Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

River Rother, South Yorkshire

 
Wikipedia: River Rother, South Yorkshire
River Rother
Staveley river rother 631556 c80561d2.jpg
the river at Staveley
Origin Pilsley
Mouth River Don
Basin countries England
Length 43.3Km

The River Rother is a river in the northern midlands of England, after which the town of Rotherham and the Rother Valley parliamentary constituency are named.

Its source is at Pilsley near Clay Cross in Derbyshire, and from there it flows northwards through North Wingfield, Danesmoor, Chesterfield, New Whittington, Old Whittington, Staveley, Renishaw, Eckington, Killamarsh, then the Sheffield districts of Beighton and Woodhouse, followed by the Rotherham districts of Catcliffe and Treeton, flowing on to its confluence with the River Don[1]. Its main tributaries are the River Drone, the River Hipper and the River Doe Lea.

Some sections of the river were highly polluted, so much so that when the Rother Valley Country Park was being created around the section north of Killamarsh and east of Beighton, water from a cleaner source was brought in to feed the park's lakes. The recent closures of industry and the work of the Environment Agency has improved the quality of the river Rother. The watercourse now holds a good head of coarse fish, and angling clubs are springing up along its length.

The planned Rother Link canal will use part of the river to connect the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation to the Chesterfield Canal.

References

  1. ^ http://www.rotherhamunofficial.co.uk/thetown/riversandcanals/rother.html

Coordinates: 53°25′29″N 1°21′43″W / 53.42470°N 1.36190°W / 53.42470; -1.36190


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "River Rother, South Yorkshire" Read more