Sheffield Pike

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Sheffield Pike
Westmorland

Sheffield Pike seen from Glencoyne
Range: Lake District Eastern Fells
Summit: 2,215 feet NY368182
54°33’18"N, 2°58’43"W

Sheffield Pike is a fell in Westmorland, and amongst the Lake District's eastern Fells. It is a prominent intermediate top on one of the eastern ridges of Stybarrow Dodd, separating and standing high above the Glencoyne and Glenridding valleys, on the eastern side of the Helvellyn Range, and looking down onto Ullswater.

The name of the fell possibly means 'the peak above the sheep fold')

Landscape

A broad ridge runs east from the summit of Stybarrow Dodd, across a grassy saddle to the subsidiary top of White Stones, the summit of Green Side (2,608 feet), where it turn to the north-east to Hart Side and Watermillock Common. The south-east shoulder of Green Side drops about 650 feet down a slope which has been quarried and damaged by mining activities beneath to the depression of Nick Head (1,916 feet). From here the ridge rises 299 feet to the top of Sheffield Pike (2,215 feet).[1]

Two lower ridges descend to the east of Sheffield Pike. The south-east shoulder, below Heron Pike, drops to a grassy col and then rises to Glenridding Dodd, the final top on the ridge before Ullswater. The north-east shoulder drops through Glencoyne Wood and past Moss Crag to Ullswater. The secluded little valley of Mossdale lies between these two lower ridges.

Broadly oval in plan, Sheffield Pike separates the Glencoyne and Glenridding valleys, rising high above both. Both flanks are steep, the Glenridding Screes on the south side particularly so, and the upper slopes on both sides have substantial outcrops of steep crags.[2] East of the summit is a second top named Heron Pike (612 m[1]), a rock turret backed by a couple of tiny tarns.

Standing between two valleys and at the head of a third, the northern slopes of Sheffield Pike are drained by Glencoyne Beck, the southern slopes by Glenridding Beck, and the eastern side by Mossdale Beck.

Summit

The undulating summit plateau of Sheffield Pike has marshy ground and small tarns in places between rocky outcrops, with rough grass and heather. A broad cairn on top of an outcrop of rock marks the summit.[3] Two iron posts, one on Heron Pike and the other above Nick Head, are inscribed “H 1912” on one side and “M 1912” on the other. These mark the boundary between the Howard estate of Greystoke and the Marshall estate of Patterdale.[2] The summit cairn also carries an old stone boundary marker with the H and M initials as well as a cryptic E.R. and the date 1830.[3]

The summit overlooks Glencoyne, but being set back from both the southern and eastern sides of the fell better views may be had from other places. The cairn above Black Crag, or the top of Heron Pike, both give better views of Ullswater, and a well-used sheep path above the crags along the south side of the fell gives the best views of upper Glenridding, backed by Catstye Cam and Helvellyn.[3]

Ascent

Most of the fell, above the Greenside Road and away from the site of the old Greenside Mine, is Open Access land.

Ascents can begin from Glenridding village or from Glencoyne on the track behind Seldom Seen. In either case the route may use either of the two cols, east or west of Sheffield Pike. From Glenridding a track known as The Rake leads to the eastern col, or the track past the former Greenside Mine leads to Nick Head, the western col.[2][3] The latter route is no longer the industrial nightmare that Alfred Wainwright complained of in his 1955 guide-book when the mine was still working, but the spoil heaps and some of the mine buildings are still there.

Sheffield Pike can also be included in walks that take in Glenridding Dodd first, and then proceed either to Hart Side for a circuit of Glencoyne, or to Stybarrow Dodd and Helvellyn for a much longer horseshoe of Glenridding.

Geology

Virtually all the rocks of Sheffield Pike are part of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group, formed on the margin of an ancient continent during a period of intense volcanic activity, roughly 450 million years ago in the Ordovician Period. [4] [5]

Within that group, nearly all the rocks on the fell belong to the Birker Fell Andesite Formation. These rocks are part of a thick succession of andesite sheets which now outcrop in a wide band around the western and northern sides of the Lake District. [6] These sheets were formed by successive eruptions of mobile andesitic lava from shallow-sided volcanoes[5]

Between the individual lava flows may be beds of volcaniclastic sandstone, sedimentary deposits formed from the erosion of the volcanic rocks, and the map shows a small deposit of this near the summit of Sheffield Pike.[6]

Two minor igneous intrusions occur on the fell. A basalt dyke of similar age to the volcanic rocks crosses Nick Head, and a later microgranite dyke of Devonian age runs near the top of the crags on the south side of the fell.[6] This was probably associated with the later stages of the emplacement of the granite batholith which underlies the Lake District.[4]:95, 100

Also associated with the granite batholith was the creation of mineral veins in parts of the Lake District.[4]:189 The richest known lead vein of all was found crossing the south-east shoulder of Green Side, running in a north-south direction.

Mining at Greenside Mine began during the eighteenth century by driving levels into the side of Green Side, but in 1853 a new level was begun from the present entrance to the mine at Lucy’s Tongue beneath Nick Head. This was driven north and west for 16 years to intersect the Greenside vein, and allowed deeper levels of the vein to be exploited. Over its lifetime the mine produced 2,400,000 tons of ore, finally closing in 1962.[7]

Considerable evidence of mining remains with extensive spoil heaps on the lower slopes of Sheffield Pike. Part of the mine buildings have been converted into a Youth Hostel. The mine was still working when Alfred Wainwright prepared his Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells.[2]

Names

  • Sheffield Pike: This name is unexplained. Its first known use is by the Ordnance Survey in 1859. One possibility is that it reflects the influence of the Howard family at Greystoke, the Dukes of Norfolk, who also owned estates in Sheffield, though there is no direct evidence for this explanation.[8] Another possibility is that the original name was something like Sheepfold Pike, and that the pronunciation became corrupted, though again there is no evidence for this.[9] These two explanations need not be mutually exclusive.
  • Heron Pike: This was called Herring Pike in nineteenth century guide-books; these names, 'heron' and 'herring', seem equally unlikely. Probably a corruption of Old English erne, 'eagle', plus pike.[9]

Image gallery

Outside links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Database of British and Irish Hills
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Alfred Wainwright (2003) [1955]. A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells Book 1: The Eastern Fells. London: Frances Lincoln. ISBN 0711222274. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Mark Richards (2008) [2003]. Near Eastern Fells. Milnthorpe: Cicerone Press. ISBN 978-1-852845414. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 P. Stone (2010). British Regional Geology: Northern England. Nottingham: British Geological Society. ISBN 978-0852726525. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 D. G. Woodhall (2000). Geology of the Keswick District (Sheet Explanation of BGS Sheet E029). Nottingham: British Geological Survey. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 British Geological Survey Sheet E029, Keswick (Solid): 1:50,000 Geological Maps, 1999 ISBN 0751832294: Geology of Britain viewer
  7. John Adams (1995). Mines of the Lake District Fells. Skipton: Dalesman. ISBN 0852069316. 
  8. Diana Whaley (2006). A Dictionary of Lake District Place-Names. Nottingham: English Place-Name Society. ISBN 0-904889-72-6. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 Robert Gambles (2013). Lake District Place Names. Kirkby Stephen, Westmorland: Hayloft Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-904524-92-3.  Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "gambles" defined multiple times with different content