Chapel Island is a limestone outcrop that lies in the Leven estuary of Morecambe Bay in England, less than one mile (1.6 km) from the shoreline at Bardsea in the area known as Ulverston Sands. It is located at 54.1741°N 3.0416°W / 54.1741; -3.0416 (OS grid ref. SD 321759). It is one of the Islands of Furness in the county of Cumbria, in the area of the historic county of Lancashire ("Lancashire north of the sands"). The island is approximately 450 yards (410 m) long and just over 100 yards (91 m) at its widest. Its area is about 7.5 acres (3.0 hectares). Chapel Island, known as Harlesyde Isle in 1593, got its present name in 1795. The name was coined by Mrs. Radcliffe in her book ‘Tour of the Lakes’. In the 14th century Augustinian canons from nearby Conishead Priory built a small chapel on the island to serve the needs of travellers and fishermen working in the Leven fisheries. The Island lies on the path of the ancient crossing from Cartmel to Conishead and would have been a place of haven to travellers caught out by the tide. Tradition describes its purpose to be the meeting for prayers with the travellers who cross the bay. In 1843 Jopling notes that the crossing passed to the south of the island, implying that the route past the island varied over time. Nothing remains of the original chapel, although Thomas West noted that these ruins were still extant in 1774. In 1821 Colonel Thomas Richard Gale Braddyll commenced building the modern-day Conishead Priory and to enhance the view from the priory he had a mock pseudo-classical ruin built on the island. This chapel ruin is now sometimes mistaken for the remains of the original. There was also a cottage on the island, probably also built in the early 19th century, which was ostensibly occupied by fishermen. It is mentioned that fishermen occupy the cottage ‘at the instance of the owner of the Priory who has erected a cottage close to the ruins. In 1851 the cottage was occupied by Thomas Benson, a mariner, his wife and stepson. By 1861 Edward Barker, his wife and three sons, all the men being fishermen, were the occupiers. The 1871 Census shows that only the sons were resident and they were no longer fishermen, now occupied as quarrymen. It is probable that they were employed at the quarry on the Conishead estate. The 1881 had no entry for Chapel island so it is possible that they were the last occupants of the cottage, which is now a ruin. In 1837 Chapel Island was proposed as a railway station by George Stephenson who was considering alternatives to the hilly route over Shap Fell, which the main West Coast line to Glasgow now takes. His idea was to take the railway from Lancaster to Morecambe (then known as Poulton), before proceeding across the sands to Humphrey Head on the Cartmel Peninsula and then cross the Leven Estuary to Furness. Embankments would have been built on the sands, with the area inside of these reclaimed. On 6 October 1858 the sloop Delight of Ulverston grounded on the rocks of Chapel Island. She was carrying a cargo of iron ore and empties. Her master was lost in the accident. Chapel Island is referred to by William Wordsworth in The Prelude, Book Tenth. The penultimate paragraph of the books reads:

Excellent beaches can be found at Chapel Island. Apart from a small area at the north of the island the land is completely overgrown with an impenetrable mat of brambles. The island can be accessed on foot at low tide. However, Morecambe Bay is notorious for quicksands, and the Ulverston Channel usually flows between the shore and the island. Those wishing to visit Chapel Island should not attempt the crossing at any time other than low tide and should seek local advice.

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Ulverston

Ulverston est une ville et une paroisse civile du Royaume-Uni, située dans le district de South Lakeland en Cumbria, dans le nord-ouest de l'Angleterre.
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Lower Holker est une paroisse civile de Cumbria, située dans le nord-ouest de l'Angleterre.
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Holker Hall (prononcé Hooker par certains) est une maison de campagne privée située à environ 2 km au sud-ouest du village de Cartmel dans le comté cérémoniel de Cumbria et le comté historique de Lancashire, en Angleterre. C'est « le plus grand [bâtiment] de sa période dans le Lancashire ... par les meilleurs architectes vivant alors dans le comté. ». Le bâtiment date du XVIe siècle, avec des modifications, des ajouts et des reconstructions aux XVIIIe et XIXe siècles. La reconstruction du XIXe siècle est réalisée par George Webster dans un style néo-jacobéen et les rénovations ultérieures sont réalisées par E.G. Paly. Hubert Austin a un cabinet commun avec Paley dans les années 1870 et ils reconstruisent tous deux l'aile ouest après qu'elle a été détruite par un incendie majeur en 1871, une décennie seulement après les travaux précédents de Paley sur la structure. L'incendie a également détruit un certain nombre d'œuvres d'art remarquables. L'historien de l'architecture Nikolaus Pevsner exprime l'opinion que l'aile ouest est le "travail domestique exceptionnel" de Paley et Austin. En 1970, la maison elle-même, ainsi que son mur de terrasse, sont classés Grade II*. La maison se trouve dans un domaine d'environ 80 hectares, et est entouré de jardins à la française, de parcs et de bois. Dans le parc se trouvent six structures répertoriées au grade II. Depuis qu'il est devenu une maison privée à la suite de la dissolution des Monastères, le domaine n'a jamais été vendu, étant passé par héritage de la famille Preston à la famille Lowther, puis à la famille Cavendish. En chronostratigraphie, le sous-étage britannique de la période carbonifère, le « Holkerian » tire son nom de Holker Hall.
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