Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

River Stour, Worcestershire

River Stour
River Stour near Caunsall
Location
CountryEngland
CountiesWest Midlands, Worcestershire, Staffordshire
SettlementsHalesowen, Stourbridge, Kinver, Caunsall, Cookley, Wolverley, Kidderminster, Stourport-on-Severn
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationClent Hills, Worcestershire
MouthRiver Severn
 • location
Stourport-on-Severn
Length40 km (25 mi)

The Stour (/ˈstaʊər/, rhymes with "flour")[citation needed] is a river flowing through the counties of Worcestershire, the West Midlands and Staffordshire in the West Midlands region of England. The Stour is a major tributary of the River Severn, and is about 25 miles (40 km) in length. It has played a considerable part in the economic history of the region.

Etymology and usage

The river-name Stour, common in England, does not occur at all in Wales;[1] Crawford noted two tributaries of the Po River near Turin, spelled Sture. In Germany the Stoer (Stör) flows into the River Elbe. The name Stour is pronounced differently in different cases. The Kentish Stour rhymes with tour; the Oxfordshire Stour is sometimes rhymes with the mower, sometimes with hour. The Worcestershire and Suffolk Stour always rhyme with hour.[2]

The origin of the name(s) remains in dispute. The Middle English word stour has two distinct meanings and derivations, still current enough to appear in most substantial dictionaries. As an adjective, with Germanic roots, it signifies "large, powerful". As a noun, from medieval French roots, it signifies "tumult, commotion; confusion" or an "armed battle or conflict". The primary definition in the Concise Oxford Dictionary is "blowing or deposit of dust", a northern English and Scottish usage of uncertain derivation.[3] Recently it has been suggested by Richard Coates that an Old European river-name was taken for an Old English adjective and that stour came to represent one pole of a structural opposition, with blyth at the opposite pole, allowing Anglo-Saxons to classify rivers on a continuum of fierceness.[4]

However, Margaret Gelling, a specialist in Midland toponyms, emphasises the importance of situating place-names in the landscape. It is hard to see the river in dramatic terms. Undoubtedly it has a history of flooding and can rise quickly after rain, but it is unlikely that anyone familiar with the Severn, into which it flows, could see the Stour as embodying raw power or turbulence. The Victorian etymologist Isaac Taylor, now long discredited on many counts, proposed a very simple solution: that Stour derives from dŵr, the Welsh word for water.[5] (Celtic origins are quite likely in the West Midlands and Worcestershire.) It is possible that the various Stours do not share a common origin or significant characteristics, requiring each to be considered on their terms. Certainly there is currently no universally-accepted explanation.

Course

Sketch map of the course of the River Stour through Worcestershire, the West Midlands and Staffordshire

The river rises in the north of Worcestershire in the Clent Hills, near St Kenelm's Church in Romsley. It collects water from many small tributary streams from the Clent Hills as it descends, following a generally north-easterly course, before veering north into the West Midlands at Halesowen.

The river continues to gather strength from Clent streams as it flows through Halesowen, before turning westwards through the southern part of the Black Country, staying within the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley. It flows through Cradley and Lye and then between Stourbridge, to which it gives its name, and Amblecote, historically an important centre of the glass industry. Here it passes half-concealed through industrial estates that have replaced traditional heavy industry, shadowed for a few kilometres by the Stourbridge Canal. It leaves the conurbation via the suburb of Wollaston, descending fairly rapidly from the West Midlands plateau to Prestwood.

The Stour enters Staffordshire at Prestwood and veers southwards, henceforward shadowed by the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, which crosses over it on a sandstone aqueduct just before its confluence with the Smestow Brook, an important tributary that drains the area north to Wolverhampton. The Stour flows south to Stourton and then loops along the eastern edge of the large village of Kinver, whence it flows back into Worcestershire.

