Difference between revisions of "Zone:StoodleyPike"

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== (Image gallery) ==
 
== (Image gallery) ==
A few extra pictures are added here. (If you, who originally created the zone article, do not have an image to share, you can delete this section.)
 
 
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File: SnowPike.jpg | The monument in winter
 
File: SnowPike.jpg | The monument in winter

Revision as of 19:50, 3 January 2023

StoodleyPike
Pike.jpg
Stoodley Pike Monument
Zontyp06.png
Information
DifficultyDifficulty4.png
LocationMunicipality: West Yorkshire, Region: Yorkshire & The Humber, Country: United Kingdom
SurfaceRock, Soil
Created2022-06-05
TriviaThe monument is a Grade II listed commemorates the surrender of Paris to the Allies after the Napoleonic Wars.
StoodleyPike at Turfgame.com


StoodleyPike is a turf zone in the municipality of West Yorkshire in the region of Yorkshire & The Humber in United Kingdom.

Placement

The zone is located on the Pennine Way west of Halifax.

Directions

The Pike can be accessed from a number of directions, including from: Mankinholes in Todmorden; Charlestown in Hebden Bridge; and Cragg Vale in Mytholmroyd. There is no vehicular or bicycle access to the monument.

(The place)

Stoodley Pike, or "the Pike", upon which the Stoodley Pike monument stands, is a 402m hill on the Pennine Way in West Yorkshire. The monument itself is 37m tall, with a 39-step spiral staircase climbing 12m to allow visitors to access a balcony running round its outer edge. The Pike can be seen across the moors from many locations around the Upper Calder Valley. It was designed in 1854 by local architect John Green and completed at the end of the Crimean War in 1856. Prior to the current stone structure, an earlier monument was built on a spot closer to the edge of the hill. This was commenced in 1814 to commemorate the defeat of Napoleon, but collapsed after being struck by lightning.

(Image gallery)

External links

Nearby zones

ThisMoorDoth