Allithwaite
Allithwaite | |
Lancashire | |
---|---|
Allithwaite | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SD386764 |
Location: | 54°10’49"N, 2°56’23"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Grange-over-Sands |
Postcode: | LA11 |
Dialling code: | 015395 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Westmorland & Furness |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Westmorland and Lonsdale |
Allithwaite is a small village in Lancashire standing about a mile west of Grange-over-Sands, in the part of the county north of the sands. It has become e commuter village, of residents commuting to such local towns as Ulverston, Barrow-in-Furness or Lancaster or across to Kendal to work. At the 2011 census Alithwaite and Cartmel counted together had a parish a population of 1,831.
The parish church is St Mary's Church, built in 1864–65 and designed by the Lancaster architect Edward Graham Paley.
There is a small primary school, Allithwaite Primary C of E School located next to the church. Both church and school were built by a legacy left to the village. The village also has two pubs, a post office, a children's playground and a reasonably sized playing field with a tennis court and a bowling green.
Wraysholme Tower
A mile to the south, Wraysholme Tower is a 15th-century pele tower, used as a barn and cowshed, adjoining a 19th-century farmhouse.[1] The tower was built by the Harrington family of Aldingham: a Michael Harrington acquired a grant of free warren in Allingham in 1315.
The tower is forty feet by twenty-eight feet. It has axes north and south and is built of local limestone rubble, with angle quoins. The walls are four feet thick at their base. There is a projecting garderobe, about seven feet square, at the south-west corner, where there is a spiral staircase. There was originally an entrance at the north-west corner.[2] The building is roofed with slate.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Allithwaite) |
References
- ↑ Wraysholme Tower
- ↑ Leslie Irving Gibson: 'Lancashire Castles and Towers' (Dalesman Books, 1977) page 48