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Ouse River

 
Dictionary: Ouse River   (ūz) pronunciation

also Great Ouse River A river, about 249 km (155 mi) long, rising in south-central England and meandering east and northeast to the Wash, an inlet of the North Sea.

 

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River, central and eastern England. It rises in Northamptonshire and flows 156 mi (251 km) past Buckingham, Bedford, Huntington, and St. Ives to Earith, then to the North Sea. Locks make the river navigable upstream to Bedford.

For more information on River Ouse, visit Britannica.com.

 
Ouse (ūz).

1 Also
Great Ouse,
river, c.155 mi (250 km) long, rising in the Northampton Highlands, Northamptonshire, S central England. The Great Ouse flows generally NE past Bedford and Ely to the Wash near King's Lynn, Norfolk, and drains the E Midlands and the W Fens. It is navigable for two thirds of its length.

2 River, c.60 mi (100 km) long, formed by the confluence of the Ure and Swale rivers near Boroughbridge, North Yorkshire, NE England. It flows generally SE past York to join with the Trent River and form the Humber River. All of its chief tributaries rise in the Pennines. Navigable to York, the Ouse is an important commercial waterway.


Wikipedia: River Great Ouse
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River Great Ouse
DSCN1566-goba-mooring-after-brownshill-staunch 1200x900.jpg
The River Great Ouse after Brownshill Staunch, near Over
Origin near Syresham in Northamptonshire
Mouth King's Lynn
Basin countries England
Length 230 km (143 miles)
Source elevation 115 m (380 feet)
Avg. discharge 11.8 m3/s (2590 gal/s)
Basin area 3400 km2 (1320 sq mi)

The River Great Ouse (pronounced /ˈuːz/) is a river in the east of England. It is 143 miles (230 km)[1] long which makes it the major navigable river in East Anglia, and the fourth-longest river in the United Kingdom. The name Ouse is from the Celtic or pre-Celtic *Udso-s,[2] and probably means simply "water".[3] The lower reaches of the Great Ouse are also known as "Old West River" and "the Ely Ouse", but all the river is often referred to simply as the Ouse in informal usage (the word "Great", which originally meant simply big, or in the case of a river long, is used to distinguish this river from several others called the Ouse).

Contents

Course

The river has several sources close to the villages of Syresham and Sulgrave in Northamptonshire. It flows through Brackley, Buckingham, Milton Keynes at Stony Stratford, Newport Pagnell, Olney and Kempston, which is the current head of navigation. Passing through Bedford, St Neots, Godmanchester, Huntingdon, Hemingford Grey and St Ives, it reaches Earith, where there is a short tidal section connected by the Old Bedford River and New Bedford River to the lower river at Denver. The old course of the river passes through the cathedral city of Ely and Littleport, to reach the Denver sluice. Below this the river is tidal and passes Downham Market to enter The Wash at King's Lynn. It has a catchment area of 1,320 square miles (3,400 km2) and a mean flow of 2,590 imperial gallons (11.8 m3) per second.[1]

The river is navigable from the Wash to Kempston Mill, which is just beyond Bedford, a distance of 72 miles (116 km). This section includes 17 locks, which are maintained by the Environment Agency, who are the navigation authority[4] and who attempt to attract more boaters to the river.

The Ouse Washes are an internationally important area for wildlife. Sandwiched between the Old Bedford and New Bedford rivers, they consist of washland which is used as pasture during the summer but which floods in the winter, and are the largest area of such land in the United Kingdom. They act as breeding grounds for lapwings, redshanks and snipe in spring, and are home to varieties of ducks and swans during the winter months.[5]

