Lake District
Harper Hills
420M
1378FT
About Harper Hills
Situated on the quiet limestone fringe of the Lake District near Shap, these gentle, grassy slopes offer a peaceful alternative to the busy high fells. As a Wainwright Outlying Fell, the summit provides a clear perspective across the Eden Valley to the North Pennines and into the rugged heart of the High Street range.
Key Statistics
Rank
555th
Parent Range
Far Eastern Fells
Prominence
?
11m
Nearest Town
Shap
Geology
Borrowdale Volcanic Group
Classifications
Nearby Fells
Find It
OS Grid Reference
NY509142
Latitude
54.5211°N
Longitude
2.7594°W
Did You Know?
- •The name likely derives from the Old English 'hearper', signifying either a musician or a local family who farmed the land on the edge of the Westmorland plateau.
- •Alfred Wainwright featured the hill in his 1974 guide, The Outlying Fells of Lakeland, pairing it with nearby Rosgill Moor for a walk he praised for its 'unusual botanical interest' on the limestone sections.
- •The summit provides a distinct view of the High Street fells across the Mardale valley, where the prominent notch of High Raise and the steep profile of Kidsty Pike are clearly visible.
- •Its position on the far eastern edge of the national park makes it an ideal spot for watching weather fronts roll in from the Pennines across the broad expanse of the Eden Valley.
- •Despite its modest elevation, the hill serves as a topographical boundary where the rugged volcanic rocks of the central Lake District give way to the softer limestone landscapes of the east.
- •It remains one of the few Wainwright summits where you are more likely to encounter a stray sheep or a local farmer than a fellow hiker with a guidebook.
