Ingleton and the surrounding area was settled in the
Iron Age by the
Brigantes who built a
hill fort on top of
Ingleborough with walls in circumference. It is thought that the
Romans defeated the Brigantes in battle and built a fort alongside the hill fort. The valley was crossed by Roman roads as Ingleton was a strategic river crossing. By the 12th century the
Normans had built a church in the village. The name Ingleton derives from the
Old English ingeltūn meaning 'settlement by a
peak'.
Manor Willian Lowther (1574–1641) of Ingleton Hall was
Lord of the Manor,
Justice of the Peace for the
West Riding and had seven children. His son Richard (1602–1645) inherited the manor and two sons joined the church. His daughter Frances (1612–1665) married John Walker who leased the Ingleton Colleries, and Elizabeth (1615–?) married Anthony Bouch in 1633 and mortgaged Ingleton Manor. Richard Lowther (Collonell , governor of Pontefract) and his son Gerrard were on the losing
Royalist side at the
Civil War siege of Pontefract Castle in 1645, and later at
Newark. The war ended and his father dead, Gerrard was fined by the new government for his
delinquency, and entered into a series of agreements to pay the debt and court appearances to maintain the estate. The Lord of Manor title had passed to Anthony Bouch by 1665, and the coal rights passed to the Walker family after a settlement in the
chancery court in 1678.
Industry The
Ingleton Coalfield was worked for 400 years. It is about 6 miles long by 4-mile wide and extends into the neighbouring parishes of
Burton in Lonsdale and
Thornton-in-Lonsdale. The coalfield terminates at the
South Craven fault. The coal measures are shallow and represent the lowest layers in the
Pennine coal measures sequence. The earliest coal mining occurred along the River Greta where Four Foot and Six Foot seams outcrop. Most deep mining was at New Ingleton Pit sunk in 1913. Its sinking led to the discovery of the Ten Foot seam (house and steam coal) at 127 yards, and the Nine Foot seam (steam and house coal) at 134 yards. Beneath them are the Four Foot seam (house, gas and coking coal) at 233 yards, the Three Foot seam (house and gas coal) at 236 yards and the Six Foot seam (steam and house coal) at 260 yards. Commercially viable deposits of
fireclay lay under the Three Foot seam and
pottery clay beneath the Six Foot seam used to make Ingleton Bricks. The Walkers achieved their legal victory through a son-in-Law William Knipe. Thomas Moore (?–1733) was the second husband of Marianne Walker and between 1702 and 1711 bought out other share holders in the collieries while building a successful medical practice in
Wakefield. He left the collieries to be managed by an agent. His daughter Susannah married William Serjeantson- and his family ran the collieries from 1736 to 1828. Coal was delivered by horse and cart. Ingleton and Bentham Moors were enclosed in 1767. Plans were drawn up in 1780 to connect Ingleton to the
Leeds & Liverpool Canal via
Clapham,
Settle and
Foulridge,
Colne but it never progressed.
Boys and girls as young as four worked the collieries in the 1780, first as 'messengers' and from six, underground, as 'trailers', pulling coal tubs. The last mine was closed in 1940. Ingleton Mill was built in 1791 by four partners who also had built a mill in Clapham in 1786. The partners, George Armitstead, a cotton spinner, Ephraim Ellis, William Petty and Thomas Wigglesworth bought the barn beside the old corn mill and built the mill. They obtained iron for its construction from
Kirkstall Forge. They ran a joiner's shop, smithy and
cotton mill. It was sold in 1807 and used to spin
flax by John Coates, before reverting to cotton spinning in 1837. (). ==Governance==