Firbank Fell: Difference between revisions

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
RB (talk | contribs)
Created page with '{{Infobox hill |name=Firbank Fell |picture=On Firbank Fell geograph 2078034.jpg |picture caption= |height=1,017 feet |county=Westmorland |range=Lake District |os grid ref=SD60893…'
 
No edit summary
 
Line 7: Line 7:
|range=Lake District
|range=Lake District
|os grid ref=SD608939
|os grid ref=SD608939
|latitude=54.339139
|longitude=-2.604422
}}
}}
'''Firbank Fell''' is a hill in [[Westmorland]] between the towns of [[Kendal]] and [[Sedbergh]].
'''Firbank Fell''' is a hill in [[Westmorland]] between the towns of [[Kendal]] and [[Sedbergh]] ([[Yorkshire]]).


Amongst Quakers the fell is renowned as a place where George Fox, the founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), preached.  Fox described what happened there on 13 June 1652 in this way:
Amongst Quakers the fell is renowned as a place where George Fox, the founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), preached.  Fox described what happened there on 13 June 1652 in this way:

Latest revision as of 16:26, 7 June 2017

Firbank Fell
Westmorland
Range: Lake District
Summit: 1,017 feet SD608939
54°20’21"N, 2°36’16"W

Firbank Fell is a hill in Westmorland between the towns of Kendal and Sedbergh (Yorkshire).

Amongst Quakers the fell is renowned as a place where George Fox, the founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), preached. Fox described what happened there on 13 June 1652 in this way:

While others were gone to dinner, I went to a brook, got a little water, and then came and sat down on the top of a rock hard by the chapel. In the afternoon the people gathered about me, with several of their preachers. It was judged there were above a thousand people; to whom I declared God's everlasting truth and Word of life freely and largely for about the space of three hours.

Because of Fox's preaching there, the site is sometimes called "Fox's Pulpit." A plaque on the rock there commemorates the event, which is sometimes considered the beginning of the Friends movement.

Firbank Fell is now immortalised as a place of Quaker history in one of the four houses at the Quaker school Bootham School.

Outside links