Anglezarke is an area of oustanding national beauty in Lancashire that is dominated by a series of reservoirs that supply water to Manchester and Liverpool. Lancashire (archaically, the County of Lancaster) is a county palatine of England, lying on the Irish Sea. ... Manchester is a city in the north-west of England. ... Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough on Merseyside in north west England, on the north side of the Mersey estuary. ...
The area sits on the edge of the Pennines in Lancashire and is close to to the town of Chorley. Typical Pennine scenery. ... Lancashire (archaically, the County of Lancaster) is a county palatine of England, lying on the Irish Sea. ... Chorley is a market town in Lancashire, England, south of Preston. ...
The area of Anglezarke and Rivington was also the location of the 2002Commonwealth GamesMountain Biking competition. 2002 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ... The Commonwealth Games is a multi-sport event held every four years involving the elite athletes of The Commonwealth. ... Mountain biking is an exciting sport that involves riding bicycles anywhere off paved roads. ...
Anglezarke itself is most wel known as a popular rock climbing destination for local climbers and is included in the guidebook Lancashire Rock published by the British Mountaineering Council Climbers on Valkyrie at the Roaches. ... The British Mountaineering Council (or BMC) is the national representative body of the UK that exists to protect the freedoms and promote the interests of climbers, hillwalkers and mountaineers, including ski-mountaineers. ...
Anglezarke is an area of oustanding national beauty in Lancashire that is dominated by a series of reservoirs that supply water to Manchester and Liverpool.
The area sits on the edge of the Pennines in Lancashire and is close to to the town of Chorley.
Anglezarke itself is most wel known as a popular rock climbing destination for local climbers and is included in the guidebook Lancashire Rock published by the British Mountaineering Council
The view, one presumes, would hardly have compensated for inaccessibility to A.S., although she could have hung a sheet at a window as a signal to be seen from Duxbury.
It was beyond the ancient boundaries of Anglezarke, so was presumably the Manor House in Healey (although Healey was not a manor but part of Heapey) and therefore not the house lived in by Countess Alice, although this cannot have been far away.
A re-perusal of the earliest estate maps of Anglezarke in the Lancashire Record Office might allow a future identification of her house, which I strongly suspect might have been on the site of The Cliffs, with the latest version still there today.