Kershopefoot is a small hamlet in Cumbria, England, traditionally in Cumberland. It is located very close to the Scotland-England border and is near the Kershope Burn and the Liddel Water. Kershopefoot is most well known for its lodge house (Kershope Lodge) situated almost a mile from the hamlet.[1] Between 1862 and 1969 a passenger station on the Waverley Line variously known as Kershope or Kershope Foot was located here.[2]
Kershopefoot is a small hamlet in Cumbria, England, traditionally in Cumberland. It is located very close to the Scotland-England border and is near the...
where cress grows". Kersal, Lancashire, "the haugh where cress grows". Kershopefoot, Cumbria, "cress valley". . . . See Watercress Line Flora Britannica...
the village of Newcastleton (also known as Copshaw Holm) to that of Kershopefoot, where the burn begins to mark the Anglo-Scottish border. Liddel Water...
Whitebridge, Grantown-on-Spey and Laggan and base camps in Kielder, Kershopefoot, Glenfinart, Glenbranter and Lochgilphead. At the end of the war and...
Carboniferous Type Group Sub-units Lyne and Fell Sandstone formations, Kershopefoot Basalt Beds Underlies Yoredale Group Overlies Inverclyde Group Thickness...
Kershope Foot railway station served the hamlet of Kershopefoot, Cumbria, from 1862 to 1969 on the Border Union Railway. The station opened on 1 March...