Tebay

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Tebay
Tebay (Cumbria)
Tebay

Tebay shown within Cumbria
OS grid reference NY618045
Shire county Cumbria
Region North West
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Police Cumbria
Fire Cumbria
Ambulance North West
European Parliament North West England
List of places: UKEnglandCumbria

Coordinates: 54°26′05″N 2°35′24″W / 54.43473, -2.59005

Tebay is a village in Cumbria, England, within the traditional borders of Westmorland. It is a small village of less than 1,000, lying in the upper Lune Valley, at the head of the Lune Gorge.

Old Tebay lies to the north of Tebay at grid reference NY618052. Historically a sheep farming area, the arrival of the railway led to increased prosperity.

Contents

[edit] Transport

[edit] Railways

Railway cottages, Tebay
Railway cottages, Tebay

The Lancaster and Carlisle Railway, built in 1844, linked those two cities; it was absorbed by the London and North Western Railway in 1879. Tebay became an important junction for, in 1861, the Stainmore Railway, from Tebay-Kirkby Stephen-Barnard Castle and later becoming part of the North Eastern Railway, brought traffic from the east; it was closed in 1962. The A685 runs over much of its trackbed east from Tebay towards Kirkby Stephen. The Little North Western Railway connecting via the Midland Railway to Settle and Leeds, enters the main line at the south end of the Lune Gorge; it was built in the 1850s, and was last used for passengers in the winter 1962/63 as a relief to the main line.

The village has had two railway accidents happen nearby. On 15 February 2004, four people were runover by a maintenance vehicle in the Tebay rail accident. Three years later, the Grayrigg rail crash happened on 23 February 2007 between Oxenholme and Tebay on the West Coast Main Line.

[edit] Roads

Tebay Services
Tebay Services

Junction 38 of the M6 lies just west of the village, south of the notoriously exposed Shap Summit. Like its predecessor, the main railway line, it uses the upper reaches of the River Lune to pass through the fells. Tebay services is one of the very few motorway service stations to be run independently, and has often won praise for its food.

[edit] The village

Central to the village is the Railway Club. This provides a concrete link to the past raison d'etre of the village. The two pubs in the village also provide a place where the inhabitants can come together. In times past a great proportion of populace was involved with the railway and the local Junction Hotel is now apartments where once were dance halls.

[edit] See also


North: Orton, Eden
West: Greenholme Tebay East: Kirkby Stephen
South: Sedbergh

[edit] External links


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