The pub, built in the 1740s, is at a remote road junction at the head of Wensleydale and is named on
Ordnance Survey mapping. Although its postal address is
Sedbergh in
Cumbria, it is actually in
North Yorkshire, in the civil parish of
Hawes, and at the point where the nascent River Ure turns eastwards, some west of Hawes, and from railway station. The name of the pub before 1840 was listed as
The Guide Post Inn. In the 1870s the pub was popular with the railway
navvies living in a camp near the pub while building the Settle-Carlisle railway and the Wensleydale Line to Hawes. Some of the navvies who drank there referred to it as
The Junction Inn. During that time it was fined for "allowing drunkenness [and] serving outside of permitted hours". After a train crash at nearby
Ais Gill in 1910, twelve bodies were stored in the pub until they could be buried at Hawes, and the preliminary inquiry into the crash was held there since it was "the largest room for miles..". In 1975 the landlords died in a fire on the day of their retirement party. The pub, which is above sea level, is adjacent to the junction of the B6259 road and the A684. It is also on the
Pennine Bridleway and near the
Pennine Journey and the
Dales High Way. Owing to its height at the west end of Wensleydale the Moorcock is known to be the wettest place in Wensleydale, averaging of rainfall a year. The route of the B6259 was built in 1825 as an alternative to the through road to Mallerstang from
Cotterdale. From Monday to Friday four buses per day in each direction connect Garsdale railway station and the Morcock Inn with Hawes. The pub closed in 2023, and planning documents lodged in 2024 indicate the owners intent to convert the pub into a tearoom and living accommodation. == References ==