On
27th
November
1858
Robert
Dixon
left
his
home
at
The
Rookings
Patterdale,
which
still
stands
today
in
the
shadow
of
Place
Fell,
to
follow
the
Patterdale
Foxhounds.
A
member
of
a
lakeland
hunting
family,
his
brother
Edward
Birkett
Dixon
had
been
a
past
huntsman.
During
the
course
of
the
morning
he
fell
to
his
death
from
Striding
Edge
on
the
Helvellyn
range
of
mountains.A
memorial
was
erected
in
his
memory
which
reads,
"In
memory
of
Robert
Dixon
of
Rooking
Patterdale
who
was
killed
on
this
spot
on
the
27th
day
of
November
1858
following
the
Patterdale
Foxhounds"
He
was
buried
in
Patterdale
Churchyard
three
days
later.
Not
as
well
known
as
Charles
Gough
who
also
fell
from
Striding
Edge
in
1805
after
setting
out
from
Ullswater
to
fish
in
Thirlmere
by
way
of
Helvellyn.
His
body
was
guarded
by
his
dog
for
some
months
until
found
on
the
shores
of
Red
Tarn
by
a
farmer.
Gough
was
immortalised
by
Sir
Walter
Scott
(Helvellyn)
and
Coleridge
but
best
remembered
by
Wordsworth's
poem
Fidelity.
Sadly
this
was
not
the
first
accident
to
involve
the
Dixon
family.
Clarke's
survey
of
1789
recounts
the
following
tale
...
"At
one
of
these
huntings
(he
was
speaking
of
the
Mardale
Shepherds
Meet)
a
man,
now
living
in
Kentmere
whose
name
was
Dixon,
fell
down
the
immense
rock
called
Blea
Water
Crag.
This
precipice
is
commonly
said
to
be
500
yards
high
(but
I
think
300
will
be
near
the
truth)
and
in
many
places
overhangs
the
base.
He
had
no
bones
broke,
but
was
terribly
bruised,
and
was
almost
completely
scalped,
so
that
now
he
has
no
hair
upon
his
head,
except
a
little
above
one
of
his
ears.
He
struck
his
head
several
times
against
the
rock
in
his
fall,
but
says
he
was
not
sensible
of
it,
and
when
he
came
to
the
bottom
he
instantly
raised
himself
upon
his
knees,
and
in
his
own
country
dialect
cried
out
'Lads,
t,
fox
is
gane
out
at
t
hee
end,
lif
t
dogs
on
and
ill
come
syun'
(Lads
the
fox
is
going
out
the
head
end,
put
the
hounds
on
and
I'll
come
soon).
It
is
26
years
since
(viz
1761)
this
remarkable
accident
and
the
place
has
ever
since
borne
the
name
of
Dixons
Three
Jumps."