Comprising a single drop of 100 feet (30 m) from a rocky overhang, Hardraw Force is claimed to be England's highest unbroken waterfall[note 1][2] – at least discounting underground falls. The underground waterfall inside nearby Gaping Gill on the western flank of Ingleborough has an unbroken fall of more than 300 feet (91 m).[3]
Geologically the bed of the river and plunge pool is shale; on top of that is sandstone and the top layer is carboniferous limestone.
It is on private land but public access to the falls is available through a turnstile behind the Green Dragon Inn. The current cost is £4 per adult, £2.50 per child.[4] Access behind the falls is now prohibited.
Hardraw Scar
Hardraw Scar (54°18′58″N2°12′18″W / 54.316°N 2.205°W / 54.316; -2.205) is a limestonegorge behind the Green Dragon inn at Hardraw near Hawes in the Yorkshire Dales. It is a natural amphitheatre and in September is the site of an annual brass-band contest.[5] The contest attracts bands from all over the North of England and is a popular event amongst players and audiences alike.
The gorge is alongside the Pennine Way. Access to the gorge is via the nearby public house.[6]
In 1899 a great flood came racing over the waterfall and into Hardraw itself, ruining buildings and uprooting coffins from the graveyard. The lip of the waterfall was demolished by the force of the water and the landowner at the time (Lord Wharncliffe) got his estate manager to repair the lip and it is now held together at the top by metal stakes.[7]
The falls were used as a location in the film Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, in the scene where Maid Marian catches Robin Hood bathing under a waterfall.[10]
Hardraw Force is the setting for a brass-band competition held annually on the second Sunday in September. The competition was first held in the natural amphitheatre of the falls in 1884 when six bands took part; the competition lapsed in 1927 but was revived in 1976. In recent years two other musical events have started up at the falls: the Hawdraw Bash is a folk-rock concert in early July and the Hardraw Gathering is a three-day festival of traditional music at the end of July.
Notes
^On 6 December 2015 Malham Cove regained its waterfall after a gap of what is possibly centuries. After Storm Desmond, water was seen falling off the 230-foot (70 m) cliff into the stream below, which made it, temporarily, the largest unbroken waterfall in England.
^Fellows, Griffith (2003). The Waterfalls of England: A Guide to the Best 200. Wilmslow: Sigma Leisure. p. 132. ISBN1-85058-767-1.
^Bagshaw, Mike; Mills, Caroline (2010). Slow North Yorkshire; Moors Dales and Coast Including York. Chalfont St Peter: Bradt. p. 82. ISBN978-1-84162-323-8.
^"Hardraw"(PDF). Out of Oblivion. Retrieved 11 October 2016.