List of Cumbria-related topics

This is a list of articles related to the English county of Cumbria. See also the Category:Cumbria for links to the Cumbrian pages (e.g., towns, villages, railway stations, places of interest, people born in Cumbria, etc.)

People

See the category Cumbria below for people born in Cumbria. This lists people not native to Cumbria but who had connections with Cumbria.

Writers

  • William Wordsworth – England's most famous poet, born in Cockermouth, lived in Grasmere
  • John Ruskin – writer and conservationist – lived at Coniston
  • W. G. Collingwood – writer and secretary to John Ruskin
  • Arthur Ransome – writer of Swallows and Amazons
  • Robert Southey – Lakes Poet
  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge – Lakes poet
  • Hartley Coleridge – writer, and son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • Thomas de Quincey – associated with the Lake Poets
  • Beatrix Potter – children's author and conservationist
  • Hugh Walpole – author – lived at Keswick
  • Alfred Wainwright – guide book author – see List of Wainwrights
  • John Cunliffe – author of Postman Pat, an animated BBC series featuring a postman in the fictional village of Greendale (inspired by the real valley of Longsleddale in Cumbria). The author lived in Kendal.

Artists

Architects

Sport

Football

Rugby League

Natural materials

  • Graphite – used in the pencil making industry in Keswick. The graphite deposit found at Borrowdale was extremely pure and solid and it could easily be sawed into sticks. This was and remains the only deposit of graphite ever found in this solid form.
  • Gypsum – used in the Plasterboard industry
  • Coal – west coast mining industry, e.g. Haig Pit at Whitehaven
  • Haematite – west coast mining industry, e.g. Florence mine at Egremont
  • Anhydrite – found at Whitehaven, where it was used in the early manufacture of sulphuric acid, and at Kirkby Thore, where it is used in the Plaster industry
  • Slate is found at various locations throughout Cumbria, with the Honister slate mine at Borrowdale now a major tourist attraction
  • Lead was mined extensively in Nenthead from the 18th century until the early part of the 20th century

Industrial processes

Major employers

History

Other pages of interest