- Rampside
Rampside is a village in
Cumbria ,England , located a few miles south-east of the town ofBarrow-in-Furness , in the north-western corner ofMorecambe Bay on the Furness peninsula.History
There is evidence that the village was inhabited as early as 1292, in the records of the monks of
Furness Abbey , thoughViking and Roman artefacts have been found in the village's church. As well asagriculture , the village acted as a small port, with shipping trade coming to Furness Abbey throughRoa Island , which itself was defended by the fortifiedPiel Island , both around one mile south of Rampside.Thomas Lawson, a herbalist and botanist, was born at Rampside in 1630 and became minister at the village church. He invited
George Fox to preach from the pulpit after one Sunday service, and subsequently became aQuaker himself in 1653. He published various religious works and died in 1691. [ "The Parish of Dalton" in "A History of the County of Lancaster", Volume 8, pp304-319 (1914).]In the late 18th century, the village had a reputation as a
bathing resort; at the time, it was larger than Barrow-in-Furness, which was still a small hamlet. The poet,William Wordsworth , is known to have frequented the village at this time. His memory of his time at Rampside and his view towardsPiel Castle led him to write the following in 1805 ["Suggested by a Picture of Peele Castle, in a Storm, Painted by Sir George Beaumont" in "The Complete Poetical Works" by William Wordsworth, Macmillan, London 1888.] :::'I was thy neighbour once, thou rugged Pile! ::Four summer weeks I dwelt in sight of thee:::I saw thee every day, and all the while,::Thy form was sleeping on a glassy sea'In 1840, development began on a causeway to Roa Island, resulting in a
rail ferry fromFleetwood to the island, the trains then passing through Rampside to get to Barrow and the southernLake District . This service became obsolete with the railway barges linkingUlverston and Lancaster, and the causeway soon became a road. Since then, Roa Island and Rampside have retained their close links to the sea, with sailing and windsurfing popular in the surrounding waters.On
February 15 ,1865 , a small shallow earthquake estimated in recent times to have been 8 on the Richter Scale, caused serious damage in Rampside. ["The Barrow-in-Furness Earthquake of 15 February 1865: Liquefaction from a Very Small Magnitude Event" by R.M.W. Musson, "Pure and Applied Geophysics", 152(4): 733-745, 1998]Present day
Rampside is also near to the
National Grid Gas terminal atRoose cote, where gas from the Morecambe Bay andIrish Sea gasfields comes onshore and is used to createelectricity which is inserted into theNational Grid . This, and commuting into Barrow, are the main sources of modern-day employment in Rampside.References
Further reading
*"Barrow and District" by Fred Barnes, Barrow-in-Furness Corporation, Barrow-in-Furness (Lancs) 1968
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