History

River Great Ouse
BSicon .svg uDOCKSe BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
The Wash
BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
A47 Kings Lynn
BSicon .svg ueABZlf uxWEIRfl uSTRlg
Relief Channel sluice
uexSTRq uSTRbl BSicon .svg uSTR
Middle Level Navigations main drain
BSicon .svg uAROADu uHAROAD uAROADu
A1122 Downham Market
BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg uSTR
uSTRq uHSTOPLOCK uJUNCrd BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
Salters Lode Lock
uSTRrg uHSTOPLOCK uJUNCrd uexSTRrg ueABZrl uSTRlg
Old Bedford Sluice
uSTR BSicon .svg uSTR uxWEIRf BSicon .svg uSTR
A G Wright Sluice
uSTR uSTRrg uABZrf uexSTR BSicon .svg uSTR
uSTR uSTR uFGATEd uxWEIRr uexSTRq ueABZrf
Denver Sluice (lock)
uSTR uSTR uSTR uxABZrg uFGATEl uxABZrf
Relief Channel Lock
uSTR uSTR
uWEIRr uexSTRq uexABZrf
River Great Ouse
uSTR uSTR uSTRlf uABZlg BSicon .svg uexSTRlf
Cut off channel
uSTR BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
Old Bedford River
uSTR
BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
New Bedford River
uSTR uSTRlf uSTRlg uJUNCld mKRZo BSicon .svg
River Wissey
uSTRlf uSTRlg uSTR umKRZu STRrf BSicon .svg
Rly bridge
uSTR uSTR uJUNCld uHAROADu
River Little Ouse
uSTR uSTR uAROADu BSicon .svg
A10 Littleport Bridge
uSTR uSTR uJUNCld uHAROADu
River Lark
uFGATEl uJUNCrd uSTR uSTR BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
Welches Dam lock
uSTRbl uSTR uSTR BSicon .svg
Mepal pumping station
uexSTR uSTR uKRZuy BSicon .svg
B1382 Adelaide Road bridge
uxmKRZu umKRZu uSTR BSicon .svg
March to Ely Rly bridge
uexSTR uSTR umKRZu BSicon .svg
Ely to Norwich Rly bridge
uexSTR uSTR uAROADu BSicon .svg
A142 Ely High Bridge
uexSTR uSTR umKRZu BSicon .svg
Newmarket Rail bridge
uexSTR uSTR uJUNCld uSTRq
Soham Lode
uexSTR uSTR uJUNCld uSTRq
River Cam
uexSTR uSTR umKRZu BSicon .svg
Ely to Cambridge Rly bridge
uexSTR uSTR uAROADu BSicon .svg
A1123 Road Bridge
uexSTR uSTR uAROADu BSicon .svg
A10 Road bridges (2)
uexSTR uSTR uexJUNCld uexSTRq
Cottenham Lode
uexSTR uSTR uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Hermitage Lock
uxAROADu uAROADu uSTR BSicon .svg
A1123 Road Bridge
uxABZrg uJUNCe uSTRrf BSicon .svg
uddSTRl BSicon .svg BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
Westview Marina, Earith
uSTRlf uFGATEr uSTRlg BSicon .svg
Brownshill Staunch
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
St Ives Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A1096 St Ives bypass
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uxISLAND BSicon .svg
Holt Island
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Hemmingford Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Houghton Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A14 Road bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Godmanchester Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg umKRZu BSicon .svg
Peterborough to London Rly
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Brampton Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Offord Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
St Neots Lock
BSicon .svg uexSTRq ueABZrf BSicon .svg
River Kym
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Eaton Socon Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A428 Road bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A1 Tempsford Bridges
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg ueABZlf uexSTRq
River Ivel
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Roxton Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Gt Barford Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTRfr BSicon .svg
Site of Old Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Willington Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A421 Road bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Castle Mill Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Cardington Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A5140 Road bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEd BSicon .svg
Bedford Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A6 Road bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg umKRZu BSicon .svg
Bedford Railway bridges (2)
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
A6 Road bridge, Bedford
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uexWMILL R BSicon .svg
Site of Kempston Mill
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uexSTR BSicon .svg
(Limit of navigation)
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uLSTR BSicon .svg
to source

The river has been important both for drainage and for navigation for centuries, and these dual roles have not always been complementary. The course of the river has changed significantly, and does not follow its ancient route from Cawdle Fen near Ely to Kings Lynn. Originally, it turned to the west at Littleport, between its present junctions with the River Little Ouse and the River Lark, and made its way via Welney, Upwell and Outwell, to flow into The Wash near Wisbech. At that time it was known as the Wellstream or Old Wellenhee, and parts of that course are marked by the Old Croft River and the border between Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. It was initially diverted to join the River Nar after flooding at Littleport in 1236, and so joined the Wash at Kings Lynn. Parts of this course were later used for the River Lark, which flows in the reverse direction along the section below Prickwillow, after the main river was moved further to the west[4]

