Rawtenstall in Lancashire

Rawtenstall is a Town in the county of Lancashire.

Rawtenstall in Lancashire is a typical English northern town boasting cobbled streets, stone architecture and dramatic landscape. Rawtenstall was mentioned in the Domesday Book and it also had connections with an important Roman road.

The town grew rapidly in the 19th century with people drawn by jobs in cotton mills and coal mining. The opening of two railway lines starting in 1846 aided its growth further, but its population started to decline after World War II due to out-migration towards larger cities, especially Manchester.

Today rawtenstall is a busy town and has become an important shopping centre in the south of Rossendale.

The area around Rawtenstall has been occupied since the end of the last ice age with evidence of pre-historic activity, mainly in nearby Trawden Forest. There are remains of settlements dating back to AD 43 when it was part of Roman Britain.

Moorland Around Rawtenstall

The North West of England is an area characterised by high moorland. The rawtenstall area is no exception, with the Trawden Forest bordering rawtenstall to the South. The moors are mainly heather moorland used for grazing sheep, but there are areas where denuded peat soils are exposed and Rawtenstall’s raw land is a result of extensive mining in the 19th century.

Towns and Villages

Rawtenstall has several smaller towns and villages contained within its boundaries including Whitworth, Crawshawbooth, Newchurch, Edenfield and Helmshore. These have been subsumed into rawtenstall’s broad definition but maintain a sense of distinct identity.

The Railway and the River

Rawtenstall had two railway lines, one from Bury to Rawtenstall via Bacup and another from Manchester Victoria to Rawtenstall via Edenfield. Both opened in 1901 but Rawtenstall’s rail traffic declined over the decades with these railways finally closed down in 1970and 1960 respectively.

The Rawtenstall area was once a hive of industry with coal mining, cotton mills and other manufacturing activities. Rawtenstall itself had a woollen mill which used the waters from raw land to drive the looms. The town also has a history of silk production.

Rawtenstall postcode: BB4 6QS

Retail in Rawtenstall

There are great places to visit near Rawtenstall including some great towns, villages, parks, waterfalls, woodlands, rivers and streams, old mines, ruins, historic buildings, ancient sites, historic monuments, hiking areas, hills, round cairns, lakes, bluebell woods, geological features, gardens, country parks, nature reserves, historic sites, canals, roman sites, museums, caves, limestone pavements, sssis, beaches, attractions, shopping centres, cities and castles.

The area around Rawtenstall boasts some of the best towns including Darwen, Chorley, Leyland, Nelson, Blackburn, Burnley, and Blackpool.

The area around Rawtenstall features a number of interesting villages including Ryal Fold, Tockholes, Brinscall, White Coppice, Heath Charnock, Higher Wheelton, and Ribchester.

Rawtenstall's best nearby parks can be found at Bold Venture Park, Sunnyhurst Wood, Astley Park, Worden Park, Cuerden Valley Country Park, and Ball Grove Park.

Waterfalls to visit near Rawtenstall include Bold Venture Waterfall, Sunnyhurst Waterfalls, Hatch Brook Waterfall, Holts Flat Waterfall, Lead Mines Clough Waterfall, Sheep Pen Waterfall, and Old Brooks Waterfall.

Don't miss Sunnyhurst Wood, Wheelton Plantation, High Bullough Wood, Back Plantation, Spen Wood, Duxbury Woods, and Longworth Clough's woodlands if visiting the area around Rawtenstall.

The area around Rawtenstall features a number of interesting rivers and streams including Sunnyhurst Brook, Hatch Brook, Dean Black Brook, Eller Brook, River Yarrow at Duxbury Woods, Ease Gill, and River Roddlesworth.

Don't miss Old Lyons Colliery (ruin), Lead Mines Clough Lead Mines, Coppice Stile Lead Mine Trial, White Coppice Lead Mine, Duxbury Park Colliery (ruin), Ellerbeck Collieries (ruin), and Sykes Mine's old mines if visiting the area around Rawtenstall.

Rawtenstall's best nearby ruins can be found at Old Lyons Colliery (ruin), Higher Pasture Barn (ruin), Ripping (ruin), Wheelton Plantation, Blackhurst (ruin), Heatherlea (ruin), and Shop Fold (ruin).

There are a number of historic buildings near Rawtenstall including Church of Saint Stephen at Tockholes, Astley Hall, Chorley Lodge, Belmont Paper Mills (Derelict), Blacko Tower, The Wishing Well at Hollinshead Hall, and Hoghton Tower.

The area around Rawtenstall features a number of interesting ancient sites including Church of Saint Stephen at Tockholes, The Quernmore Burial, Standing Stones Hill, Pikestones Chambered Long Cairn, Jepsons Gate Cairn, Black Coppice Chambered Cairn, and Dog Holes Cave.

