- Shepperton Lock
Infobox Waterlock
lock_name = Shepperton Lock [ [http://www.visitthames.co.uk/uploads/a_users_guide_to_the_River_thames.pdf Statistics from Environment Agency "A User's Guide to the River Thames:Part II"] ]
caption= Shepperton lock (2005)
waterway =River Thames
county =Surrey
maint =Environment Agency
operation = Hydraulic
first = 1813
latest = 1899
length = 174' 5" (53.16m)
width = 19' 10" (6.04m)
fall = 6' 8" (2.03m)
sealevel = 33'
enda =Teddington Lock
distenda = 10 miles
endb =
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extra= Power is available out of hoursShepperton Lock is a lock on the
River Thames , in England adjoining the northern bank nearShepperton ,Surrey (formerlyMiddlesex ). It is across the river fromWeybridge but not directly accessible from there.In 1813, the
City of London Corporation built thepound lock on a cut along an existing watercourse to createLock Island .There are two weirs, one between Lock Island and
Hamhaugh Island and the other larger one between Hamhaugh Island and the southern bank. TheShepperton to Weybridge Ferry service runs from Ferry Lane below the lock to the end of Thames Street,Weybridge , where there are two rowing clubs and a canoeing club. Overlooking the lock and the islands is the Thames Court pub/restaurant.History
A weir is recorded at Shepperton in the 1086
Domesday Book but this is unlikely to have been on the tidal Thames itself. There is also reference to a sluice or dam at Shepperton in 1293 and tolls being raised on passing ships, but the geography of the area is likely to have changed and these do not appear to refer to the site of the current lock. The lock was built in 1813 on the site of a small watercourse known as Stoner's Gut which ran across the neck of a hook in the river as it went to Weybridge. This channel was considered a nuisance to navigation and was not considered for use as the main channel as barges usually went to Weybridge or the Wey Navigation. Various accounts at the end of the 18th century record flood waters cutting through the gut and it is believed that there was a little wooden church built on piles over the river which was washed away. The gut was dammed and in 1805 came the first suggestion for a lock. After strong opposition, the proposal was put forward again in 1809 and a wooden lock was subsequently built. [Fred. S. Thacker "The Thames Highway: Volume II Locks and Weirs" 1920 - republished 1968 David & Charles] A stone lock was built in 1899, next to the existing wooden one which was then filled in and removed.There was formerly a small island called Dog Ait at this point. This became corrupted into the name "Dockett" as in Dockett Eddy Lane.
Access to the lock
The lock is on the Middlesex bank, and can be reached from Shepperton down Ferry Lane or from the Chertsey direction via Dockett Eddy Lane leading to Towpath. There is usually ample parking space. From the Weybridge side it can only be reached by the ferry.
Reach above the lock
Immediately above the lock is Pharaoh's Island, which was a gift from the nation to
Admiral Nelson following theBattle of the Nile . The Middlesex bank is quite open with several larger houses along it untilDumsey Meadow aSite of Special Scientific Interest . The Surrey side is built up until parkland at Chertsey Meads, and then built up again at the edge ofChertsey itself.Chertsey Bridge crosses the river just before Chertsey Lock. On the backwater going past Chertsey Lock, which becomes theAbbey River , is the site of the Anglo-SaxonChertsey Abbey sacked by theViking s.Chertsey Regatta is held alongside Dumsey Meadow in August.Thames Path
The
Thames Path follows the northern (Middlesex) bank all the way to Chertsey Lock.Literature and the Media
The lock in
Charles Dickens "Our Mutual Friend " at Plashwater Mill is based on Shepperton lock.In
H. G. Wells "The War of the Worlds " one of the main battles fought against the invaders from Mars takes place between Weybridge and Shepperton lock.ee also
*
Locks on the River Thames
*Rowing on the River Thames References
* [http://www.riverthames.co.uk/about_thames/3763.htm The River Thames Guide — About the Thames — Shepperton Lock]
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