An Act of Parliament was passed in 1600 which allowed Adventurers, who paid for drainage schemes with their own money, to be repaid in land which they had drained. The Act covered large tracts of England, but no improvements were made to the region through which the Great Ouse flowed until 1618, Arnold Spencer and Thomas Girton started to improve the river between St Ives and St Neots. Six sluices were constructed, and Spencer attempted to obtain permission to improve the river to Bedford, but the Act was defeated, despite support from Bedford Corporation. Some dredging was done, and Great Barford became an inland port, but he lost a lot of money on the scheme, and the condition of the river worsened.[6]

Below Earith, thirteen Adventurers working with the Earl of Bedford formed a Corporation to drain the Bedford Levels. Cornelius Vermuyden was the engineer, and a major part of the scheme was the Old Bedford River, a straight cut to carry water from Earith to a new sluice near Salters Lode, which was completed in 1637. The sluice was not popular with those who used the river for navigation, and there were some attempts to destroy the new works during the turmoil of the civil war. A second drainage Act was obtained in 1649, and Vermuyden oversaw the construction of the New Bedford River, parallel to the Old Bedford River, which was completed in 1652. There was strong opposition from the ports and towns on the river, which increased as the old channel via Ely gradually silted up. Above Earith, Samuel Jemmatt took control of the river, and navigation was extended to Bedford in 1689 by the construction of new staunches and sluices.[6]

Between St Ives and Bedford, there were ten sluices, which were pound locks constructed at locations where mill weirs would have prevented navigation. There were also five staunches, which were flash locks constructed near to fords and shallows. Operation of the beam and paddle provided an extra volume of water to carry the boats over such obstructions. On the lower river, a combination of high spring tides and large volumes of floodwater resulted in the complete failure of Denver sluice in 1713. While there were celebrations among the navigators, the problem of flooding returned, and the channel below Denver deteriorated. Charles Labelye therefore designed a new sluice for the Bedford Level Corporation, which was constructed between 1748 and 1750 and included a navigation lock. No tolls were charged on the river below St Ives or on the New Bedford, and those responsible for drainage complained about damage to the sluices and to banks by the horses used for towing boats. An Act of Parliament to regulate the situation was defeated in 1777 after fierce opposition, and it was not until 1789 that a Haling Act was passed, which ensured that tolls were charged and landowners were repaid for damage to the banks caused by horses. These measures were a success, as there were few complaints once the new system was in place.[6]

Port of Kings Lynn

After the river had been diverted to King's Lynn, the town developed as a port. Evidence for this can still be seen, as two warehouses built in the 15th century for trade with the Hanseatic League have survived. However, the harbour and the river below Denver sluice were affected by silting, and the problem was perceived to be the effects of the sluice. Sand from The Wash was deposited by the incoming tide, and the outgoing tide did not carry it away again. Colonel John Armstrong was asked to survey the river in 1724, and suggested returning it to how it was prior to the constuction of the drainage works. John Smeaton rejected this idea in 1766, suggesting that the banks should be move inwards to create a narrower, faster-flowing channel. William Elstobb and others had suggested that the great bend in the river above King's Lynn should be removed by creating a cut, but it took 50 years of arguing before the Eau Brink Act was obtained in 1795 to authorise it, and another 26 years until the cut was finally opened in 1821. During this time, most of the major civil engineers of the time had contributed their opinions.[6]

The work was overseen by John Rennie and Thomas Telford and construction took four years. It proved to be too narrow, resulting in further silting of the harbour, and was widened at an additional cost of £33,000 on Telford's advice. The total cost for the 2.5-mile (4.0 km) cut was nearly £0.5 million, and although the navigators, who had opposed the scheme, benefitted most from it, there were new problems for drainage, with the surrounding land levels dropping as the peaty soil dried out. The Eau Brink Act created Drainage Commissioners and Navigation Commissioners, who had powers over the river to St Ives, but both bodies were subject to the Bedford Levels Corporation. Although often in opposition, the two parties worked together on the construction of a new lock and staunch at Brownhill, to improve navigation above Earith.[6]

