Contributors: Amy Lax, Ian Goodall, Mark Bowden and Christopher Dunn, with other contributions by Keith Blood, Keith Falconer and Colin Lofthouse.
E-book (PDF) published 2012.
Furness and the neighbouring parts of southern and western Cumbria had a lively and significant iron industry in the 18th and 19th centuries, growing out of a tradition of ironworking stretching back to the medieval period and probably much earlier. Unlike the similar iron-rich regions of the Weald and the Forest of Dean, Furness has not received the attention it deserves as a cradle of this vital industry. The physical remains of the iron industry and its supporting woodland industries, surviving both as standing buildings and as archaeological field monuments, are widespread in the fells of High Furness and the lowlands of the Furness peninsula, and in many cases they are very well preserved. The Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England - now merged with English Heritage - has compiled a record of the best preserved and most representative of these buildings, sites and landscapes, using aerial photography, ground photography and detailed analytical survey. This book is a synthesis of the results of that survey, which will, it is hoped, form a stepping stone to further archaeological and historical research. It is also intended to raise the profile of these important remains both locally and further afield. It will be of particular value to all those interested in the history of the Lake District, in industrial archaeology, and in the preservation of the industrial heritage and its landscape context.
Author(s): Mark Bowden (ed.)
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 2000
Language: English
Pages: X+92
City: Swindon
Illustrations 6
Acknowledgements vii
Summary viii
1. Introduction 1
2. Raw Materials 12
3. Processes 34
4. Prospect 75
Endmatter
Appendix: Management and conservation of woodland and related archaeological sites 80
List of References 82
Index 85