Parton, Cumberland

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Parton
Cumberland
The Lowther Arms, Parton - geograph.org.uk - 475478.jpg
Lowther Arms public house, Parton
Location
Grid reference: NX979205
Location: 54°34’1"N, 3°34’30"W
Data
Population: 914  (2011)
Post town: Whitehaven
Postcode: CA28
Dialling code: 01946
Local Government
Council: Cumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Copeland

Parton is a village on the coast of Cumberland, overlooking the Solway Firth, a mile and a quarter north of the port town of Whitehaven. Formerly a port itself and a mining centre, Parton is now purely residential, benefiting from its location between the A595 trunk road and the coastal railway line.

History

Beginnings

The sheltered anchorage in Parton Bay was used by the Romans, who had a fort on the high ground to the north of the present village. Later, the bay was used by the inhabitants of Low Moresby, the hamlet which grew up to the east of the old fort in the Middle Ages.

In Elizabethan times a number of small merchant vessels were based in the bay, trading as far as Chester; by this time there was probably also a salt-pan in operation. The port was developed in the early 17th century to cater for Moresby's coal trade, but fell into decline after two generations of the Lowther family turned the hamlet of Whitehaven into a major port. Although the Lowthers theoretically had the legal power to prevent port development at Parton, the entrepreneur Thomas Lamplugh teamed up with Henry Fletcher, lord of the manor of Moresby, to "repair" the harbour at Parton, following which Fletcher sold off plots for development along the shore. Within about five years (boosted by Lamplugh's private Act of Parliament in 1705 to break the Lowthers' legal power) a new port community had developed, mainly serving local collieries, but also including industrial facilities such as a glassworks, which was able to export bottles as far as London thanks to the improved harbour.

18th century prosperity

In spite of Lamplugh's enterprise, Parton Bay is not as well sheltered as Whitehaven, and within about 15 years, Lamplugh was unable to afford maintenance costs (possibly a contributory factor to the closure of the glassworks and salt-pan about this time). The manor of Moresby was bought in 1722 by one Thomas Brougham, who was able to sideline Lamplugh and develop the port himself, but ironically, in 1738, he sold his rights to the Lowther family. Surprisingly, rather than shut down the port which rivalled Whitehaven, they used it themselves for some of their coal shipments, and Parton prospered for decades. New industries developed, most notably a brewery, but everything was nearly wrecked in 1795, when a storm destroyed the harbour breakwaters. With such extensive damage, the harbour reverted to being a little fishing haven, but the village industries had enough local custom to survive, for a while at least.

A new and important industrial concern opened to the north of the village in 1800: the Lowca engineering company. In 1817, the large tannery at the south end of the village was bought for development as a colliery; the coal being mined some distance inland and brought to Parton along a tunnel called the Parton Drift, which also drained the mine workings. To convey coal to the port of Whitehaven a horse-drawn tramway was built along the foot of the cliffs.

19th century onward

In 1840 the Lowca engineering works of Tulk and Ley made the first locomotive for the new Maryport and Carlisle Railway, but ironically, it had to be transported from Parton by seagoing barge. Not until several years later was the technically challenging railway extension to Whitehaven via Parton developed. The railway soon supplanted the old tramway, and brought new opportunities for Parton's industries. The colliery, the engineering works and the brewery all thrived, an iron-foundry opened next to the new railway station, and in the 1870s an ironworks was established on the shore near the Lowca works. Unfortunately, the end of the 19th century was a period of industrial consolidation, and Parton's relatively small businesses began to struggle.

By the 1920s, almost all were gone, and Parton became a dormitory town for collieries around Lowca and Whitehaven. Many of the houses in the old village were over 200 years old by this time, and were classified as slums, so over the next half-century new housing estates were developed on top of the Brows- the escarpment overlooking the old port. Although the local collieries have all closed, Parton's dormitory function continues, thanks to its good transport access. Moresby Hall (now a hotel) and parish church remain, just outside the village boundary, on the high ground to the north of Parton.

The north of Parton, with the site of the former harbour (now a green space) at bottom left, 20th century development on the hill at right, and Lowca village on the hills in the distance

Outside links

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References