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Helmshore

Helmshore
The White Horse, Helmshore - geograph.org.uk - 918518.jpg
The White Horse public house, Helmshore
Helmshore is located in Lancashire
Helmshore
Helmshore
Helmshore shown within Lancashire
Population 5,805 (2011.Ward)
OS grid reference SD782212
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town ROSSENDALE
Postcode district BB4
Dialling code 01706
Police Lancashire
Fire Lancashire
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Lancashire
53°41′13″N 2°19′44″W / 53.687°N 2.329°W / 53.687; -2.329Coordinates: 53°41′13″N 2°19′44″W / 53.687°N 2.329°W / 53.687; -2.329
Helmshore rail accident
Date 4 September 1860
Location Helmshore, Lancashire
Country England
Rail line Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Cause split train
Statistics
Trains 2
Deaths 11
List of UK rail accidents by year

Helmshore is a village in the Rossendale Valley, Lancashire, England. It is situated south of Haslingden, broadly between the A56 and the B6235, approximately 16 miles north of Manchester. The ward population taken at the 2011 census was 5,805.

Helmshore is part of the Rossendale and Darwen constituency. Jake Berry has been the Member of Parliament for Rossendale and Darwen since 2010.

The area around Helmshore is moorland. Post-Ice Age this would have been forested and bog oak can still be found on the flat peatland tops over 250 metres high. The forest declined in the Neolithic period, and largely disappeared during the Bronze Age, mainly as a result of climatic change although hastened by human activity. There is some evidence of human habitation in the area during the Neolithic period - stone implements found on Bull Hill and at Musbury valley, and the stones at Thirteen Stone Hill near Grane, and there are a relatively complex network of both local and long distance old tracks crossing the area.

The village is dominated by the spectacular flat-topped Musbury Tor, once the centre of the medieval hunting park, or Forest. Either side of the Tor are two valleys: Alden valley in the south-west and Musbury valley to the North-west. The 'whole land of Musbury' was granted to John de Lacy (before 1241) by Lewis de Bernavill. A licence for a 'free warren' was granted to the Earl of Lincoln in 1294. Work on fencing the Park was completed by 1304-5, with palings being erected. The park, with its 'herbage and agistments' was said to be worth 13s. 4d. in 1311. In 1329 and 1330 it is described as 'Queen Isabel's park of Musbury', and fines were being applied for trespass to, among others, the rector of Bury. Stretches of the ditch enclosure are clearly visible at Grane and Alden valleys, and deer are still occasionally seen in the area. There are several current place names identifying the Park.


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