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Grasmere (lake)

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Primary inflows
  
River Rothay

Basin countries
  
England

Max. width
  
700yd (640m)

Length
  
1.24 km

Width
  
622 m

Inflow source
  
River Rothay

Primary outflows
  
River Rothay

Max. length
  
1680yd (1540m)

Surface area
  
0.24mi² (0.62km²)

Surface elevation
  
61 m

Outflow location
  
River Rothay

Number of islands
  
1

Grasmere (lake) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Lake District, Rydal Water, Dove Cottage, Easedale Tarn, Helm Crag

Grasmere is one of the smaller lakes of the English Lake District, in the county of Cumbria. It gives its name to the village of Grasmere, famously associated with the poet William Wordsworth, which lies immediately to the north of the lake.

Contents

Map of Grasmere, Ambleside, UK

The lake is 1680 yd (1540 m) long and 700 yd (640 m) wide, covering an area of 0.24 mi² (0.62 km²). It has a maximum depth of 70 ft (21m) and an elevation above sea level of 208 ft (62 m). The lake is both fed and drained by the River Rothay, which flows through the village before entering the lake, and then exits downstream into nearby Rydal Water, beyond which it continues into Windermere.

The waters of the lake are leased by the Lowther Estate to the National Trust. The waters are navigable, with private boats allowed and rowing boats for hire, but powered boats are prohibited.

The lake contains a single island, known as The Island. In 2017 this island was bequeathed to the National Trust. This gift has particular significance to the National Trust, as the organisation was founded in response to the sale of the same island to a private bidder in 1893. Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley felt that such a location should instead be in public ownership, and soon afterwards started the National Trust with Octavia Hill and Robert Hunter.

Etymology

" 'The lake flanked by grass'; 'gres', 'mere'. Early spellings in 'Grys-', 'Gris(s)-' might suggest ON 'griss' 'young pig' as 1st el.[ement], but the weight of the evidence points to OE/ON 'gres' 'grass', with the modern form influenced by Standard English....The medial '-s(s)e-' may, as suggested by Eilert Ekwall in DEPN, point to ON 'gres-saer' 'grass-lake' as the original name.". Plus the element "'mere' OE, ModE 'lake, 'pool'".

(OE is Old English up to around AD 1100; ON is Old Norse.)

References

Grasmere (lake) Wikipedia