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Nostalgia aint what it used to be... The "I remember when......." section is finally with us - lets reminisce! |
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Welcome to Accrington Web!
We are a discussion forum dedicated to the towns of Accrington, Oswaldtwistle and the surrounding areas, sometimes referred to as Hyndburn! We are a friendly bunch please feel free to browse or read on for more info. You are currently viewing our site as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, photos, play in the community arcade and use our blog section. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please, join our community today!
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30-05-2008, 00:25
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#16
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: TASMANIA
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Re: Hacking boat
Used to love Whalley in the 50s & 60s. The dog Inn, The Swan, . My aunt Mary & uncle Herbet had a cabin at Hacking Boat, some happy memories there. Worked at Brockhall & went down to the river quit regular, good place to take the nurses in the summer. Ahh the memoris.
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30-05-2008, 07:14
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#17
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: at work [again]
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Re: Hacking boat
Remember my gran used to talk about going there
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09-10-2008, 11:31
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#18
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Junior Member+
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Melbourne, Australia
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Re: Hacking boat
Spent my youth there. lived a Brockhall. 2 of my friends drowned there when i was 18. found the boys bodys where the ribble joined the calder aparently the 2 rivers meeting causes a trench at the bottom once pulled down you can not go up against the water pushing down, or so the police diver said. there used to be a boat there before my time i found the old mooring posts about 200mt down from the ribble/calder join. As a boy i swam to the other side and found the oars in an old barn. firther back from the water was an old farn house that sheep lived in from time to time. there i found the origional boat. about that time i got chased off as it is was a private estate. maybe the old boat is still there. as i remember it was about 15ft to 20 ft covered in tar and needed 4 oars.
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16-10-2008, 16:00
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#19
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Full Member+
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Morecambe
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Re: Hacking boat
I remember the suspension bridge down the side of the Tanners Arms, it got washed away years ago, did they replace it?
Quote:
2 rivers meeting causes a trench at the bottom once pulled down you can
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There has been a whirlpool there for as long as I can remember. I think the area is called Sale Wheel Wood, between Ribchester and Dinkley. You used to be able to see the river from the woods but don't know if you still can. The trees were covering the view years ago.
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28-11-2008, 15:49
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#20
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Resting In Peace
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 497
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Re: Hacking boat
we don't get the summers like we used to,the weather is against us for picnics at our favourite spots.
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05-12-2008, 02:06
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#21
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Junior Member+
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Melbourne, Australia
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Re: Hacking boat
Quote:
Originally Posted by Morecambe Ex Pat
I remember the suspension bridge down the side of the Tanners Arms, it got washed away years ago, did they replace it?
There has been a whirlpool there for as long as I can remember. I think the area is called Sale Wheel Wood, between Ribchester and Dinkley. You used to be able to see the river from the woods but don't know if you still can. The trees were covering the view years ago.
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The suspention bridge near the Tanners is at Dinkly a couple of miles down streem. I remember a couple of times when a patient of brockhall escaped and tried to swim the river. my dad and others used to go down to the suspention bridge a day or so later because they expected the body to get stuck on the rocks, it usually did.
There is no visable whirlpool where the Calder meets the Ribble (the spot i am talking about) just lots of under tow. OK if you swim on the top but if you dive down you may not come up.
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20-10-2009, 06:57
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#22
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Launceston, Tasmania
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Re: Hacking boat
Sally's cafe back in the 50's!! mushy peas!-all after a day at Hacking boat where, at the Hall, you could get a basket with mugs, pot of tea etc. the Green Punt would take you over the water for2d. EW.
Other great swimming places were West Bradford bend, Mytton & Brungerly bridge
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20-10-2009, 07:12
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#23
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Launceston, Tasmania
Posts: 2
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Re: Hacking boat
I have old colour photos of Hacking hall & boat-- How do I upload them?
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20-10-2009, 15:08
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#24
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Resting in Peace
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Clayton-le-Moors
Posts: 10,551
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Re: Hacking boat
Quote:
Originally Posted by wiggy
I have old colour photos of Hacking hall & boat-- How do I upload them?
