Friday 4 February 2011

New Blog - the Hitching Stone

 All photo's clickable to go larger !

After reading Pennine Rangers (Tony) excellent  Blog :- Redmires - Stanage
http://pennineranger.blogspot.com/2011/02/redmires-stanage.html
I was taken by photo #3 and the reference to it :-
“Close by the trig point is a rock with a cup and water channels carved into it.  There are a series of them up this end of Stanage, from the time it was used as a drove road used by Jaggers, the local name for the drovers who transported goods over the moors using a pack-horse to carry goods such as salt from Cheshire, this cup is labelled number 9.”

which prompted me to produce this Blog :-
23-11-2009 I finished refurbing a US SMP, made in 1982, M1950 petrol stove and with the rain stopping about 1:30 it was off to the Hitching Stone to give it a try.
Hitching Stone from afar
Supposedly the largest single boulder in Yorkshire it measures 29 feet long, 25 feet wide and 21 feet high.it lies at the meeting of five boundaries and is a glacial erratic
Looking at the West side which is facing Pendle Hill
Looking at the South side
Carved into the top is a deep water basin about 8' x 4' and in todays high wind had waves blowing out and down the end of the rock if you read any of the Victorian folklore it will be no doubt full of Druids this and ceremonies that but in actual fact it's more mundane being a glorified horse trough with all the horse trails passing
The water hole is carved out to almost the bottom of the boulder but is kept full of rocks by the landowner in case any of the local Neds fall in and drowned . I think I'd just have it full of water and award the Ned a posthumous Darwin certificate.
The stone is such a prominent landmark the townships of Cowling, Sutton and Keighley meet here as do the wapentakes (an assembly or meeting place) of Skyrack (Leeds) and Staincliffe (Keighley, Settle, Skipton, Stainburn). Estimated at over 1,000 tons, The stone is of glacial origin and almost certainly originated on Earl Crag to the North.

Being so prominent it is associated first with the Salt Packhorse tracks as in the middle ages salt was vital as it was not possible to grow sufficient hay to keep all the cattle through the winter as any good land was used for growing Oats,the staple foodstuff of the day.In autumn all but the breeding stock and Oxen used for ploughing were killed and salted for winter food.Salt was sourced from the Cheshire salt wiches from Northwich to Manchester.There's several place names in the area :- Salterforth,Salt Pye Farm, etc. By the middle of the 17 century self sufficient farming as a way of life was being replaced by a dual economy farming cottage textile industry.The population was growing again after the Black Death and with fresh land being taken from the moorland fringes Lime became an important commodity to sweeten the acid moorland and make mortar for all the new building.Limestone not being found in the eastern part of the Pennines had to be carried in from the West.The cottage textile industry saw improvement to many packhorse tracks as the weavers were scattered throughout the uplands which were not practical for a horse and cart to bring the wool to and the finished cloth away to market by a carrier known as a Brogger who owned a train of pack horses.It was common practice to use a train of 25+ horses, the lead ones wearing bells to warn of their approach on the narrow tracks.The bells are called Croatal bells having a lose pellet called a rumbler inside rather than suspended.The largest one in the picture made at the Robert Wells foundry at Aldbourne Wiltshire between 1755-1798.
A horse would carry up to 2 1/4 cwt.(100Kg)in two evenly balanced panniers,sometimes mounted on a wooden frame called a crutch.
By the beginning of the 19th.century there were teams of carriers running regular services charging a shilling per ton per mile.Packhorse tracks were built to last and can sometimes be identified by a row of stone flags called "causey stones" about 3 feet square and 9 inches thick sunk into the ground.Valley sides had tracks cut and raked into the hillside,the word rake on maps often indicating the site of an old track.
The Hitching Stone was also the site of a Lammas fair until 1870, with the racing of horses nearby. A short distance away are two smaller stones,the one on the east called Kidstone, the other ‘Navaxstone’ which stands at the terminus of the race-course.
The Keighley 1858 Lammas fairs were also held here,though were stopped in 1870 apparently after a Typhoid outbreak attributed to troops returning from the Boer wars.
Lamma was the festival of the first wheat harvest of the year. The festival occurred on August 1, and therefore is one of the so-called quarter days of the Celtic calendar, which is closely linked with the solar calendar, based on the equinoxes and solstices. Inside the carved hollow in the west side there is a hollow tube passing through from base to the top in which can be seen the imprint of a fossil tree (Lepidodendron) which has since eroded away. In some of the hollows in the cliffs between the pinnacle and the tower, where the boulder originated, there's still some in situ.
Some from my collection
and the M1950 petrol stove (running on Panel Wipe)
just thought I’d share and thanks toTony (Pennine Ranger)

5 comments:

  1. Gawd its a long time since I've been to the Hitchen Stone - 1978, when I lived in Farnhill....thats nearly mmmnnnnm years....
    I ought to go back and have a wander over Ickornshaw Moor

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  2. Hi Mike back in the early 70’s I owned a farm cottage at Ickornshaw which came with turbary (spl?) peat cutting, sheep grazing rights on the moor,
    I also had a 12ft. x 8ft. wood cabin (ok shed) on the moor, top bunk bed, table underneath, couple chairs and a small stove (burn peat). Those were the days, had to go when I sold the cottage.Do you remember the Lepidodendron's growing ?
    cheers Danny

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  3. Woah! That certainly trumps anything I can find on Stanage apart from Stanage itself. I've climbed onto the Great stone of Fourstones near High bentham but the Hitching Stone is even more impressive. I shall have to make a detour to visit it when I next go up to the Dales. Great post. Tony

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  4. Ah those were the days when the lepidendronthingies were growing. It was a lot warmer then, of course and it was much easier to grow tomatoes.
    There's a colliery spoil heap with a lot of tree fossils in it at Nenthead... far too many for a rucksack, in fact.

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  5. Hi Mike wern't the Pterodactyls a pest with the tomatoes ? We used to get our coal from a private mine at Cliviger just outside Burnley untill it started to get loads of shale in it, and explode on the fire ! I once asked "do you get any fossils down the mine" only to be answered "only't Buggers that work down there"
    cheers Danny

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