Open Country - Postal Paths and Corpse Roads
Helen Mark is in Cumbria, finding out about historic routes through the fells, once used by postal workers and by coffin bearers.
Up until the 1970s, postmen and women in rural areas walked their delivery rounds - taking routes through the hills dubbed "postal paths". Some routes, and fragments of others, still survive today. In this programme Helen Mark explores one of them, near the village of Shap in Cumbria, with author Alan Cleaver who is writing a book about these old paths. So far he's identified over thirty of them up and down the UK. Others have now been built over and are gone forever. Alan tells Helen about the cultural significance of the postal service in the past, recounting the poignant story of a man who used to write letters to himself, just so that the postman would call by and he would have a visitor. Alan and Helen discuss the disappearing role of postmen and women, in the age of electronic communication.
Helen also explores part of Shap's old Corpse Road, which linked Swindale Head with Mardale - a village which didn't have its own cemetery until the mid 18th century. Before that, bodies had to be carried over the fells to Shap for burial - a distance of about eight miles. The last body was carried along the Corpse Road in 1736. Local historian Jean Scott-Smith tells the story of the Corpse Road and shows Helen part of the route.
Produced by Emma Campbell
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
![]()
Help Me Relax
Soothing stories and soundscapes to help you drift off to sleep. Updated every Wednesday.
More clips from Open Country
![]()
Open Country - Britain's deadliest footpath
Duration: 23:23
![]()
Open Country - Mabel's mountain trip with hares
Duration: 23:48
![]()
Open Country - The changing river with Philippa Forrester
Duration: 23:29
![]()
Open Country - Creative Island with Anneka Rice
Duration: 24:03






