Wye | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | England |
Counties | Buckinghamshire |
Towns | High Wycombe, Bourne End |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | West Wycombe, Chiltern Hills |
• coordinates | 51°38′52″N0°48′45″W / 51.64778°N 0.81250°W |
• elevation | 94m |
Mouth | River Thames |
• location | Bourne End |
• coordinates | 51°34′13″N0°42′40″W / 51.57028°N 0.71111°W |
• elevation | 26m |
Length | 17 km (11 mi) |
Discharge | |
• location | Hedsor |
• average | 1.00 m3/s (35 cu ft/s) |
• minimum | 0.25 m3/s (8.8 cu ft/s)25 December 1973 |
• maximum | 4.40 m3/s (155 cu ft/s)25 September 1981 |
Discharge | |
• location | High Wycombe |
• average | 0.31 m3/s (11 cu ft/s) |
The River Wye is a river in Buckinghamshire, England. It takes its name from the town of High Wycombe through which it flows, rather than the town being named after the river, as is more commonly the case. [1]
Around 10.5 miles (16.9 km) in length, [2] the Wye rises close to West Wycombe village in the Chiltern Hills and flows through High Wycombe, where it is fed from other tributataries such as Hughenden Stream, [3] before emptying into the River Thames at Bourne End, on the reach above Cookham Lock. In particularly wet years, the source can temporarily change and effectively extend the river by another mile, due to a chalk spring rising above the ground in a field further up the same valley. The River Wye now runs in underground culverts through the centre of High Wycombe. [4] Pann Mill watermill, at the eastern end of Wycombe, is the last remaining watermill on the river. [5]
There is a long history of water-mills being operated in the Wye Valley which drops about 220 feet (67 m) in its 10.5-mile (16.9 km) course. The Domesday Book records eighteen of them in the nine miles between West Wycombe and the Thames. [6] By the seventeenth century there were fulling mills as well as corn mills. A Court of Survey in 1627 lists six mills running upstream from the boundary with Wooburn Parish: the paper mill, Tredway, Loudwater, Bassetsbury, Chalfonts (Rye) and Bridge. There were by this time at least two paper mills: Glory in Wooburn Green and Hedge in Loudwater. By 1636 another paper mill had been established in the parish of West Wycombe and by 1656 another at Marsh, below Wycombe. At this time paper was made from rags and by the end of the eighteenth century more than 150 men were recorded as papermakers in the valley. In 1816 there were 32 paper mills (some of which also milled corn), four which only milled corn and one which was also a saw mill. This was when paper making reached its peak in the valley. However, the introduction of the Fourdrinier machine at the nearby Frogmore Paper Mill, which produced a continuous roll of paper, led to widespread unemployment and many families went to the cotton mills of Lancashire. In 1830 there were riots when machine wreckers broke the machines at Ash, Marsh Green and Loudwater. Twenty men were punished by penal transportation to Tasmania. [7]
Papermaking continued at the Soho and Glory mills till the end of the twentieth century, though the water-mills gave way to steam in the mid-nineteenth century. The Soho mill in Wooburn was the prime supplier of high-grade colour paper till its demise in 1984. [8]
Shown in order from highest to lowest. Note that Marsh Green to Treadway are on an extra cut parallel to Pan to Loudwater Mills. The number is that given by registration in the eighteenth century.
Name [9] | Recorded | Last record | No | Type | OS Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
West Wycombe Mill | 1311 | 1900~ | sawmill (18thC) | SU 8373 9415 | |
Upper, Francis or Little Mill | 1681 | 1903 | 423 | paper | SU 8443 9400 |
Lower, Mill End or Fryer's Mill | 1505 | 1915 | 422 | Corn & paper | SU 8490 9384 |
Lord, Frog or Ball Mill | 1717 | 1883 | 421 | Corn & paper | SU 8550 9363 |
Ash or Lane's Mill (Broughton/Wynkle's) (2) | 1596 | 1895 | 419, 420 | paper | SU 8600 9339 |
Temple Mill (Gosenham) | 1227 | 1895 | corn | SU 8631 9315 | |
Bridge Mill | 1185 | 1932 | corn | SU 8653 9290 | |
Pann Mill | 1185 | 1967 | corn | SU 8705 9276 | |
Rye Mill (Bradshaw's, Sale's, Bowler's, New) | 1346 | 1931 | 411 | paper | SU 8746 9260 |
Bassetbury Mill | 1411 | 1931 | corn | SU 8771 9240 | |
Bowden Mill (2) | 1235 | 1939 | 415, 416 | Corn & paper | SU 8830 9220 |
Wycombe Marsh Mill (Lower Marsh) | 1133 | 1993 | 414 | paper | SU 8880 9195 |
King's Mill (New) | 1725 | 1939 | 417 | paper | SU 8746 9260 |
Loudwater Mill (2) | 1483 | 1939 | 430, 431 | paper | SU 9014 9079 |
Snakely or Ford's Mill | 1767 | 1970 | 428 | paper | SU 9027 9036 |
Hedge Mill | 1235 | 1970 | 427 | Corn & paper | SU 9042 9012 |
Marsh Green or Upper Marsh Mill | 1750 | 1816 | 412 | Corn & paper | SU 8790 9212 |
Beech Mill | 1740 | 1900 | 413 | paper | SU 8881 9155 |
Treadway Mill (Overshot's) | 1682 | 1854 | 418 | Corn & paper | SU 8999 9056 |
Clapton Mill | 1492 | 1922 | 429, 509 | Corn, metal & paper | SU 9100 8997 |
Glory Mill (2) | 1235 | 2000 | 426 | Corn & paper | SU 9130 8950 |
Lower Glory Mill | 1631 | 1907 | 425 | Corn & paper | SU 9160 8895 |
Soho Mill | 1705 | 1988 | 424 | Corn & paper | SU 9080 8770 |
Prince's Mill (Egham Green) (3) | 1730 | 1865 | 287, 288, 289 | Corn & paper | SU 9009 8736 |
Gunpowder Mill (Jackson's) | 1705 | 1980 | 286 | Corn & paper | SU 8978 8717 |
Hedsor Mill | 1492 | 1980 | 285 | Corn & paper | SU 8962 8670 |
Lower Bourne End Mill | 1719 | 1895 | 284 | Corn & paper | SU 8948 8643 |
High Wycombe, often referred to as Wycombe, is a market town in Buckinghamshire, England. Lying in the valley of the River Wye surrounded by the Chiltern Hills, it is 29 miles (47 km) west-northwest of Charing Cross in London, 13 miles (21 km) south-southeast of Aylesbury, 23 miles (37 km) southeast of Oxford, 15 miles (24 km) northeast of Reading and 8 miles (13 km) north of Maidenhead.