Passing through the villages of Caunsall, Cookley and Wolverley, it is joined by the Horse Brook, which drains an area extending northward into Shropshire, and the Honey Brook. Further south, the Wannerton Brook brings in water from the Blakedown area, on the western fringe of the Clent Hills. The Stour then bisects Kidderminster from north to south. Here it is hidden from sight for a short distance as it passes beneath the canal, to emerge on its eastern side. At the southern edge of Kidderminster the Stour is joined by the Barnett Brook, a major tributary which begins in the Clent Hills, and which, together with the Hoo Brook, creates a large complex of pools to the east. Passing through the formerly navigable section around Wilden, it joins the River Severn at Stourport, in a small, old industrial area to the east of the canal port.

Geology

The Stour rises on the north-eastern edge of the Clent Hills, an outcrop of New red sandstone that traps it on the West Midland plateau. Its course is mainly over similar sandstone, together with some gravels, as it finds its way off the plateau by a fairly circuitous route, to the Severn valley. In this it is similar to the Tame and its own tributary, the Smestow: all are forced to wander far along generally shallow gradients as they find their way from the plateau, which is essentially a shallow dish in shape - a low tableland with raised edges. It carries mainly sandy sediments, as can be seen after rainfall.

Wildlife

The Stour was once a trout stream, but became severely polluted with chemicals that were released into it by industries along its banks, particularly acid from the holloware industry of Lye. In the final decades of the 20th century, this pollution ceased, and the river was cleaned up. Nowadays, wildlife is making a comeback in the Stour with kingfishers and grey heron present, as well as recent reports of salmon and trout beginning to recolonise as far as Stourbridge.

History

For a short section west of Stourbridge, the Stour marks the boundary, between the historic counties of Staffordshire and Worcestershire. It also historically formed part of the boundary of an exclave of Shropshire, which contained Halesowen, until the town was transferred to Worcestershire in the 19th century, along with nearby Oldbury.

Industry

Mills were a crucial part of the medieval economy and the Stour was well able to power them. At Cradley, at the confluence of the upper Stour and the Lutley Gutter (also known as the Pudding Brook), in what was to become the Black Country, the earliest mentions of mills date back to the 12th century.[6] Two corn mills are mentioned in Kinver in the Domesday Book.[7]

From the Middle Ages, the lower Stour was important in this early industrial development, as its fulling mills thickened cloth made in Worcester, Kidderminster, and Kinver. From the 17th century there was a proliferation of iron forges fined pig iron and slitting mills, which cut bars of iron into rods for the production of nails in the Black Country. Blade mills (on tributaries), sharpened the blades of scythes and other tools from the 15th century.[8] Richard Foley established one of the earliest slitting mills at the Hyde, Kinver in 1627.[9]

Many of the mills on the Stour were formerly concerned with the iron industry. Whittington, near Kinver, had a forge and then a slitting mill, and finally a nail mill.[10] Mills were converted from one use to another, as demand fluctuated: fulling mills of the 16th century, often became forges or slitting mills in the 17th. The 17th century iron industry along the Stour and its tributaries is connected with the name of Dud Dudley (an illegitimate son of Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley) who carried out early experiments, using coal products to substitute for charcoal in iron production and wrote a book, Metallum Martis. The Dudley family had works at Cradley. The Foley family were much more important in the later 17th century and the Knight family in the 18th. Iron production continued well into the 19th century (occasionally, even later), but the valley was overshadowed by the coke-based industry on the Black Country plateau.

Navigation

Rivers Stour and Salwarpe Navigation Act 1662
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act for making navigable the Rivers of Stower and Salwerp, and the Rivulets and Brooks running into the same, in the Counties of Worcester and Stafford.
Citation14 Cha. 2. c. 14
Dates
Royal assent19 May 1662

In the 1660s and 1670s, Andrew Yarranton attempted to make the river Stour itself navigable along much of its course. But these efforts were finally abandoned around 1680, when funds were exhausted. It is doubtful whether it would have been a profitable enterprise, had it succeeded. At Wilden a short section of the Stour, of about a mile, was successfully made navigable but because of all the bends it is recorded that it was not easy to navigate. There was a lock at Pratt's Wharf (misnamed Platt's Wharf by the Ordnance Survey) connecting the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal with the river. This enabled canal barges to use the River Stour to deliver timber to a steam saw-mill in Wilden. Later it was used to transport coal and iron to the Wilden Works. The wharf was built by Isaac Pratt from Henwick, Worcester in 1835. He is described as a businessman and a merchant. There were two houses at Pratt's Wharf, one occupied by a lock keeper and the other by a clerk. The link was closed c. 1950.[11]

The Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, planned by James Brindley, was built between 1770 and 1772. It shadows the Smestow, and then the Stour from Prestwood southward, cutting across its many bends and meanders. From Stourton Junction (near Prestwood), the Stourbridge Canal led to Stourbridge, thus shadowing the upper Stour, while branches led towards collieries near Brierley Hill and linked to the Dudley Canal. These were all built in the late 18th century, effectively creating a canal network parallel to the river network.

Later industry

Kidderminster, long a centre of cloth manufacture, increasingly specialised in carpet-making from about 1785. The Stour took on a fresh importance as this industry grew, driving the fulling and weaving processes, as well as carrying away the effluent - particularly when dyed cloth was washed in the river. The flow of the Stour became so crucial to the manufacturers of the town that they persistently fought attempts to extract water for industrial and domestic use from the Smestow - potentially of great value to Wolverhampton and the Black Country.[12]

The magnificent Stambermill Viaduct carries what was the former Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway line over the Stour between Stourbridge and Lye. It now is only used by goods trains.

Tributaries

The main tributaries of the Stour are, travelling upstream from its confluence with the River Severn:

  • The Barnett Brook or Belne Brook, which enters from the left, bringing water from a number of tributary streams. The Barnett Brook originates on the Clent Hills (on the opposite side of the watershed to the Stour's own feeder streams). To the north-west of Belbroughton, two major feeder streams converge at Bell End (one of which is known as Fenn Brook). The stream known locally as Belne Brook then flow into Belbroughton where another feeder stream from the foot of the Clent Hills joins it.[13] It leaves Belbroughton and flows through Drayton, and then to Stone where a tributary from Harvington Hall joins it. From there it flows into Kidderminster where at the Spennels Valley Nature Reserve it is joined by the Hoo Brook, (a stream that supply a complex of lakes and pools towards Stone, to the south-east of Kidderminster).[14]
  • Known as Wannerton Brook, at its confluence with the Stour one mile below Wolverley, at Broadwaters to the north of Kidderminster. Its three largest feeder streams converge and feed a series of pools in Blakedown where the stream is known as the Blakedown Brook. Two of the three feeder streams start on the Clent Hills (on the opposite side of the watershed to the Stour's own feeder streams) the first originates in St Kenelm's Pass above High Clent and passes down through West Hagley on to Stakenbridge and Churchill. The second originates above another hamlet in Clent called Walton Pool and flows down to Holy Cross and then on to Broom where it is known as Gallows Brook. The third, and the shortest rises in Yieldingtree, but it supplies several old mill ponds before converging with the main stream just south of Blakedown.[13][15]
  • The Honey Brook, which enters from the right, opposite Wolverley Court, close to the Kidderminster suburb of Franche.
  • The Horse Brook or Horsebrook, which also joins from the right, bringing water from the Shatterford and Kingsford areas, and from parts of South Staffordshire and Shropshire.
  • The Mill Brook, which enters from the right at the Hyde, opposite Dunsley near Kinver, and drains an area within South Staffordshire to the north of Kinver.
  • The River Smestow, also known as the Smestow Brook, the Stour's largest tributary, which enters from the right. The Smestow drains an area well to the north, originating in the northern suburbs of Wolverhampton, and looping around the city to flow past Wombourne and join the Stour at Prestwood.
  • The Lutley Gutter, also known locally as the Pudding Brook, which enters from the left at Cradley and, together with the Stour itself, has played a major role in the industrial history of the town.

