River Avon (Warwickshire) Information & River Avon (Warwickshire) Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Hypnotherapy | Birmingham | Warwickshire ...
Hypnotherapy | Birmingham | Warwickshire...
buildingbelief.com
 Avon OH Dental Care - Avon Dentist - Avon Dentistry - Avon Sedation Dentis...
Avon OH Dental Care - Avon Dentist - Avon Dentistry - Avon Sedation Dentis...
westlakesedationdentist.c...
 Experienced Avon Lake Cosmetic Dentist Providing Avon Lake Cosmetic...
Experienced Avon Lake Cosmetic Dentist Providing Avon Lake Cosmetic...
westlakecosmeticdentist.c...
 
River Avon
Stratford-on-avon river 15a07.JPG
The River Avon by the Royal Shakespeare
Theatre
in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire
Origin Naseby, Northamptonshire
Mouth River Severn, Tewkesbury
51°59′49″N 2°09′25″W / 51.997°N 2.157°W / 51.997; -2.157
Basin countries England, United Kingdom
Length 154 km (96 mi)

The River Avon or Avon (pronounced /ˈeɪvən/) is a river in or adjoining the counties of Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire and Gloucestershire in the Midlands of England. It is also known as the Upper Avon, Warwickshire Avon or Shakespeare's Avon. The river has a total length of 96 miles (154 km). Avon is an anglicisation of the Welsh word for 'river' (spelled afon in Welsh)

Contents

[edit] Course

River Avon
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg ueTRANSf BSicon .svg
Safe limit for shallow craft
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uTRANSf BSicon .svg
Red House (safe limit of navigation)
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A422 Clopton Bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZun BSicon .svg
Tramway Bridge
uSTRq uFGATEl uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
Stratford-upon-Avon Canal
BSicon .svg uexSTRrg ueABZrf BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTR uFGATEu BSicon .svg
Colin P Witter Lock
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZun BSicon .svg
Footbridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A4390 Seven Meadows Road
BSicon .svg uxWEIRlg
BSicon .svg
Weir Brake/Gordon Grey Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZuw BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
uxWEIRrg
Stan Clover Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZuy BSicon .svg
Binton Bridges
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
uxWEIRrg
WA Cadbury Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uxWEIRlg
BSicon .svg
Pilgrim Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
uxWEIRrg
Elsie and Hiram Billington Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZuy BSicon .svg
B4085 Bidford Bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uxWEIRlg
BSicon .svg
Inland Waterways Assoc Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uWEIRr uexSTRlg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEu uexSTR
Robert Aickman New Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg ueABZrg uexSTRrf
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
uxWEIRrg
George Billington Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A46(T) Simon De Montford Bridge    
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg umKRZu BSicon .svg
Railway Bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uWEIRr uexSTRlg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEu uexSTR
Evesham Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg ueABZrg uexSTRrf
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAROADu BSicon .svg
A44 Bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg umKRZu BSicon .svg
Railway Bridge
BSicon .svg uexSTRrg ueABZrf BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTR uFGATEu BSicon .svg
Chadbury Lock
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg umKRZu BSicon .svg
Railway Bridge
BSicon .svg uexSTRrg ueABZrf BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTR uFGATEu BSicon .svg
Fladbury Lock
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTRrg ueABZrf BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTR uFGATEu BSicon .svg
Wyre Lock
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uWEIRr uexSTRlg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uFGATEu uexSTR
Pershore Lock
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg ueABZrg uexSTRrf
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZuy BSicon .svg
B4084 Pershore New Bridge
BSicon .svg uexSTRrg uWEIRl BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTR uFGATEu BSicon .svg
Nafford Lock
BSicon .svg uexSTRlf ueABZlg BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uKRZuy BSicon .svg
B4080 Eckington Bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg umKRZu BSicon .svg
Defford Railway Bridge
BSicon .svg uexSTRrg ueABZrf BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uexSTR uFGATEu BSicon .svg
Strensham Lock
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg uxWEIRr uJUNCrd BSicon .svg
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uAKRZu2 BSicon .svg
M5 motorway Bridge
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTRlf uSTRlg
BSicon .svg uSTRrg uSTRq uWEIRl
weir
uJUNCld uJUNCe uFGATEr uJUNCrd
Avon Lock + River Severn
uSTR BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uSTR
Tewkesbury
uSTR BSicon .svg BSicon .svg uxWEIRg
weir and mill

The source of the Avon is near the village of Naseby in Northamptonshire. For the first few miles of its length between Welford and the Dow Bridge on Watling Street, it forms the border between Northamptonshire and Leicestershire. On this section, it has been dammed to create Stanford Reservoir. It then flows in a generally west-southwesterly direction, not far north of the Cotswold Edge and through the Vale of Evesham, passing through the towns and villages of Welford, Rugby, Wolston, Leamington Spa, Warwick, Stratford-upon-Avon, Welford-on-Avon, Bidford-on-Avon, Evesham and Pershore, before it joins the River Severn at Tewkesbury.

