River Derwent, County Durham: Difference between revisions

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
RB (talk | contribs)
Created page with 'right|thumb|350px|The River Derwent at Blackhall Mill The '''River Derwent''' is a river of 35 miles on the bor…'
 
No edit summary
 
Line 9: Line 9:
The name Derwent comes from the Old Welsh word for oak, ''derw'', and is found as the name of a number of rivers of the north and Midlands.
The name Derwent comes from the Old Welsh word for oak, ''derw'', and is found as the name of a number of rivers of the north and Midlands.


[[File:River from bridge - geograph.org.uk - 550097.jpg|left|200px|The Derwent]]
[[File:River from bridge - geograph.org.uk - 550097.jpg|thumb|left|200px|The Derwent]]
==Miscellany==
==Miscellany==
The river is known locally as "The Divvy". [[Derwent Park (Rowlands Gill)|Derwent Walk Country Park]] named after it is at Rowlands Gill.
The river is known locally as "The Divvy". [[Derwent Park (Rowlands Gill)|Derwent Walk Country Park]] named after it is at Rowlands Gill.

Latest revision as of 07:07, 8 August 2014

The River Derwent at Blackhall Mill

The River Derwent is a river of 35 miles on the border between County Durham and Northumberland. It ultimately becomes a tributary of the River Tyne, which river has already by then assumed the duty of marking the county border.

The Derwent rises in the Pennines, formed by the joining of two becks a mile west of Blanchland. It broadens into the Derwent Reservoir, west of Consett. On its journey, the river flows through places such as Allensford, Shotley Bridge, Blackhall Mill and Rowlands Gill. Until a little above Blackhall Mill, it forms the county border (after which the border heads off north on its own to the Stanley Burn and to the Tyne, levaing the lower reaches of the Derwent within County Durham).

The Derwent joins the River Tyne at Derwenthaugh, near the Gateshead MetroCentre.

Name

The name Derwent comes from the Old Welsh word for oak, derw, and is found as the name of a number of rivers of the north and Midlands.

The Derwent

Miscellany

The river is known locally as "The Divvy". Derwent Walk Country Park named after it is at Rowlands Gill.

Fishing permits on the river are usually priced at £3.00 on each stretch.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about River Derwent, County Durham)