- River Roddlesworth
The River Roddlesworth (also known as Rocky Brook) is a river of
Lancashire .Course
The source of the river is on the slopes of
Great Hill , just above the ruins known as "Pimm's", where the infant river is known as Calf Hey Brook. Calf Hey Brook is joined by another stream occasionally termed Roddlesworth - which rises beneath Cartridge Hill and runs past the ruins of "Hollinshead Hall " - beneath "Slipper Lowe".From there, it follows a northerly course through Roddlesworth Plantations, around the two
Roddlesworth Reservoir s fed by the river and past Red Lees (a name seemingly linked with that of the river). The river continues through the Stanworth Valley inLivesey , where it is met by Stockclough Brook, and under theM65 motorway andLeeds & Liverpool Canal .Soon after this, the Roddlesworth enters a culvert close to the "Star Paper Mill".
The Roddlesworth flows into the
River Darwen at Moulden Brow. Between the confluence with Stockclough Brook and the Darwen, the river is known locally as Moulden (or Moulding) Water.For virtually its entire course, the Roddlesworth marks the boundary between Chorley Borough and the
unitary authority ofBlackburn with Darwen .This border was preceded by that between the Hundreds of Blackburn and Leyland.
The river also demarcated the eastern edge of the region of "Gunolfesmores" in the
Middle Ages and, later, the Manor of Hoghton [Lofthouse, J. (1951) "Lancashire Landscape". Robert Hale Ltd., London, page 92.] .The name is first recorded in about 1160 as "Rodtholfeswrtha", suggesting a derivation meaning "the homestead of
Hrothwulf " [Ekwall, E. (1922) "The Place-names of Lancashire". Longmans, Green & Company, page 132.] .ettlements
The Roddlesworth runs through a wooded
valley close to the settlements ofTockholes ,Roddlesworth ,Abbey Village and Stanworth before joining the River Darwen close toFeniscowles .Reservoirs
*
Abbey Village Reservoir
*Lower Roddlesworth Reservoir
*Upper Roddlesworth Reservoir
*Rake Brook Reservoir is fed by Rake Brook close to itsconfluence with the Roddlesworth.Tributaries
Finnington Brook joins close to where the Roddlesworth itself falls into the River Darwen. Rising from the confluence of several small
brook s, draining "Riley Green ", "Marsh View" and "Brimmicroft", which meet close to Riley Green Bridge over theLeeds and Liverpool Canal , the brook runs eastward in a small, wooded valley below the canal. The river flows by thehamlet of "Finnington", picking up other streams heading north from "Stanworth", running by ahatchery and through a reservoir, joining the Roddlesworth on the south side of "Moulden Water Bridge".Stockclough Brook flows into the Roddlesworth in the "Stanworth Valley", opposite the site of what was probably once a small mill. The brook rises close to "Potter's" and flows west and south west, skirting by "Lower Whitehalgh Farm" before passing beneath "Stockclough Lane" and the "M65 Motorway". Whitehalgh Brook joins near stepping stones in "Owlet Holes Wood" before Stockclough Brook flows beneath the "Stockclough Viaduct", over which the former railway between Cherry Tree and Chorley once ran, before joining the Roddlesworth. Whitehalgh Brook itself rises in "Adam Plat Wood" where three brooks from "
Tockholes " combine. Sheep Bridge Brook rises near "Tithe Barn Cottages" and flows northwest towards "Yew Tree Farm", before moving southwest through "Hole Bottom Wood", where it flows beneath the bridge that gives the stream its name. It meets Chapels Brook, flowing northwest from "Close Farm" and "Weasel Farm" in Tockholes, following "Rock Lane" to "Chapels Farm", after which it moves past "Pickering Fold" and through "Heald Wood". Shaw Brook joins at the western end of Adam Plat Wood, having run west and north from its source on "Green Hill", via "Golden Soney Farm" and "Lower Hill", past "Higher Crow Trees Farm" and "Lower Crow Trees Farm" passing through a wooded vale to its confluence with Whitehalgh Brook.Rake Brook rises at "Brown Hill" on "
Withnell Moor" and flows northward, draining the west side of "Cold Within Hill" before pouring through "Birch Clough", separating "Twist Moor" and "Roddlesworth Moor" and feeding "Rake Brook Reservoir", formerly populated by "Rake Wood". The confluence of Rake Brook and the River Roddlesworth is in "Benson's Wood", just after the end of the overflow from the Roddlesworth Reservoirs.Rake Brook Reservoir is also fed by another stream rising on Withnell Moor. This unnamed brook flows north, separating Withnell Moor from "Wheelton Moor" (as well as the twocivil parish es) before passing the ruins of "New Temple" (just south of "Solomon's Temple"), "Summer House" (formerly known as "Botany Bay") and "Pope's", running east of "Millstone Edge", before meeting Rake Brook.References
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