jackson
The Whitewater Hotel at Backbarrow, near Newby Bridge
I stayed in Backbarrow for several days at the Whitewater Hotel which has been converted from a former mill building by the river. The lobby of this lovely "spa hotel" has display cabinets of memorabilia from its industrial heyday in the last century which was interesting and I recommend a visit.
My wife Elizabeth and I used this as a base to explore nearby Windermere including a ride on the heritage railway line from Haverthwaite to Lakeside. There are lovely woodland walks signposted in the hills to the north of Backbarrow.
A memory of Backbarrow contributed by John Howard Norfolk
Extracts From Cark In Cartmel & Cumbria books
A quiet corner of the tiny village of Cark, where the River Eea flows under a low bridge into the sands of
Morecambe Bay. Note the upturned cart by the bridge. The village takes its name from the Old Welsh ‘carreg’,
meaning rock or stone.
An extract from from"Cumbria Photographic Memories".
The plate by the window
to the left of the door
(now a window) shows
that this was also the
telegraph office and
money order office,
and also the Post Office
Savings Bank. The middle
window has gifts and
photographs for sale. The
building, now a private
residence, is on the road
to Cartmel, and is nearly
opposite the former
Constabulary Station.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".
The board on the house on the left proclaims that the building belongs to W H Duckworth, cycle and motor engineer. He had
cycles for hire. Londis, the grocers, now occupies the area of bushes to its right. Boys are playing on the bridge over the beck.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".
We are looking from the
bridge by the railway. The
road is devoid of both
people and traffic – is it
early morning? The third
house from the right,
slightly lower than its
neighbours, is now the post
office. Otherwise, the scene
is little changed today.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".
Former mill workers’
houses, now
modernised, line the
beck. Low Row is to
the left, the lowest of
three similar rows;
Middle Row had been
demolished by the
time of the picture.
The bridge is one
of a number built
in the 19th century
– previously, Cark had
just one bridge over
the beck.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".