The Railway Age

Denver sluice was reconstructed in 1834, after the Eau Brink Cut had been completed. Sir John Rennie designed the new structure, which incorporated a tidal lock with four sets of gates, enabling it to be used at most states of the tide. Sir Thomas Cullam, who had inherited a part share of the upper river, invested large amounts of his own money in rebuilding the locks, sluices and staunches in the 1830s and 1840s. The South Level Drainage and Navigation Act of 1827 created Commissioners who dredged the river from Hermitage Lock to Littleport bridge, and also dredged several of its tributaries. They constructed a new cut near Ely to bypass a long meander near Padnall Fen and Burnt Fen, but although the works cost £70,000, there were too late to return the navigation to prosperity. Railways arrived in the area rapidly after 1845, reaching Cambridge, Ely, Huntingdon, King's Lynn, St Ives, St Neots and Tempsford by 1850. The river below King's Lynn was improved by the construction of the 2-mile (3.2 km) Marsh Cut and the building of training walls beyond that to constrain the channel, but the railways were welcomed by the Bedford Levels Corporation, for whom navigation interfered with drainage, and by King's Lynn Corporation, who did not want to be superseded by other towns with railway interchange facilities.[6]

A large interchange dock was built at Ely, to facilitate the distribution of agricultural produce from the local region to wider markets. In addition, coal for several isolated pumping stations was transferred to boats for the final part of the journey, rather than it coming all the way from King's Lynn. Decline on most of the river was rapid, with tolls halving between 1855 and 1862. Flooding in 1875 was blamed on the poor state of the navigation, and it was recommended that it should be abandoned, but there was no funds to obtain an Act of Parliament to create a Drainage Authority. The navigation was declared to be derelict by three County Councils soon afterwards. It was then bought by the Ouse River Canal and Steam Navigation Ltd, who wanted to link Bedford to the Grand Junction Canal, but they failed to obtain their Act of Parliament. A stockbroker called L. T. Simpson bought it in 1893, and spent some £21,000 over the next four years in restoring it. He created the Ouse Transport Company, running a fleet of tugs and lighters, and then attempted to get approval for new tolls, but was opposed by Bedfordshire and Huntingdonshire County Councils. Protracted legal battles followed, with Simpson nailing the lock gates together, and the County Councils declaring that the river was a public highway. The case eventually reached the House of Lords in 1904, who allowed Simpson to close the locks.[6]

The Leisure Age

The Great Ouse at King's Lynn

Simpson's victory in 1904 coincided with an increased use of the river for leisure. As he could not charge these boats for use of the locks, the situation was resolved for a time in 1906 by the formation of the River Ouse Locks Committee, who rented the locks between Great Barford and Bedford. Over 2000 boats were recorded using Bedford Lock in a three month period soon afterwards. Despite pressure from local authorities and navigation companies, the upper river was closed for trade, and a Royal Commission reported in 1909 on the poor state of the lower river, the lack of any consistent authority to manage it, and the unusual practice of towing horses having to jump over fences because there were no gates where they crossed the towing path. The Ouse Drainage Board was formed in 1918, but had no powers to deal with navigation issues, and it was not until the powers of the Land Drainage Act (1930) were used to create the Great Ouse Catchment Board that effective action could be taken.[6]

The Catchment Board bought the navigation rights from Simpson's estate, and began to dredge the river and rebuild the locks. There was an upturn in commercial traffic from 1925, when the sugar beet factory at Queen Adelaide near Ely was opened. They operated six or seven tugs and a fleet of over 100 barges, and three tugs and 24 barges from the Wissington sugar beet factory on the River Wissey also operated on the river. Local commercial traffic continued around Ely until after the Second World War. The sugar beet traffic ceased in 1959, and the last commercial boat on the upper river was "Shellfen", a dutch barge converted to carry 4,000 imperial gallons (18,000 l) of diesel fuel, which supplied the remote pumping stations until 1974, when the last ones were converted to electricity. [6]

Below Denver, the situation was complicated by the fact that there were six bodies with responsibility for the river in 1913. No dredging took place, as there was no overall authority. The training walls were repaired in 1930 by the King's Lynn Conservancy Board, and the Great Ouse Catchment Board reconstucted and extended them in 1937. After major flooding in 1937 and 1947, and the North Sea flood of 1953, flood control issues became more important, and the Cut-Off Channel was completed in 1964, to carry the headwaters of the River Wissey, River Lark and River Little Ouse to join the river near Denver sluice.[6] The Great Ouse Relief Channel, which runs parallel to the main river for 6.5 miles (10.5 km) from here to Wiggenhall bridge, was constructed at the same time. It joins the river at a sluice above King's Lynn, and was made navigable in 2001, when the Environment Agency constructed a lock at Denver to provide access.[7]

