Alston Moor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alston with Garrigill
Geography
Status Rural district and Civil parish
HQ Alston Town Hall
History
Created 1894
Abolished 1974
Succeeded by Eden District Council, Alston Moor Parish Council
Alston Moor
Civil parish
Status: Civil Parish
Population: 2156
Administration
Primary council: Eden
County: Cumbria
Region: North West England
Politics
UK Parliament: Penrith and The Border
European Parliament: North West England


Alston Moor is an area of moorland and civil parish in Cumbria, England, based around the small town of Alston. The parish has a population of 2,156 (2001 census). Apart from the town of Alston, the parish also includes the villages of Garrigill and Nenthead, along with the hamlets of Nenthall, Nentsberry, Galligill, Blagill, Ashgill, Ayle, Leadgate, Bayles and Raise.

Under the Local Government Act 1894, the parish, then known as Alston with Garrigill, which had previously been a rural sanitary district on its own, became one of the few single-parish rural districts. This remained in existence until 1974 when it became part of the Eden district. The parish is divided into the wards of Alston (which includes Leadgate), Garrgill and Nenthead.

The parish is drained by the River South Tyne whose source is located in the fells above Garrigill and also by the Rivers Nent and Black Burn which along with many other smaller streams flow into the Tyne. The Rivers Tees and Wear also have their sources on the borders of the parish.

The manor of Alston or Alston Moor was held for many centuries by the Radcliffe family who held the title Earl of Derwentwater, but after the part in the failed 1715 Jacobite Rising, the lands were confiscated, and Alston became the property of the naval hospital at Greenwich in London.

Greenwich Hospital remained the principal landowner in the parish and owner of the extensive mineral rights up until the 1960s when the estate was transferred to the Trustees for Catholic Purposes who a few years ago sold their remaining properties in Alston Moor.

The poet W. H. Auden was to travel a great deal in Britain and abroad, but it is the wild region between the River Tees and the Roman Wall which provides the backdrop to many poems and plays of the ‘20s and ’30s, and echoes at intervals throughout his life. In America in 1947, an Ordnance Survey map of Alston Moor hung on the wall of Auden’s chaotic shack on Fire Island.

According to his brother John, Auden came to love Alston Moor more than any other place. The poem entitled ’Alston Moor’ dates from 1924, as does ’Allendale’.

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