Bow Creek: Difference between revisions
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==History== | ==History== | ||
The [[River Lea]] rises in the town of [[Luton]] in [[Bedfordshire]], and flows to the east and then the south to reach the [[River Thames]] at [[Leamouth]]. The final 2¼ miles are known as Bow Creek, and follow a meandering route across a low lying area formerly called Bromley Marsh, but now occupied by gas works and trading estates. The river is one of the oldest navigations in the country, but the creek is tidal, providing insufficient depth for navigation at low tide.<ref>{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |p=13}}</ref> | The [[River Lea]] rises in the town of [[Luton]] in [[Bedfordshire]], and flows to the east and then the south to reach the [[River Thames]] at [[Leamouth]]. The final 2¼ miles are known as Bow Creek, and follow a meandering route across a low-lying area formerly called Bromley Marsh, but now occupied by gas works and trading estates. The river is one of the oldest navigations in the country, but the creek is tidal, providing insufficient depth for navigation at low tide.<ref>{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |p=13}}</ref> | ||
Use of the river for navigation is recorded in documents dating from 1190, and in 1424, it became the first river in Britain where improvements were authorised by an Act of Parliament. Another act of 1571 allowed the Lord Mayor to make cuts and improvements to the river, and to construct towing paths on both sides of it. This work is thought to have included a new cut between Old Ford and Bow Locks, which is known as Bow River, and like Bow Creek, is not subject to tolls for those using it.<ref>{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=14–16}}</ref> During the great plague of 1665, bargemen on the river continued to supply food to the population of London, and were granted permission to navigate the Thames without having to ask a [[Lightermen|Thames Lighterman]] for assistance, in recognition of the risks they had taken.<ref>{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |p=17}}</ref> | Use of the river for navigation is recorded in documents dating from 1190, and in 1424, it became the first river in Britain where improvements were authorised by an Act of Parliament. Another act of 1571 allowed the Lord Mayor to make cuts and improvements to the river, and to construct towing paths on both sides of it. This work is thought to have included a new cut between Old Ford and Bow Locks, which is known as Bow River, and like Bow Creek, is not subject to tolls for those using it.<ref>{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |pp=14–16}}</ref> During the great plague of 1665, bargemen on the river continued to supply food to the population of London, and were granted permission to navigate the Thames without having to ask a [[Lightermen|Thames Lighterman]] for assistance, in recognition of the risks they had taken.<ref>{{harvnb |Boyes |Russell |1977 |p=17}}</ref> |
Latest revision as of 12:20, 31 January 2016
Bow Creek is the tidal estuary of the River Lea which marks the boundary of Essex and Middlesex. It is 2¼ miles long and is considered part of the Bow Back Rivers.
History
The River Lea rises in the town of Luton in Bedfordshire, and flows to the east and then the south to reach the River Thames at Leamouth. The final 2¼ miles are known as Bow Creek, and follow a meandering route across a low-lying area formerly called Bromley Marsh, but now occupied by gas works and trading estates. The river is one of the oldest navigations in the country, but the creek is tidal, providing insufficient depth for navigation at low tide.[1]
Use of the river for navigation is recorded in documents dating from 1190, and in 1424, it became the first river in Britain where improvements were authorised by an Act of Parliament. Another act of 1571 allowed the Lord Mayor to make cuts and improvements to the river, and to construct towing paths on both sides of it. This work is thought to have included a new cut between Old Ford and Bow Locks, which is known as Bow River, and like Bow Creek, is not subject to tolls for those using it.[2] During the great plague of 1665, bargemen on the river continued to supply food to the population of London, and were granted permission to navigate the Thames without having to ask a Thames Lighterman for assistance, in recognition of the risks they had taken.[3]
Because of the importance of the river as a navigation, the engineer John Smeaton was asked to survey it and to suggest how it could be improved in 1765. He produced a report in 1766, which recommended replacing the flash locks with more modern pound locks, and more significantly for Bow Creek, making a new cut from Bow tidal gates to the Thames at Limehouse. Although only a little further to the west, access at Limehouse avoided the long loop around the Isle of Dogs for traffic heading towards London.[4] The cut was to be opened on 2 July 1770, but failure of a side wall delayed the event until September, and a bridge collapsed into it in December. Traffic began to switch to the new cut, which was too narrow to allow barges to pass one another, and so a programme of widening it was carried out, which was completed in September 1777.[5] The channel now ends in Limehouse Basin.
Access to the new navigation, now known as the Lee Navigation, was still by tidal gates at Bow. There had been gates at the site since at least 1307, as a structure was erected by Henry de Bedyk during the reign of King Edward I. The gates were rebuilt in 1573 by the owners of the tide mill, but the City of London appointed a surveyor to inspect the plans and a committee to oversee the work. Documents from 1588 suggest that the gates opened automatically when the incoming tide reached a level with the river above them. Another rebuilding took place in 1721, again by the tide mill owners, and with the City of London approinting a surveyor to oversee the work. Smeaton in 1766 suggested that the gates should be replaced by a conventional pound lock, but this was not carried out. However, in 1852 a lock was constructed, although the gates also remained in place. The lock was rebuilt and shortened in 1900, and a second lock constructed beside it in 1931. Higher floodgates and walls were added in 2000 to prevent the inundation of the Lee Navigation when the level of the tide in the creek exceeded the level in the navigation.[6]
Access from the creek to Bow Back Rivers was altered in the 1930s as part of an upgrade carried out to improve the waterways and to provide employment. The Prescott Channel was constructed to bypass the tide mills, and gave access from the creek to the Three Mills Wall River and the Waterworks River.[7] The lock and sluice structure at the mouth of the new channel became disused in the 1960s and was subsequently removed, but a new structure capable of handling 350-ton barges has been built as part of the upgrade to the waterways for the 2012 Summer Olympics, recreating a navigable connection been the creek and the Bow Back Rivers.[8] The creek gave access to Abbey Creek and the Channelsea River, which connected to the old course of the River Lea near Hackney Marshes. Most of this waterway has since been culverted. Water also entered the creek through the sluices of the tide mills at Three Mills.
Ships were built at the Orchard House Yard, in the southern reaches at Leamouth, and launched in the creek where they could travel north along the River Lee Navigation or south to the River Thames. In 1810, an iron bridge was built spanning the creek – just south of the modern A13 bridge. The abutments have been reused for the pedestrian Jubilee Bridge.
Outside links
- The Iron Bridge and Ironbridge Tavern — A Chronology — Bow Creek/River Lea
- British Waterways history of the Bow Back Rivers
- The Lee Navigation - Intro and Bow Locks to Old Ford
References
- ↑ Boyes & Russell 1977, p. 13
- ↑ Boyes & Russell 1977, pp. 14–16
- ↑ Boyes & Russell 1977, p. 17
- ↑ Boyes & Russell 1977, pp. 20–21
- ↑ Boyes & Russell 1977, pp. 21–22
- ↑ Thomas 2010
- ↑ Boyes & Russell 1977, p. 36
- ↑ "Waterways face new Olympian task". BBC News. 6 April 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7307252.stm.
Books
- Boyes, John; Russell, Ronald (1977). The Canals of Eastern England. David and Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-7415-3.
- Thomas, Richard (2010). Bow Locks. History of the Lee and Stort Navigation. Richard Thomas. http://www.leeandstort.co.uk/Bow_Locks.htm.