Loweswater is a scattered village. The Church of St Bartholomew’s and the Kirkstile Inn are close by each other, both with stunning views. The Church was renovated and made much larger in 1884. This was due to some lead mines being opened in the area and it was thought that the population would increase. Unfortunately the mines did not produce enough lead and the venture failed. The Kirkstile Inn was originally a working farm and its origins are in the 1600s. As an Inn, it used to be known as The Hare and Hounds. The Inn always had a close association with the Melbreak Hunt. It was the venue for the opening meet in October and on New Year’s Day. The Hunt was always very popular with the farmers. The Kirkstile Inn is now very much patronised by climbers, walkers and tourists.
Scale Hill Hotel in Brackenthwaite is just across the bridge over the River Cocker, and, in fact, situated within Buttermere Civil Parish. It has closer ties with Loweswater than with Buttermere, and began as a farm before it developed into an Inn. With the birth of tourism in the Lakes in the late 1700s, Scalehill soon became a popular place for tourists travelling by horse and carriage to stop on their tour from Keswick to Buttermere and Loweswater, before continuing through Lorton Vale to Lorton village. It was developed over time into a hotel. It was always very popular with Americans and people who sought quiet and solitude. In more recent times, the author Arthur Ransome was a regular visitor, as were Joyce Grenfell the entertainer and her husband. The hotel kept boats for the use of guests on Crummock.
The Loweswater and Brackenthwaite Agricultural Society was established in 1870, its first Secretary being William Coates Hope of Cornhow. Traditionally, it was one of the most popular agricultural shows in the district. It used to be held on the third Thursday of September and for many years was held at Godferhead. From 1888, records show that the school children were allowed to take the day off from school so they could attend the show with their parents. In the earlier part of the twentieth century, people came from Keswick by pony and trap and many stopped on their return at the Scalehill Hotel for tea, before continuing on their homeward journey. There were no shows during the two World Wars.
James Coulthard (1852-1948) is recorded in Bulmers Directory of 1901 as running the Post Office in Gillerthwaite. It was located in the living room in his home. He was also gardener and coach driver at Foulsyke for the Robinson family. When telephone wires came to the area, the public telephone was in a kiosk in the house, for some time being the only one in Loweswater. After he retired, one of Coulthard’s daughters, Ada, continued running the post office for a number of years until the late 1940s. The Post Office then moved to Palace How while the Cholmley family were there, and it then moved to Thrush Bank. It closed in the 1950s, Loweswater people then being obliged to go to Lorton Post Office.
The Rev’d Mr and Mrs Irwin and their daughters Mona and Dorrie (1894-1989) lived at High Park. The family had moved to Loweswater after Irwin retired as vicar of Buttermere sometime in the late 1920s/early 1930s. Following the deaths of her husband and daughter Mona, Mrs Irwin and Dorrie continued living at High Park. Dorrie played the organ at Loweswater church, her mother having played the organ in Buttermere church for fifty years. They were an eccentric pair, living as recluses. They used to gather sheeps’ wool from hedgerows and take it home to spin. They then wove the undyed wool into clothes. They would go to Loweswater school and teach the children how to spin. After Mrs Irwin died, Dorrie continued to live at High Park in one room with no electricity. She relied on oil lamps and a paraffin stove. Allegedly, few if any repairs to the house were ever carried out, there were holes in the roof, one of them being directly over Dorrie’s bed. She refused to have it mended, so kept an umbrella permanently above the bed. [Sources of Information: Tales of a Lakeland Valley, Loweswater by Sheila Richardson and Pat Evans and local oral history]
The Rev’d Geoffrey Howard White (1910-1990) was vicar at Loweswater for 28 years. He was quite an eccentric character but very well liked. At the beginning of the Second World War, Geoffrey became an Army chaplain with the 4th Buffs. Within months, he was captured in the retreat to Dunkirk and spent the next five years as a Prisoner of War. in four different camps. After the War was over, he was briefly sent as Chaplain to Carlisle Castle, where, he arrived in a very poor state of health and mind. However, he was discharged from the Army as unfit and was offered the living at Loweswater by the Bishop of Carlisle.
Geoffrey was determined to get to know everyone and to play as active a part as he could in the social life of the parish. He quickly discovered the “centre” of the parish, as far as entertainment went was, was an old Army (Nissen) hut which was in a hollow on the hill above the vicarage. Whist-drives, dances, concerts and all kinds of meetings took place there, and films where shown too. Six weeks after Geoffrey’s arrival, the WI called a meeting in the Nissen hut with a view to forming a Dramatic Society. Twelve people turned up and the drama group was formed. Geoffrey acted in and produced plays for this group, first under the auspices of the WI, and then as an independent entity until 1971. In the early days, stage lighting consisted of candles placed in polished biscuit tins. [Sources of information: “A Dash of White”, the memoir of the Reverend Geoffrey Howard White, and local oral source]
The Revd Mark Turner was a young evacuee in Loweswater during the Second World War. He has written:
“My mother, Constance Turner (nee Haythornthwaite – a Cumbrian family who came from Rowrah), evacuated from Oxford during the War, in about 1940. We moved initially to Godferhead farmhouse, where we stayed for a number of months. I remember being very small and walking up the stairs with a candle to our bedroom where there was a small rag carpet on the floor by the bed and the bed was heated by a ceramic flask hotwater bottle. We used to call them tanks and had to move them around the bed with our toes to get the bed warm. One day I was in the farm yard and, not knowing what I was doing, unlatched the door where the Rawlings kept their bull. Luckily he did not realise the door was open!
Later we moved to Low Park, where Beth Alexander owned a small cottage across the farm yard and where we stayed for the rest of the war. Beth was a Quaker and a lovely friendly and hospitable person who used to bake lovely cakes. My brother, Christopher Turner, was old enough to go to the school above the Kirkstile Inn. There he learnt to speak in the Cumbrian accent among other things, which was difficult when we returned to Oxford after the war as no one understood what he was saying!”
The school at Loweswater was built at the end of the 1830s, and closed in 1984. There was one class room with a kitchen and cloakroom. One pupil who was at the school during the 1940s remembers the Headmistress, Mrs Alice James, living in the flat above the school. During the Second World War, the evacuee children staying in the area came with a teacher called Miss Rutherford and joined the school. There was not much play equipment at this time apart from bean bags, hoops and skipping ropes. For P.E. the children would walk, skip, and run around the play area. A bean bag was hung from the lower branch of a tree and when they reached it, they had to jump up and touch it. Other activities in school breaks would be hopscotch, marbles and conkers in the autumn. After the school closed in 1984, the premises became the new Village Hall.
During World War Two, members of the Home Guard in Loweswater were responsible for keeping a watch on Crummock Water. It was thought that a sea plane could easily land on it.
Low Park Farm is a very old farm, originally dating back to the 1500s. This farm, and other farms close by situated on the North West side of Crummock Water, were formerly owned by Workington Water Board. In 1932/4 the farmers were stopped from farming for fear of contamination to the lake. The farming families left, the family from Low Park emigrating to Australia. However, the land was subsequently let out to other farmers who were allowed to keep stock on it, and the various farm houses in the area were let to non-farming people, Workington Water Board refusing to sell any properties on the basis that it would require an Act of Parliament to enable them to do so. In the mid 1970s, the Manchester Water Board took over Workington Water Board and put the properties up for sale. The National Trust is now a significant landowner in Loweswater. The Warden’s House is next to Watergate Farm at the southern end of the lake.
Written by Fiona Lambrick