Blackstone Edge

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Blackstone Edge
Lancashire, Yorkshire
Blackstone Edge - geograph.org.uk - 468.jpg
The highest point of Blackstone Edge
Range: Pennines
Summit: 1,549 feet SD977163
53°38’24"N, 2°2’35"W

Blackstone Edge is a gritstone escarpment reaching 1,549 feet above sea level in the Pennines surrounded by moorland, on the boundary between Lancashire and the West Riding of Yorkshire.

History

Passing by the crag is Blackstone Edge Long Causeway also known as Blackstone Edge Roman Road, a paved road originally thought to be of Roman origin but after investigations by James Maxim considered to be a 1735 turnpike or packhorse route.[1] The Aiggin Stone, a gritstone pillar, possibly a way-marker stands alongside the packhorse route marking the county boundary. The stone has a cross and the letters I and T cut into it. Its name is said to derive from the French aiguille for a needle or aigle an eagle.[2]

The Aiggin Stone and cairn on Blackstone Edge Moor

Much of the surrounding area was within the township of Hundersfield, although some parts lay within Butterworth township.

During the Civil War, the Parliamentarians sent 800 men to fortify Blackstone Edge where John Rosworm came from Manchester to direct the construction of defences. It was successfully held against an attack by Royalist cavalry.[3]

In 1660 the churchwardens of St Chad's paid 24 shillings for eight loads of "great stones from Blackstoneedge" for Rochdale church steps.

Celia Fiennes travelled over Blackstone Edge and described her journey in about 1700.[4]

A meeting of Chartists from the surrounding industrial towns of Lancashire and Yorkshire was held in 1846 attracting up to 30,000 people.[5]

Sport

Blackstone Edge is frequented by walkers and rock climbers who use its traditional climbing and bouldering routes.[6][7] The crag was featured in the 1913 rock climbing guide to the Peak District, 'Some Gritstone Climbs' by John Laycock. One walking route is a circular walk from Hollingworth Lake in Smithy Bridge near Littleborough up to Blackstone Edge and another route links Blackstone Edge to Hebden Bridge in the Calder Valley.

The Pennine Way long-distance footpath from Edale in the Derbyshire Peak District to Kirk Yetholm in Roxburghshire passes along the top of the outcrop. It is also an optional route of the Rochdale Way.

From the summit it is possible to see Manchester city centre, Winter Hill in the West Pennine Moors and the mountains in Snowdonia in clear weather.

References

  • Broxop, Ernest (1973), The Great Civil War in Lancashire, 1642-1651, Manchester University Press, ISBN 9780719005398