The Avon's tributaries include the Rivers Leam, Stour, Sowe, Dene, Arrow, Swift, Alne, Isonbourn, Sherbourne and Swilgate as well as many minor streams and brooks.

[edit] Navigation

From Alveston weir, which is 2 miles (3.2 km) upstream of Stratford-upon-Avon, downstream to Tewkesbury and the River Severn, the river has been rendered navigable by the construction of locks and weirs. The Stratford-upon-Avon Canal links to the Avon through a lock in the park in front of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. Navigation on the River Avon is restricted to boats with a maximum length of 72 ft (21.94 m), beam of 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m), height of 10 ft (3.04 m) and draught of 4 ft (1.18 m).

Traffic is now exclusively leisure oriented. Overnight moorings are available at Stratford-upon-Avon, Luddington, Welford-on-Avon, Barton, Bidford-on-Avon, Harvington, Offenham, Evesham, Craycombe, Wyre, Pershore, Defford, Comberton, Birlingham, Eckington, Strensham and Tewkesbury. There are boatyards at Stratford-upon-Avon, Welford-on-Avon, Barton, Bidford-on-Avon, Evesham, and Tewkesbury.

River Avon taken from the garden of the Fleet Inn, Twyning, Gloucestershire.
Bridge at Bidford-on-Avon; notice the navigation arch at the right
River Avon in Stratford-upon-Avon on a sunny day
One of the two lock gates between the River Avon and the Stratford-on-Avon canal

[edit] History

The navigation works on the Avon were originally authorised by an Order in Council and Letters Patent of Charles I in 1635, and by 1641 it was reported that the river was navigable to within 4 miles (6 km) of Warwick. It is often suggested[weasel words] that William Sandys (the 1635 grantee) constructed only flash locks (with a single barrier), and that Andrew Yarranton, who restored the river in the 1660s provided pound locks (with two pairs of mitred gates), but this is wrong. The evidence actually points to the reverse, namely that Yarranton put in about three navigation weirs (a type of flash lock) to overcome certain difficulties that remained; these were never adjacent to mills.[1]

The navigation rights were confirmed by the Stour and Salwarpe Navigation Act in 1662. Due to the way in which it was restored, the Navigation became divided into two separately administered sections: the Upper Avon Navigation between Stratford and Evesham, and the Lower Avon Navigation between Evesham and the River Severn. The Upper Avon Navigation had fallen into disuse by 1874. The Lower Avon Navigation never quite fell into total disuse, but by the end of the Second World War only one barge was plying the stretch between Tewkesbury and Pershore.

[edit] Restoration

The Lower Avon Navigation Trust Ltd (LANT) was constituted as a charity in 1950, and by 1962 the 8 locks from Tewkesbury to Evesham were restored to working order, re-opening the Lower Avon. The Upper Avon was in a much worse condition than the Lower Avon, but the Upper Avon Navigation Trust Ltd (UANT) was constituted in 1965 to rebuild the navigation. Despite this work requiring the building of new locks and weirs, and most of the work being undertaken by volunteers, the Upper Avon was reopened in 1974.

[edit] Proposed extension

There have recently been proposals to extend the navigation upstream from Alveston to a link with the Grand Union Canal at either Warwick or Leamington Spa. This would open up a stretch of river that has never previously been navigable, and is a controversial issue locally.[citation needed]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ King

[edit] Further reading

  • C. Hadfield & J. Norris, Waterways to Stratford (2nd edn, David & Charles, Newton Abbot, 1968), 15-70
  • J. Davies, Shakespeare’s Avon: the history of a navigation (Oakwood Press, Headington Oxon 1996)
  • P. King, 'The river Teme and other Midlands navigations' Journal of Railway and Canal Historical Society 35(5) (July 2006), 349-50.

[edit] External links




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots