Sedbergh is a village and also civil parish in Cumbria, England. Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, it exists regarding 10 miles (16 kilometres) eastern of Kendal, 28 miles (45 kilometres) north of Lancaster as well as regarding 10 miles (16 kilometres) north of Kirkby Lonsdale. The town sits just within the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Sedbergh is at the foot of the Howgill Fells on the north bank of the River Rawthey which signs up with the River Lune regarding 2 miles (3 kilometres) listed below the community. The parish falls in the selecting ward of Sedbergh and also Kirkby Lonsdale. This covers both communities and bordering areas with a total population taken at the 2011 Census of 6,369. Sedbergh has a narrow main road lined with shops. From all angles, the hills rising behind your houses can be seen. Up until the resulting the Ingleton Branch Line in 1861, these remote locations were obtainable just by walking over some rather high hills. The line to Sedbergh train station ran from 1861 to 1954. The civil parish covers a big location, consisting of the hamlets of Millthrop, Catholes, Marthwaite, Brigflatts, High Oaks, Howgill, Lowgill and Cautley, the southern part of the Howgill Fells as well as the western part of Baugh Fell. George Fox, a founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), talked in the churchyard of St. Andrew's Church (which he called a "steeple residence") as well as on close-by Firbank Fell throughout his travels in the North of England in 1652. Briggflatts Meeting House was integrated in 1675. It is the namesake of Basil Pennant's long poem Briggflatts (1966 ). Sedbergh School is a co-educational boarding institution in the town, while Settlebeck School is its main state-funded secondary school.