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There are instructions here Wiggy ... to be honest I just hit the attachments button above this window .. it brings up the browse window .. and go from there, as per Len's instructions.
http://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f...ples-4719.html
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20-10-2009, 17:50
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#25
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Senior Member+
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: ACCRINGTON
Posts: 2,358
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Re: Hacking boat
This is off t'internet...."Dinckley is Celtic in origin and the name means 'fort of the wood'. It is positioned off the beaten track and is unspoiled making it ideal for delightful walks including through Sale Wheel Woods to the Old Dinckley Ferry which has now been replaced by a low level suspension bridge. The Old Hacking Boat House is a reminder of when the ferryman would transport travellers across the river (The Boat is now in Clitheroe Museum). Hacking Hall Stands on the opposite bank built by Thomas Livesey in 1607 and the riverside can see part of the ferryboat’s jetty. The front of the Hall has 14 sets of mullioned windows and a public car park can be found here".
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01-11-2009, 18:48
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#26
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Full Member+
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Wherever I rest my head.
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Re: Hacking boat
Quote:
Originally Posted by arthur bithell
Spent my youth there. lived a Brockhall. 2 of my friends drowned there when i was 18. found the boys bodys where the ribble joined the calder aparently the 2 rivers meeting causes a trench at the bottom once pulled down you can not go up against the water pushing down, or so the police diver said. there used to be a boat there before my time i found the old mooring posts about 200mt down from the ribble/calder join. As a boy i swam to the other side and found the oars in an old barn. firther back from the water was an old farn house that sheep lived in from time to time. there i found the origional boat. about that time i got chased off as it is was a private estate. maybe the old boat is still there. as i remember it was about 15ft to 20 ft covered in tar and needed 4 oars.
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My maternal grandparents' were tenant farmers at Dinckley in the 1930's and my late mother often related to the 'Dinckley Ferry' which operated between Dinckley and the river bridge at Ribchester. The ferry vessel was known locally as the 'Hacking Boat' for whatever reason and the name apparently stuck to the area in which it plied it's trade - or so I was led to believe.
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01-11-2009, 21:07
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#27
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God Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: uʍopǝpısdn
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Re: Hacking boat
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stumped
The ferry vessel was known locally as the 'Hacking Boat' for whatever reason and the name apparently stuck to the area in which it plied it's trade - or so I was led to believe.
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The farm was owned by the Hacking family, thats as much as I know about it
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02-11-2009, 17:25
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#28
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Junior Member+
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Accrington
Posts: 25
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Re: Hacking boat
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stumped
The ferry vessel was known locally as the 'Hacking Boat' for whatever reason and the name apparently stuck to the area in which it plied it's trade - or so I was led to believe.
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The land was owned by the del Hacking family from at least 1200, and may have been known in those days as Hacking or land of Hacking.
Bernard de Hacking gave his estate to his son William in 1328. The land then passed to the Shuttleworth family when his only daughter Agnes married Henry Shuttleworth.
It again passed through marriage when Anne Shuttleworth, the sole heir of Robert Shuttlworth married Sir Thomas Walmsley, who built the house in 1607.
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08-05-2011, 14:46
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#29
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Chaddesden, Derby
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Re: Hacking boat
According to an article in the Lancashire Evening Telegraph, 5 July 1993, the ferry ran from 1686 to the mid-50s. It was a flat bottomed boat with seats round the sides. Mr Michael Jackson, a former Ribble Valley Council chief executive discovered it decaying in a barn while out rambling and had it restored. It was on display at the Clitheroe Castle Museum but took up to much space and is now in the possession of the Ribble Valley Borough Council. Standing on the Billington side of the river you had to shout for the farmer or his wife to ferry you across the Ribble, where it joins the Calder, for a few coppers. It is reputed that dogs were sometimes left to swim across to avoid payment. A long chain acted as an anchor
Last edited by Bryn; 08-05-2011 at 14:48.
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08-05-2011, 18:01
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#30
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Senior Member+
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: ACCRINGTON
Posts: 2,358
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Re: Hacking boat
Last edited by Atarah; 08-05-2011 at 18:06.
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