Settlements

The main settlement on the Stour are, travelling upstream from its confluence with the River Severn:

In Worcestershire

In Staffordshire

  • Kinver, once an important industrial village, but now mainly a residential and tourist centre.
  • Stourton and Prestwood

In Dudley Metropolitan Borough in the West Midlands

  • Stourbridge, with its suburbs of Wollaston (before 1974, part of Worcestershire) and Amblecote (historically part of Staffordshire), traditionally a centre of the glass industry.
  • Lye, formerly a centre of heavy industry, now best known for its strip of Indian restaurants specialising in balti meals. Before 1974, part of Worcestershire.
  • Cradley, once famous for its forges specialising in chain making. Before 1974, part of Worcestershire.
  • Halesowen, also once a centre for forges, specialising in nail making, but now largely a residential and commercial area. Traditionally an exclave of Shropshire, from 1844 until 1974 it was part of Worcestershire.

In Worcestershire

  • Romsley, where the Stour originates in a spring outside the main village but within the parish. Before 1844, part of Shropshire, together with Halesowen. 1974–1998: part of the County of Hereford and Worcester

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ O.G.S. Crawford, "Celtic place-names in England", The Archaeological Journal (British Archaeological Association) 2nd ser. 27 1920: p. 144
  2. ^ Ayto, John and Crofton, Ian: Brewer's Britain and Ireland, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2005, ISBN 0-304-35385-X, p.1059.
  3. ^ Concise Oxford Dictionary, 10th edition, Oxford, 2001, ISBN 0-19-860438-6, p.1415
  4. ^ Richard Coates, "Stour and Blyth as English river-names" English Language and Linguistics 10 Cambridge University Press (2006:23-29).
  5. ^ Taylor, Isaac: Words and Places, London, 2nd edition, 1921, p.143, accessed July 2009
  6. ^ http://www.cradleylinks.com/bird_mills_on_the_stour.html Norman Bird: More about the Mills on the Stour, at Cradley Links, accessed July 2009.
  7. ^ Victoria County History, Staffordshire, XX, 144.
  8. ^ P.W. King, 'The north Worcestershire scythe industry' Historical Metallurgy 41(2) (2007), 124-47.
  9. ^ Victoria County History, Staffordshire, XX, 146.
  10. ^ Victoria County History, Staffordshire, XX, 145.
  11. ^ Stourport-on-Severn Civic Society. Newsletter No 41. June 2005.
  12. ^ Williams, B. J. and J. Van Leerzem, J.: Water supplies of the Black Country "Smestow Valley", South Staffs. Water Company, undated, accessed July 2009.
  13. ^ a b Mick Pearson (ed.). "The West Midlands River Stour". Black Country Society.
  14. ^ "Map of the confluence of the Barnett Brook and the Hoo Brook". All Technology Copyright Streetmap EU Ltd.
  15. ^ "Map of the Blakedown Brook". All Technology Copyright Streetmap EU Ltd.

External links

52°20′07″N 2°16′34″W / 52.335169°N 2.27608°W / 52.335169; -2.27608

Read more information:

Portuguese civil engineer and politician (born 1986) In this Portuguese name, the first or maternal family name is Veloso and the second or paternal family name is Silva. João TorresDeputy Secretary-General of the Socialist PartyIncumbentAssumed office 30 March 2022Secretary-GeneralAntónio CostaPreceded byJosé Luís CarneiroSecretary of State for Commerce, Services and Consumer ProtectionIn office26 October 2019 – 30 March 2022Prime MinisterAntónio CostaPreceded byHimself …

Member of Victorian Legislative Council Thomas Turner à Beckett, 1870 engraving Thomas Turner à Beckett (13 September 1808 – 1 July 1892) was a lawyer and politician in colonial Victoria (Australia), member of the Victorian Legislative Council.[1] Early life à Beckett was born in London, England, son of William à Beckett (senior) and his wife Sarah, née Abbott.[1] Thomas junior was brother of Sir William à Beckett and Gilbert Abbott à Beckett.[2] Thomas was educa…

