Land Girl - The Happiest Years of My Early Life

A Memoir of Service in the Women's Land Army 1939-46

  • Home
  • Acknowledgements
  • Contact Me
  • Blog

Appendix – The Bowland Fells

February 7, 2014 By LG-Admin Leave a Comment

Appendix

The Bowland Fells

The Bowland Fells are in north east Lancashire butting the Pennines and the Yorkshire Dales to the east. Marshaw was at the westerly extremity. They are areas of isolated, desolate, diverse and unspoiled high heather peat bog and moor laid on gritstone, often cloud covered and rising to nearly 1600’, with sharp cut steeply falling cloughs in the fell sides, deep valleys, small rivers and winding becks in their bottoms, a habitat for rare birds. Human occupation has made little mark on this country. That such wild country is in Lancashire might surprise some.

Today Bowland is the only remaining part of the north western wilderness that in ancient times covered a huge area of central England. The limits of this forest where mapped out in the North by taking in the Forest of Bowland, south to Nottingham Forest, further south the New Forest, Hampshire, touching the English Channel, and finally west to Savernake Forest in Wiltshire. The Trough of Bowland however, is but a minor part of the greater Forest of Bowland, and comprises the valley and high pass between Marshaw and Dunsop Bridge. Its effect is to divide the upland core into two main areas, north to the Scottish Border country and south, that is in turn divided by the broad Valley of the River Ribble in which part Pendle Hill is a significant feature. Lancashire cotton mill towns are found beyond in narrower valleys. Bowland and those areas surrounding it have figured in much of Lancashire, Yorkshire and English history, and the rivalries between the two counties, from very early years.

The term “forest” here is applied in the historical sense, an area typically owned by royalty that was partly wooded and kept for hunting, sometimes with its own laws. Where, Kings and Queens of bygone years and their followers sported for wild boar, deer, wolves, wild cats and game. The Crown retains its hold today with much of the this land held within the Duchy of Lancaster. Today sport is restricted to game. By its very nature the land is unsuited to agriculture even though England in the Second World War tried to extract crops through arable farming as I am testament to with my work at Marshaw. But, the best use hill sheep farming which was the principal income for Marshaw. At home on the fells is the long lived Lonk breed first seen with monks at the Cistercian Abbeys founded in the 1100’s at Whalley and Sawley, in the Ribble Valley, who kept flocks of these sheep.

The Trough’s unique characteristics and natural beauty, led to its protection from harmful development through designation as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Parts of the heather moorland and blanket bog too are designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest and are similarly protected. The extensive heather moorlands are a vital habitat for upland birds, and so Special Protection Areas under the European Birds Directive.

Even in present times it remains sparsely populated; and those who lived there earlier did so on remote farms and cottages or in small clusters of houses along the valley bottoms finding employment on the land. With the changing times many of those dwellings and buildings have gone out of agricultural occupation and use as have both Greenbank Farm, Marshaw and areas of Over Wyresdale. The M6 makes homes in these areas attractive due to the ease of commuting access to Preston and Lancaster so agricultural properties like the ones I worked are are sold off and areas “gentrified.”

Filed Under: Appendix Tagged With: abbey, bog, forest, gentrified, hunting, Lancashire, moor, peat, Pennines, royalty, sheep, The Bowland Fells, Trough of Bowland, Yorkshire Dales

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About Me

Proud member of the Women's Land Army, Jeanne Flann, nee Harlow, here. Happily retired in Utah after a full and satisfying life that got off to a great start working as a Land Girl in the Trough of Bowland, you can read more about me.

Follow Me

  • Facebook
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Book Outline

  • Introduction
  • Part One
    • Chapter 1 – Prologue, the Sullivans, the Harlows and My Childhood
    • Chapter 2 – Joining Up – The Women’s Land Army
    • Chapter 3 – Lancashire College of Agriculture at Hutton
  • Part Two
    • Chapter 4 – Lower Greenbank Farm Over Wyresdale
    • Chapter 5 – Holt Farm Gateacre – Tragedy & Deliverance
    • Chapter 6 – Marshaw, The Trough of Bowland Fells
  • Part Three
    • Chapter 7 – Epilogue
    • Chapter 8 – Recognition at Last
  • Appendix

All Sections

  • Finished for Now – Land Girls.Me a Memoir
  • Welcome to Land Girls
  • Appendix – The Bowland Fells
  • Recognition at Last For Land Girls
  • Epilogue – Life After Being a Land Girl in the WLA
  • Last and Best Assignment as a Land Girl: Marshaw – The Trough of Bowland
  • Second Assignment as a Land Girl: Holt Hall Farm, Liverpool – Tragedy and Deliverance
  • First Assignment as a Land Girl: Lower Greenbank Farm, Over Wyresdale

Land Girls Memoirs and Other Memoirs

In the two step process of creating a paper memoir and now converting it into a web based one, it is my hope that my memoir, Land Girl - The Happiest Years of Early Childhood joins other Land Girl memoirs as a member of that genre, and contributes to it.

My husband has his own memoir through the same process as mine, paper memoir first, then website GunnerFlann.com. He too hopes his memoir contributes to the National Service Memoirs genre.

Please let us know if you agree contact me.

Recent Posts From the Blog

  • Finished for Now – Land Girls.Me a Memoir
  • Welcome to Land Girls
  • Appendix – The Bowland Fells

Popular Tags

21st birthday abbey bog books church civilian employers clipping time conscription daily routine dances disbanding distractions Facebook forest Friesian cows gentrified haymaking hunting hunting parties lambing Lancashire Land Girl Land Girls Land Girls Memoir Liverpool Lonk Memoir moor movies Parade peat Pigs Queen recognition recreation repairing stone walls royalty sheep sheepdogs trips to market Trough of Bowland Twitter Veronica WLA Women's Land Army

Find It Here

Copyright © 2025 ·Landgirls · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress · Log in