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Newlands Valley

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The fells of Hindscarth (left) and Robinson (right) at the head of the Newlands valley.
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The fells of Hindscarth (left) and Robinson (right) at the head of the Newlands valley.

The Newlands Valley is located within the Lake District National Park in Cumbria, England at the approximate grid reference of [NY235204]. It is regarded as one of the most picturesque and quiet valleys in the national park even though it is situated very close to the popular tourist town of Keswick and the busy A66 road.

Settlements

The valley has a minor motor road which traverses its entire length, it starts at the village of Braithwaite on the A66 and continues over the Newlands Hause to Buttermere, another road starts at the hamlet of Portinscale also on the A66 and joins the route from Braithwaite near the village of Stair. The valley is thinly populated consisting mainly of farms and tourist accomodation, Stair is the main settlement in the valley and includes the Newlands Adventure Centre and the Swinside Inn, which is the only pub in the valley and is situated one kilometre to the north of Stair.

Further up the valley the hamlet of Little Town consists of a farm and a few cottages and is the site of the small white washed Newlands Church which was rebuilt in 1843, it was visited by William Wordsworth in May 1826 and he was inspired to write a stanza in his poem “To May”, the full poem is on display in the church. Little Town used to have it’s own school before being closed in 1967 and it’s own pub which closed and was converted to farm buildings many years ago. Skelgill on the slopes of Catbells is a farm dating back to the 14th century, which includes a 12 bedded camping barn for visitors. For car drivers the Newlands valley ends at Newlands Hause at a height of 333 metres (1093 feet), where there is a car park underneath the slopes of Robinson, the Moss Beck waterfalls are well seen coming down from the fell. From the hause the road descends steeply to Buttermere.

Mining

The Newlands Valley was extensively mined and quarried for many centuries, lead, copper, silver and even gold have been extracted over the years. The most famous mine in the Lake District is situated in Newlands, this is the Goldscope mine, located on the lower slopes of Hindscarth near Low Snab farm, it has operated since the 1500s and yielded large amounts of lead and copper, so much so that it was called “Gottesgab” (God's Gift) by the German miners who were brought over to develop the mine in its early days, the mine closed at the end of the 19th century, not because it was exhausted but because the mines main shaft had gone so deep it had become uneconomic to pump the water from it. Other well known mines in the valley are Barrow lead mine located on the slopes of Barrow which closed in 1888, the Yewthwaite lead mine which occupies a small valley between the fells of Catbells and Maiden Moor and ceased production in 1893 and the long closed Dale Head copper mine which was started by German miners in Elizabethan time.

Landscape and Scenery

The scenery of the Newlands valley consists of farmland in the valley bottom and soaring fells above giving a landscape of tranquil beauty. Fells that have their foot in the valley include, Barrow, Causey Pike, Catbells, Ard Crags, Maiden Moor, High Spy, Dale Head, Hindscarth and Robinson. The quality of the fell walking is very good, the Newlands horseshoe is a 14 kilometre walk starting and finishing at Little Town with 1000 metres of ascent and takes in all the 2,000 foot peaks in the valley.

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