The upper river was reopened to Bedford in 1978. The reconstuction by the Catchment Board had reopened the locks to Godmanchester and then to Eaton Scoton by the onset of the Second World War. To continue the progess, the Great Ouse Restoration Society was formed in 1951, and successfully campaigned for and assisted with the restoration. Since 1963, the river has been the responsibility of the Environment Agency, who issue navigation licences.[8]

Connections

The Great Ouse at St Neots

The non-tidal reaches of the river are used for leisure boating, but remain largely separated from the rest of the British inland waterway system. Several of its tributaries are navigable, including the River Cam, the River Lark, the River Little Ouse and the River Wissey. Close to Denver sluice, Salters Lode lock gives access to the Middle Level Navigations, but the intervening section is tidal, and deters many boaters. Access to the Middle Level Navigations is also possible via the Old Bedford River and Welches Dam lock, but this route is only open for a few weekends each year, and was heavily silted in 2009. The proposed Fens Waterways Link, which aims to improve navigation from Lincoln to Cambridge may result in this section being upgraded, or a non-tidal link being created at Denver.[8]

There are two more proposed schemes to improve connections to the river. The first is for a Bedford to Milton Keynes link, to connect the river to the Grand Union Canal. This was first suggested in 1812, when John Rennie costed a 15-mile (24 km) canal to join the canal, then called the Grand Junction Canal at Fenny Stratford. His estimate of £180,807 scared investors, and no progress was made.[6] In 1838, there was a proposal to link the river to the Newport Pagnall Canal,[8] and again in the 1880s, the Ouse River Canal and Steam Navigation Ltd bought the river with the aim of creating the link. An enabling Act of Parliament was defeated, although Major Marindin, acting for the Board of Trade, was optimistic about the likely benefits.[6] The idea was revived in 1994, by the Bedford and Milton Keynes Waterway Trust, who have formed a partnership with 25 bodies, including local councils, British Waterways and various government agencies. A feasibility study was carried out in 2001, which looked at nine possible routes, and by 2006, the cost of the preferred route was between £100 and £200 million.[8]

The second scheme is for an extension of the Great Ouse Relief Channel to link it to the River Nar, and provide a non-tidal link to King's Lynn. The project would include a large marina, and would be part of a much larger regeneration project for the south side of the town.[8] Two locks would be required to raise boats from the Relief Channel to the River Nar.[9]

Tributaries

The Great Ouse near Little Paxton.

Tributaries of the River Great Ouse: (upstream [source] to downstream by confluence)

Rowing

In 1944 the annual boat race between the Oxford and Cambridge universities took place on this river, between Littleport and Queen Adelaide, the only time that it has not been held on the Thames; it was won by Oxford.[10] The Great Ouse is used by three clubs from Cambridge University for the training of rowers, with the Boat Club (CUBC), [11] the Women's Boat Club (CUWBC) [12] and the Lightweight Rowing Club (CULRC), all using facilities at Ely. Rowing is popular in several of the towns on the Ouse, especially Bedford, which is one of the most active rowing centres in the UK.

See also

Reconstruction of a C1 AD currach on the Great Ouse.

References

  1. ^ a b Rivers and the British Landscape, (2005), Sue Owen et al., Carnegie Publishing, ISBN 978-1-95936-120-7
  2. ^ Indogermanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch:entry 9
  3. ^ Oxford Dictionary of British Place Names (2003)
  4. ^ a b The River Great Ouse and tributaries, (2006), Andrew Hunter Blair, Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson Ltd, ISBN 978-0-85288-943-5
  5. ^ Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Ouse Washes
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l The Canals of Eastern England, (1977), John Boyes and Ronald Russell, David and Charles, ISBN 978-0715374153
  7. ^ Jim Shead's Canal pages
  8. ^ a b c d e Inland Waterways of Great Britain, 8th Ed., (2009), Jane Cumberlidge, Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson, ISBN 978-1-84623-010-3
  9. ^ Inland Waterways Association: Kings Lynn to the Great Ouse Flood Relief Channel Link, accessed 2009-10-10
  10. ^ "Celebrate the 1944 University Boat Race!". BBC. February 2004. http://www.bbc.co.uk/cambridgeshire/out_about/2004/02/historic_boat_race.shtml. 
  11. ^ CUBC: Facilities
  12. ^ CUWBC: Facilities

External links

Coordinates: 52°19′36″N 0°00′02″E / 52.32653°N 0.00069°E / 52.32653; 0.00069


 
 

 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "River Great Ouse" Read more