Railway station serving Copenhagen Airport, Denmark Not to be confused with Kastrup station. Copenhagen AirportKøbenhavns LufthavnMain line and Copenhagen Metro stationCopenhagen Airport railway stationGeneral informationLocationTerminal 32770 KastrupDenmarkLine(s)Øresund LinePlatforms2Tracks4Train operatorsDSBSJÖresundstågMetroselskabetConstructionStructure typeBelow gradeAccessibleYesOther informationStation codeCphLocationCopenhagen AirportLocation within Greater CopenhagenShow map of Gre…

هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فضلًا، ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالات متعلقة بها. (نوفمبر 2020) أليس باري معلومات شخصية الميلاد سنة 1946 (العمر 76–77 سنة)  بيرنلي  مواطنة المملكة المتحدة  الحياة العملية المهنة ممثلة  اللغات الإنجليزية  المواق…

Extinct family of dinosaurs CamarasauridsTemporal range: Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous, 170–126 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Skeleton of Camarasaurus Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Clade: Dinosauria Clade: Saurischia Clade: †Sauropodomorpha Clade: †Sauropoda Clade: †Neosauropoda Clade: †Macronaria Clade: †Camarasauromorpha Family: †CamarasauridaeCope, 1877 Type genus †CamarasaurusCope, 1877 Genera †Camarasaurus †L…

تظهر الخريطة الأراضي المملوكة لليهود منذ 31 ديسمبر 1944 بما فيها الأراضي المملوكة بالكامل والمشتركة بأراضي غير مُقسمة وأراضي الدولة خاضعة للتنازل. وهذا يشكل 6 بالمئة من مجمل مساحة الأرض، وأكثر من نصفها ملك للصندوق الوطني اليهودي وجمعية الاستعمار اليهودي في فلسطين[1] شراء ا…

Overview of and topical guide to Kuwait See also: Index of Kuwait-related articles The Flag of KuwaitThe Coat of arms of Kuwait The location of Kuwait An enlargeable map of the State of Kuwait Kuwait is a sovereign emirate located on the coast of the Persian Gulf in Southwest Asia and the Middle East.[1] Kuwait is bordered by Saudi Arabia to the south and Iraq to the north and west. The name of Kuwait is a diminutive of an Arabic word meaning fortress built near water.[2] It has …

1938 film by Ben Holmes Little Orphan AnnieTheatrical release posterDirected byBen HolmesScreenplay byBudd SchulbergSamuel OrnitzStory bySamuel OrnitzEndre BohemBased onLittle Orphan Annieby Harold GrayProduced byJohn SpeaksStarringAnn GillisRobert KentJune TravisJ. Farrell MacDonaldJ.M. KerriganCinematographyFrank RedmanEdited byRobert BischoffMusic byGeorge BassmanLouis ForbesJoseph NussbaumProductioncompanyColonial Pictures CorporationDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease date December …

Namma Metro's Green Line metro station Mahalakshmi Namma Metro stationGeneral informationOther namesMahalakshmi LayoutLocationChord Rd, Nagapura, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560086Coordinates13°00′30″N 77°32′56″E / 13.008217°N 77.548821°E / 13.008217; 77.548821Owned byBangalore Metro Rail Corporation Ltd (BMRCL)Operated byNamma MetroLine(s)Green LinePlatformsSide platform Platform-1 → Nagasandra Platform-2 → Silk InstituteTracks2ConstructionStructure typeElevated…

Gereja Kristen Sulawesi TengahLogo GKSTPenggolonganProtestan, ReformedPemimpinPdt. Djadaramo Tasiabe, M.Th.WilayahSulawesi TengahSebagian Sulawesi SelatanDidirikan18 Oktober 1947 (1947-10-18) TentenaSitus web resmihttps://www.sinodegkst.org/ Gereja Kristen Sulawesi Tengah (bahasa Inggris: Central Sulawesi Christian Church; sering disingkat menjadi GKST), adalah gereja Protestan terbesar di Sulawesi Tengah, Indonesia, dan termasuk dalam kelompok gereja-gereja Reformed. Ide untuk membentu…