Bourne End is a village mostly in the parish of Wooburn, but partly in that of Little Marlow in Buckinghamshire, England. It is about five miles (8 km) south-east of High Wycombe and three miles (5 km) east of Marlow, near the boundary with Berkshire and close to where the Buckinghamshire River Wye empties into the Thames.
Marlow is a town and civil parish within the Unitary Authority of Buckinghamshire, England. It is located on the River Thames, 4 miles (6 km) south-southwest of High Wycombe, 5 miles (8 km) west-northwest of Maidenhead and 33 miles (53 km) west of central London.
Hedsor is a small village and civil parish in Wycombe district in Buckinghamshire, England, in the very south of the county, near the River Thames and Bourne End. It is in the civil parish of Wooburn.
Loudwater is a village in the parish of Chepping Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located in the valley to the east of High Wycombe, on the A40 London Road.
Wooburn is a large village in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located off the A4094 road between Wooburn Green and Bourne End in the very south of the county near the River Thames, about two miles south west of Beaconsfield and four miles east of Marlow. Wooburn is one of the two principal settlements within Wooburn, a civil parish in Wycombe district.
Bourne End is the name of more than one place. It is an old English name, referring to the point where two rivers join.
The Darent is a Kentish tributary of the River Thames and takes the waters of the River Cray as a tributary in the tidal portion of the Darent near Crayford. 'Darenth' is frequently found as the spelling of the river's name in older books and maps, Bartholomew's Canals and River of England being one example. Bartholomew's Gazetteer (1954) demonstrates that Darent means "clear water", a result of it springing from and running through chalk. The purity of the water was a major factor in the development of paper and pharmaceuticals in the area.
Chepping Wycombe is a civil parish in the ceremonial county of Buckinghamshire, England. The parish includes the three large villages of Tylers Green, Loudwater, and Flackwell Heath. The central part of the parish comprises extensive business and industrial development lying adjacent and underneath an elevated section of the M40 in the valley of the River Wye.
Beaconsfield is a constituency in Buckinghamshire represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2019 by Joy Morrissey of the Conservative Party. She succeeded Independent and former Conservative Dominic Grieve, whom she defeated following his suspension from the party. The constituency was established for the February 1974 general election.
The Marlow branch line is a single track railway line in England, between Maidenhead station in Berkshire and Bourne End and Marlow stations in Buckinghamshire. It is 7 miles 10 chains (11.5 km) in length. Passenger services are operated by Great Western Railway using Class 165 and Class 166 diesel trains. The line connects to the Great Western Main Line at Maidenhead; it uses a section of the former Wycombe Railway line to High Wycombe together with the former Great Marlow Railway.
Wycombe Marsh is an area of High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England. It lies on the River Wye and the A40 road, approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) south-east of High Wycombe town centre, and approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) north-west of Loudwater. Wycombe Marsh is in the Ryemead ward of High Wycombe, which had a population of 7,188 at the 2011 census.
Wooburn Green is a village in the civil parish of Wooburn, Buckinghamshire, England.
The Wycombe Railway was a British railway between Maidenhead and Oxford that connected with the Great Western Railway at both ends; there was one branch, to Aylesbury.
The River Bourne rises in the parish of Ightham, Kent and flows in a generally south easterly direction through the parishes of Borough Green, Platt, Plaxtol, West Peckham, Hadlow, and East Peckham where it joins the River Medway. In the 18th century the river was known as the Busty or Buster, the Shode or Sheet, but is not known by these names nowadays. A bourne is a type of stream, while shode means a branch of a river.
The Coppermill Stream is a short waterway near Walthamstow in the Lea Valley. Originally a minor tributary of the River Lea, the approximately 2-mile (3.2 km) long stream is now used as an aqueduct to transport water from the reservoirs in the Lea Valley to Coppermills Water Treatment Works. The stream is part of a Site of Metropolitan Importance.
Wooburn, or Wooburn and Bourne End, is a civil parish in Buckinghamshire, England. South-east of High Wycombe, it comprises the villages of Wooburn, Wooburn Green and Bourne End and the hamlets of Berghers Hill, Cores End, Hawks Hill, Widmoor and Wooburn Moor. The Buckinghamshire River Wye flows through the area, emptying into the River Thames at Bourne End.
Warren Nature Reserve is a 2.3 hectares Local Nature Reserve in Wooburn in Buckinghamshire. It is owned by Wycombe District Council and managed by the council together with Wooburn and Bourne End parish council.