Main RoadCockermouth is a market town of some seven thousand inhabitants, which lies at the north western corner of the English Lake District. It dates from Norman times, and developed at the confluence of two rivers - the Derwent and Cocker. Much of the medieval street plan remains, and there are many features of historical interest. This lead to its inclusion in the 1965 list of 'gem towns', that was compiled by the Department of the Environment, recommending preservation by the State as part of the national heritage.

treesAs well as Wordsworth House, there are several other places of interest to the visitor. The Mineral Museum exhibits some of the finest mineral specimens in Northern England. The Museum of Printing has a varied and fascinating range of printing presses brought together from all over Britain. The Toy and Model Museum exhibits a wide selection of mainly British toys from 1900 to the present day. Jennings Brewery offers 1.5 hour tours around the Brewery, explaining the various processes involved in brewing traditional beer. The Bitter End is the only pub in Cumbria to have its own working brewery - 'Cumbria's Smallest Brewery', and is winner of the Lakeland branch of CAMRA's 'Pub of the Year'. At the nearby roundabout on the A66, is the Sheep and Wool Centre, where there is an opportunity to meet Cumbria's most famous residents, with 19 different breeds of live sheep giving the indoor presentation. also housed here is the Cumwest Exhibition, which gives an opportunity to discover why the Western Lakes and Coast is a very special part of Cumbria with its own distinctive character, history, landscape and culture.

HouseLying just outside the boundary of the Lake District National Park, Cockermouth is an attractive market town not overwhelmed by the tourist atmosphere of Keswick and Ambleside. Cockermouth grew up at the junction of the two most important rivers in the area. Here the River Cocker, flowing out of the lakes Buttermere, Crummock and Loweswater meets the River Derwent on its journey from lakes Derwent and Bassenthwaite to the sea at Workington. The Romans built the fort of Deventio at Papcastle, about a mile from the present town, at a meeting place of roads from Maryport, Carlisle and Penrith. Cockermouth Castle was built in the 13th century, but little of that remains because of the efforts of Robert the Bruce. The majority of today's ruins date from 1360 to 1370, though there have been some modern additions. The castle is privately owned, and not normally open to the public. Tours are often available during the Cockermouth Festival in July. Today's visitors are attracted by the town's calm, its nearness to some of the more peaceful lakes and mountains, and the fact that Dorothy and William Wordsworth were born here. The large Georgian house in the Main Street where they were born, is now in the care of the National Trust. Another famous son of Cockermouth was Fletcher Christian, the man who led the mutiny on 'The Bounty'. He was born about a mile from the town at Eaglesfield in 1764, and attended the same school as Wordsworth. John Dalton, born in 1766 also at Eaglesfield, was one of the most brilliant scientists of his age, and was the originator of the atomic theory. The town received its Market Charter in 1221, and has retained its importance as a market town ever since. Quarrying and mining for lead and iron were later developments outside the town, and a brewery has been built at the foot of the castle mound, where the two rivers meet.

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