River Burn, Norfolk

River Burn, Norfolk

The River Burn (also known as "Nelsons River") is a river in the North West of the County of Norfolk. From its source to its mouth on the North Coast of Norfolk it is 9.8 miles long. The river has a fall of 36 meters to the sea. The source is one mile south of the village of South Creake, in a small copse west of a bend in London Lane. From the source it runs north east towards the village of South Creake, where at Fakenham road it turns north west and run through the village. Gradually the river turns north and runs along the western side of the Burnham road heading towards North Creake.

The river runs through the village of North Creake, crosses under the Burnham Road and heads north across the open countryside towards the ruins of Creake Abbey. This abbey is on the southern edge of the Burnham’s, a mile or so from Burnham Thorpe. It was built towards the end of the 1300s for an Augustinian priory which had inhabited this spot since the 1220s, becoming an abbey shortly afterwards. Creake Abbey is unusual, because although it survived into the 16th century, it never suffered the effects of the Reformation or the dissolution of the monasteries. In 1508, an outbreak of plague killed virtually all the inhabitants, and it was abandoned.

The river runs through a small pool in what were the grounds on the west side of the abbey, and then passes under the lane and out northwards across countryside towards Burnham Thorpe. At Burnham Thorpe the river runs through another pool very close to the site of the Burnham Thorpe Parsonage. That parsonage was the birth place of Admiral Horatio Nelson. Burnham Thorpe was originally one of a group of seven villages all prefixed with "Burnham" taking their name from the river. It is approximately three miles from the North Norfolk coast, a low, flat coastline of muted colour, of sand and salt-marsh. From the high ground above the village one can see the sea, and it is said that from there you can hear the sound of surf on the sand of the shore.

The river now curves north west through the village towards Thorpe common. The Manor House on Thorpe common has a moat all around supplied with water from the river. Further on the river passes under the route of a dismantled railway. From here the river widens a little and flows into the mill pond at Burnham Overy. the sails had copper vanes.Just a very short distance on the river reaches a second watermill. The lower mill at Burnham Overy is the second of two watermills on the river Burn. This mill consists of a long row of buildings in four sections, three storeys high, built from local red brick with pantile roofs. The mill dates from 1795. The inlet water bridge is in between the second and third building. The A149 coast road passes over the river at the mill site.

From here the river enters Overy marshes and Overy Creek. The river spreads out into multiple tidal creeks through the salt marshes that fringe the coast thereabouts, and finally leaves land and enters the sea between the eastern point Scolt Head Island and Overy Marshes, the gap locally known as Burnham Harbour. Small boats can reach Burnham Overy Staithe through this gap and creek.

Links

* [http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/commondata/103196/363896?referrer=/subjects/waterres/457898/458141/ Gauging station River Burn, South Creake]
* [http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/subjects/flood/floodwarning/NF1D?time=1098013500 Flood warnings, River Burn, Env ag]
* [http://www.norfolkchurches.co.uk/creakeabbey/creakeabbey.htm North Creake Abbey ruins]
* [http://www.norfolkmills.co.uk/Watermills/burnham-overy-lower.html Burnham Overy Lower Mill]
* [http://www.norfolkmills.co.uk/Watermills/burnham-overy-union.html Burnham Overy Union Mill]


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