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- Bardsea abstract "Bardsea is a village in the Low Furness area of Cumbria, England. It is two miles to the south-east of Ulverston on the northern coast of Morecambe Bay. It lies within the historic borders of Lancashire. Bardsea, or Berretseige, is mentioned in the Domesday Book as one of the townships forming the Manor of Hougun held by Earl Tostig. Also once part of the medieval manor of Muchland.Bardsea was a small farming and fishing village well into the 19th century. It was accessed mainly by crossing the treacherous sands of Morecambe Bay. The church of Holy Trinity was consecrated in 1853: previously the area had been included within the parish of Urswick.The area was also associated with the early Quaker movement; when founder George Fox married local landowner Margaret Fell, he took over Swarthmoor Hall and much of the land round Bardsea. There is an old Quaker burial ground nearby at Sunbrick on Birkrigg Common, where Margaret Fell was reputedly buried in 1702 (one authority suggests she was interred at the burial ground at Swarthmoor, although this is contradicted by other sources). George Fox himself was buried in London.When iron ore mining and production led to industrialization in Furness, Bardsea became an important port, with steamers leaving for Fleetwood and Liverpool. This was short-lived, however, with the Furness Railway and Ulverston Canal taking business away from the village by the late end of the Victorian period.Bardsea currently has two public houses, the Ship Inn [1] a farm in 1750 and the Braddylls Arms, originally a coaching house dating back to the 18th century. Braddyll is a family name of landowners who traded in coal and iron ore.Bardsea also has a converted Malt Kiln, dated 1829 and once part of the Well Wood estate, which is now used as a village hall. The Hartley family bought the hall and set up a trust deed in memory of local men who were killed in the war, handing over the malt Kiln to the community.[2]Nearby locations of interest are the common with prehistoric Birkrigg stone circle, Sea Wood [3] which once belonged to Lady Jane Grey, the Manjushri Centre at Conishead Priory and Chapel Island used as a sanctuary when crossing the sands.".
- Bardsea thumbnail Bardsea_From_Birkrigg.JPG?width=300.
- Bardsea wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Bardsea wikiPageExternalLink index.
- Bardsea wikiPageExternalLink description.asp.
- Bardsea wikiPageID "2737525".
- Bardsea wikiPageLength "3131".
- Bardsea wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Bardsea wikiPageRevisionID "643403646".
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Birkrigg_stone_circle.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Furness.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Morecambe_Bay.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Populated_coastal_places_in_Cumbria.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Villages_in_Cumbria.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Chapel_Island.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Conishead_Priory.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Cumbria.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Domesday_Book.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Earl_Tostig.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink File:Bardsea_From_Birkrigg.JPG.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Fleetwood.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Furness.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Furness_Railway.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink George_Fox.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Historic_counties_of_England.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Iron_ore.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Lady_Jane_Grey.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Lancashire.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Liverpool.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Margaret_Fell.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Morecambe_Bay.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Muchland.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Quakers.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Religious_Society_of_Friends.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Sunbrick.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Swarthmoor_Hall.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Tostig_Godwinson.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Ulverston.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Ulverston_Canal.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Urswick.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Victorian_era.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink Victorian_period.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLink File:CowpScarMusselBed(RogerTemple)Nov2007.jpg.
- Bardsea wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bardsea".
- Bardsea hasPhotoCollection Bardsea.
- Bardsea wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Bardsea wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Bardsea wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cumbria-geo-stub.
- Bardsea wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:OpenDomesday.
- Bardsea wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Bardsea subject Category:Furness.
- Bardsea subject Category:Morecambe_Bay.
- Bardsea subject Category:Populated_coastal_places_in_Cumbria.
- Bardsea subject Category:Villages_in_Cumbria.
- Bardsea hypernym Village.
- Bardsea point "54.15 -3.066666666666667".
- Bardsea type Place.
- Bardsea type PopulatedPlace.
- Bardsea type Village.
- Bardsea type Place.
- Bardsea type Village.
- Bardsea type Location.
- Bardsea type Place.
- Bardsea type Thing.
- Bardsea type SpatialThing.
- Bardsea type Q486972.
- Bardsea comment "Bardsea is a village in the Low Furness area of Cumbria, England. It is two miles to the south-east of Ulverston on the northern coast of Morecambe Bay. It lies within the historic borders of Lancashire. Bardsea, or Berretseige, is mentioned in the Domesday Book as one of the townships forming the Manor of Hougun held by Earl Tostig. Also once part of the medieval manor of Muchland.Bardsea was a small farming and fishing village well into the 19th century.".
- Bardsea label "Bardsea".
- Bardsea sameAs Bardsea.
- Bardsea sameAs Bardsea.
- Bardsea sameAs m.07__sy.
- Bardsea sameAs 2656356.
- Bardsea sameAs Q4860220.
- Bardsea sameAs Q4860220.
- Bardsea lat "54.15".
- Bardsea long "-3.066666666666667".
- Bardsea wasDerivedFrom Bardsea?oldid=643403646.
- Bardsea depiction Bardsea_From_Birkrigg.JPG.
- Bardsea isPrimaryTopicOf Bardsea.