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High Street (Lake District)

High Street
High Street and Small Water from Harter Fell.jpg
High Street seen from Harter Fell with
Small Water in the foreground
Highest point
Elevation 828 m (2,717 ft)
Prominence 373 m (1,224 ft)
Parent peak Helvellyn
Listing Marilyn, Hewitt, Wainwright, Nuttall
Coordinates 54°29′31″N 2°51′54″W / 54.492°N 2.865°W / 54.492; -2.865Coordinates: 54°29′31″N 2°51′54″W / 54.492°N 2.865°W / 54.492; -2.865
Geography
High Street is located in Lake District
High Street
High Street
Location in Lake District, UK
Location Cumbria, England
Parent range Lake District, Far Eastern Fells
OS grid NY440110
Topo map OS Explorer OL5

High Street /h strt/ is a fell in the English Lake District. At 828 metres (2,718 ft), its summit is the highest point in the far eastern part of the national park. The fell is named after the Roman road which ran over the summit.

The Roman road crosses the fell on its journey between the forts at Brougham (Brocavum) near Penrith and at Ambleside (Galava). Situated in one of the quieter areas of the Lakes, the High Street range has quite gentle slopes with a flat summit plateau. It was these characteristics which persuaded Roman surveyors to build their road over the fell tops rather than through the valleys which, at the time, were densely forested and marshy thus making them susceptible to ambushes.

The fell's flat summit was also used as a venue for summer fairs by the local population in the 18th and 19th centuries. People from the surrounding valleys would gather every year on 12 July to return stray sheep to their owners; games and wrestling would also take place as well as horse racing. The summit of High Street is still known as Racecourse Hill and is so named on maps, and fell ponies can be found grazing occasionally on its summit. The last of the summer fairs was held in 1835.

The River Kent, which flows south through the town of Kendal before emptying into Morecambe Bay, has its source on High Street's southern slopes. Dropping 300 m in 40 km (1000 feet in 25 miles), the Kent is reputed to be the fastest-flowing river in England.


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Wikipedia

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