Robin Hood's Wood (Helsington): Difference between revisions

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Robin Hood's Wood is a small wood by the bank of River Kent at a point approximately equidistant from Helsington, Natland, and Sedgwick, midway between Low Park Wood and Hawes Wood. In the middle of River Kent, a few meters NW of Robin Hood's Wood is [[Robin Hood's Island (Helsington)|Robin Hood's Island]], a small wooded rock, and ''c.'' 375 m SSW is located [[Robin Hood's Well (Helsington)|Robin Hood's Well]]. The source cited by Dobson & Taylor is "the 1857 Ordnance Survey map" of Westmorland, presumably a 1" map.<ref>{{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, p. 305, ''s.n.'' 'Robin Hood's Wood'.</ref> However, the locality is also indicated on a 6" O.S. map that may be a few years older, ''Lancashire'' IX, published 1851-63, but based on surveying carried out 1847-58 (see Maps section below). A small island in a river may have appealed to a child's imagination, and perhaps these three localities were named by children playing in this area?
Robin Hood's Wood is a small wood by the bank of River Kent at a point approximately equidistant from Helsington, Natland, and Sedgwick, midway between Low Park Wood and Hawes Wood. In the middle of River Kent, a few meters NW of Robin Hood's Wood is [[Robin Hood's Island (Helsington)|Robin Hood's Island]], a small wooded rock, and ''c.'' 375 m SSW is located [[Robin Hood's Well (Helsington)|Robin Hood's Well]]. The source cited by Dobson & Taylor is "the 1857 Ordnance Survey map" of Westmorland, presumably a 1" map.<ref>{{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, p. 305, ''s.n.'' 'Robin Hood's Wood'.</ref> However, the locality is also indicated on a 6" O.S. map that may be a few years older, ''Lancashire'' IX, published 1851-63, but based on surveying carried out 1847-58 (see Maps section below). A small island in a river may have appealed to a child's imagination, and perhaps these three localities were named by children playing in this area?
<!--[[File:Geograph-2664400-by-Karl-and-Ali.jpg|thumb|right|500px|Robin Hood's Island, a wooded rock  in River Kent, midway between Low Park Wood and Hawes Wood (photo &copy;  [http://www.geograph.org.uk/profile/37389 Karl and Ali] and licensed for reuse under this [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/ Creative Commons Licence]).]]-->
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=== Gazetteers ===
=== Gazetteers ===
* {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, p. 305, ''s.n.'' 'Robin Hood's Wood'.<!--
* {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, p. 305, ''s.n.'' 'Robin Hood's Wood'.<!--

Revision as of 23:51, 8 May 2018

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Robin Hood's Island.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-08-17. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-05-08.

Robin Hood's Wood is a small wood by the bank of River Kent at a point approximately equidistant from Helsington, Natland, and Sedgwick, midway between Low Park Wood and Hawes Wood. In the middle of River Kent, a few meters NW of Robin Hood's Wood is Robin Hood's Island, a small wooded rock, and c. 375 m SSW is located Robin Hood's Well. The source cited by Dobson & Taylor is "the 1857 Ordnance Survey map" of Westmorland, presumably a 1" map.[1] However, the locality is also indicated on a 6" O.S. map that may be a few years older, Lancashire IX, published 1851-63, but based on surveying carried out 1847-58 (see Maps section below). A small island in a river may have appealed to a child's imagination, and perhaps these three localities were named by children playing in this area?

Gazetteers

Maps

Brief mention

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Notes


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