Rawtenstall's best nearby historic monuments can be found at Jubilee Tower, Bevis and the Ruined Summerhouse, and Cromwell's Bridge.

Rawtenstall has some unmissable hiking areas nearby like Anglezarke, Lead Mines Clough, High Bullough Wood, Stronstrey Bank, Lister Mill Quarry, Great Hill, and White Coppice.

Rawtenstall's best nearby hills can be found at Standing Stones Hill, Great Hill, Healey Nab, Spitlers Edge, Will Narr, Warton Crag, and Parlick.

Jepsons Gate Cairn is a great place to visit close to Rawtenstall if you like round cairns.

There are a number of lakes near Rawtenstall including High Bullough Reservoir, Anglezarke Reservoir, White Coppice Mill Pond, Big Lodge Water, Top Lodge, The Blue Lagoon, and Lower Ogden Reservoir.

Rawtenstall's best nearby bluebell woods can be found at High Bullough Wood, Duxbury Woods, Hill Top Wood, Warton Crag, and Roddlesworth Woods.

Geological Features to visit near Rawtenstall include Stronstrey Bank, White Coppice Quarry, Warton Crag and Grisedale Wood Limestone Pavement, Sykes Mine, and The Great Stone of Fourstones.

The area around Rawtenstall features a number of interesting gardens including The Evaders' Garden, Astley Walled Garden, and Hoghton Tower.

Rawtenstall has some unmissable country parks nearby like Yarrow Valley Country Park, Worden Park, Cuerden Valley Country Park, Witton Country Park, Beacon Fell, Langroyd Country Park, and Wyre Estuary Country Park.

The area around Rawtenstall boasts some of the best nature reserves including Top Lodge, Longworth Clough, Leighton Moss, Brockholes Nature Reserve, Ball Grove Park, Upper Ball Grove Lodge, and Mere Sands Wood.

Don't miss Black Coppice Mill Stone Factory's historic sites if visiting the area around Rawtenstall.

There are a number of canals near Rawtenstall including Leeds and Liverpool Canal at Heath Charnock, Leeds and Liverpool Canal at Higher Wheelton, Leeds and Liverpool Canal - Summit to Wigan Section, Leeds and Liverpool Canal at Adlington, Lancaster Canal at Bolton-le-Sands, and Leeds and Liverpool Canal - Rufford Branch.

Don't miss Ribchester Roman Bath House, and Ribchester Roman Museum's roman sites if visiting the area around Rawtenstall.

Ribchester Roman Museum, The British Commercial Vehicle Museum, and Harris Museum - Art Gallery and Library Preston are some of Rawtenstall best museums to visit near Rawtenstall.

Dog Holes Cave, Fairy Hole, and County Pot are some of Rawtenstall best caves to visit near Rawtenstall.

The area around Rawtenstall's best limestone pavements can be found at Warton Crag and Grisedale Wood Limestone Pavement.

The area around Rawtenstall features a number of interesting sssis including Warton Crag S.S.S.I, and West Pennine Moors.

The area around Rawtenstall features a number of interesting beaches including Blackpool, Half Moon Bay, The Shore (Bolton-le-Sands), and Hest Bank Wharf.

Madame Tussauds Blackpool, The Big One, and Blackpool Pleasure Beach are some of Rawtenstall best attractions to visit near Rawtenstall.

Don't miss The Concourse Shopping Centre's shopping centres if visiting the area around Rawtenstall.

Preston, and Lancaster are great places to visit near Rawtenstall if you like cities.

Places near Rawtenstall feature a number of interesting castles including Clitheroe Castle.

Rawtenstall History

There are some historic monuments around Rawtenstall:

Places to see near Rawtenstall

History of Rawtenstall

As with many small mid-Lancashire towns, it saw a population decline in the 20th century, going from 30,000 inhabitants in the 1911 census to 21,500 in the 1971 census. With the decline of the traditional manufacturing industries, shoemaking became one of the last survivors. The firm of H. W. Tricketts, in nearby Waterfoot, had been a major producer and exporter of footwear across the British Empire, but eventually the last shoemaking firms closed as production moved overseas.

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Lakes near Rawtenstall

    Rivers near Rawtenstall

    Shopping in Rawtenstall

    Lidl Bacup Road, Wood Top

    Lidl supermarket

    M&S Foodhall A682, Wood Top

    M&S Foodhall supermarket

    Tesco Bury Road, Wood Top

    Tesco supermarket

    Where to Eat in Rawtenstall

    The Salt and Pepper Pots

    Brett Gregory is an award-winning filmmaker based in Bolton whose production company, Serious Feather, is currently making a documentary about autism and poetry.

    As a part of this production, Landscape Britain was asked to advise with regards to the location of specific areas of outstanding natural beauty throughout the region.

    Visit www.seriousfeather.com for further information.

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