Description
Bassenthwaite, a village, a parish, and a lake in Cumberland. The village stands on the NE side of the lake, opposite to and about 3 miles from Bassenthwaite Lake railway station, 7 miles NNW of Keswick, under which it lias a post and money order office; telegraph office, Bassenthwaite Lake railway station. the parish is divided into two constablewicks, High-side and Low-side. Acreage, 6915; population, 541. the surface is liighly diversified and picturesque, ranging from the summit of Skiddaw to the meadows on the lake. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Carlisle; net value, £190 with residence. Patrons, the Dean and Chapter of Carlisle. the parish church was restored in 1874, and a liandsome chapel of ease built in 1878. There are small charities. The lake is in the basin of the Derwent river; commences 3 miles NW of the foot of Derwent Water; extends 4 miles north-north-westward, with a mean breadth of 1/8 of a mile; and has a surface elevation of 226 feet above the level of the sea. Its bosom is not gemmed with any island; its head is flat and open, but looks away to the mountains round Derwent Water; its W side is flanked by a range of wooded fells, mostly rising from the water's edge; its foot is screened by vale and slope, going up at 3 miles distance to Binsey Hill; and its E side is flanked by the grand skirts and shoulders of Skiddaw, crowned at 5 1/2 miles' distance by that mountain's summit. Pike and perch abound in the lake, and salmon pass through it to the Upper Derwent,
Bassenthwaite, Cumberland
Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1894-5
