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| Home > Tourist Pages > Villages > Dent |
Dent
Very reminiscent of somewhere like Mousehole in Cornwall, in that most
houses are painted stark white, and the village roads twist and wind,
and remain cobbled. It nestles amidst the soaring fells of the Yorkshire
Dales. The village is now in Cumbria. A spacious car park on the west of the village (About £2 per two
hours) enjoys a magnificent view and makes it easy to explore this fascinating
village on foot. Dent's most famous son, Adam Sedgwick, was one of Englands' greatest geologists, who attended Dent Grammar School, a tiny building adjoining the north side of the churchyard, and his father was Vicar of the 18th century church. First-floor spinning-galleries were once a feature of houses in Dent, used by women and girls of the households to spin yarn. The village gained a reputation in the 17th and 18th centuries for its thriving cottage industry of knitting, usually of simple garments like stockings, gloves, waistcoats and caps, carried out by all members of a family in order to supplement their meagre incomes. Dent women continued to knit, commercially, until late last century |
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