Belmount, scene of an 1880 murder

Dramatic events

Today it's hard to believe anything has ever disturbed the tranquillity of the hills around Hunstanworth other than the lonely call of the curlew or the sad-sounding "Go back, go back, go back" of the red grouse.

But delve a little into newspaper reports, talk to some of the older villagers, probe a few documents in the county archives, and you realise that even Hunstanworth has had its moments of drama, disaster and tragedy.

The parish registers mention an eight-week long storm in 1679, and a woman and child killed by a thunderbolt just four days before it subsided. Local poet Thomas Lough wrote "The Ramshaw Flood" in response to the inundation of August 8 1808 in which, according to historian John Sykes' Local Records: "A new smelting mill, at Derwent Heads, near Blanchland, was nearly swept away ...together with a considerable quantity of lead ore".

This section looks at some of the events - both natural and man-made - which have shaken the Hunstanworth community.