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Geography of Lahore – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) The Ravi River flows on the north-western side of Lahore. The geography of Lahore comprises the various features relating to the l…

Deep Blue Deep Blue (дослівно з англ. «Насичений синій») — комп'ютер для гри в шахи побудований компанією IBM. В 1997 році машина здобула перемогу над чемпіоном світу Гаррі Каспаровим. Після цієї перемоги ринкова ціна акцій компанії зросла на 18 мільярдів.[1] Зміст 1 Матч із Каспаро…

2006 video gameVirtual VillagersVirtual Villagers: A New Home promotional artworkDeveloper(s)Last Day of WorkPublisher(s)Last Day of WorkDesigner(s)Arthur K. HumphreyEngineCustomPlatform(s)Windows,Mac OS X,Nintendo DS,iOS,Palm OS (A New Home)ReleaseA New HomeJuly 18, 2006[1]The Lost Children March 16, 2007[2]The Secret City May 15, 2008The Tree of Life February 22, 2010New Believers December 30, 2010Origins 2 November 15, 2017Genre(s)Life simulation,God game,Social simulationMode…

Traditional Norwegian cheese preparation GommeGommePlace of originNorway Gomme (Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈɡʊ̂mːə]) is a traditional Norwegian dish usually served as a spread or a dessert.[1] Gomme has long traditions in several places in the country and was largely used as a party food when cakes were served, for example at Christmas. Gomme is commonly a form of sweet cheese made of long-boiled milk and having a yellow or brown colour. It is can be used as a cheese spread …

本條目存在以下問題,請協助改善本條目或在討論頁針對議題發表看法。 此條目翻譯品質不佳,原文在en:Russian submarine Kursk (K-141)。 (2018年8月10日)翻譯者可能不熟悉中文或原文語言,也可能使用了機器翻譯。請協助翻譯本條目或重新編寫,并注意避免翻译腔的问题。明顯拙劣的翻譯請改掛{{d|G13}}提交刪除。 此條目需要补充更多来源。 (2013年8月13日)请协助補充多方面可靠来…

You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian. (September 2011) Click [show] for important translation instructions. View a machine-translated version of the Italian article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikip…

West Lafayette redirects here. For the village in Ohio, see West Lafayette, Ohio. City in Indiana, United StatesWest LafayetteCityWest Lafayette Public Library and Purdue University in backgroundWest Lafayette City Hall, formerly Morton SchoolCelery Bog nature area FlagNickname: West SideShow West LafayetteShow Tippecanoe CountyShow IndianaShow the United StatesCoordinates: 40°26′31″N 86°54′45″W / 40.44194°N 86.91250°W / 40.44194; -86.91250CountryUnited S…

Європейська екологічна позначка, заснована Регламентом Ради (ЄС) від 23 березня 1992 року, може застосовуватись у всіх країнах Європейського Союзу та у Швейцарії після переговорів та схвалення ряду технічних характеристик (проголосовано кваліфікованою більшістю представн…

Painting by Jasper Johns Three FlagsArtistJasper JohnsYear1958TypeEncaustic on canvasDimensions77.8 cm × 115.6 cm (30+7⁄8 in × 45+1⁄2 in)LocationWhitney Museum of American Art, New York Three Flags is a painting by American artist Jasper Johns, from 1958. It is held in the Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York.[1] History and description The work comprises three canvases painted with hot wax. The three canvases form a tiered a…

Book of the New Testament Part of a series onBooks of theNew TestamentPapyrus 46, one of the oldest New Testament papyri, showing 2 Cor 11:33–12:9 Gospels and Acts Four Evangelists MatthewMarkLukeJohn Lukan Acts Acts of the Apostles Epistles and Apocalypse Pauline epistles Romans 1 Corinthians2 Corinthians GalatiansEphesians PhilippiansColossians 1 Thessalonians2 Thessalonians 1 Timothy2 Timothy TitusPhilemon Hebrews Catholic epistles James 1 Peter2 Peter 1 John2 John3 John Jude Apocalypse Boo…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya

Lokasi Pengunjung: 3.142.40.195