- Bell Weir Lock
Infobox Waterlock
lock_name = Bell Weir 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= Bell Weir Lock with the M25 crossing beyond
waterway =River Thames
county =Surrey
maint =Environment Agency
operation = Hydraulic
first = 1817
latest = 1877
length = 257' 7" (78.51m)
width = 24' 5" (7.44m)
fall = 6' 0" (1.82m)
sealevel = 47'
enda =Teddington Lock
distenda = 17 miles
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extra= Power is available out of hoursBell Weir Lock is a lock on the
River Thames in England situated on the Surrey bank nearEgham . It is just upstream of theM25 Runnymede Bridge which carries the M25 andA30 road across the river. The lock was first built by theThames Navigation Commission in 1817.The weir is just a short distance upstream above the island.
History
The first proposed location for a pound lock in 1811 was across the bend at the present recreation ground. The lock was built at its present site in the winter of 1817-1818. It was known as Egham Lock, but took its name from Charlie Bell, the first weir keeper and ferryman. The weir collapsed under weight of ice in 1827 and the lock collapsed in 1866. Lock and weir were rebuilt in 1867 but the lock had to be rebuilt in stone in 1877. A new weir was completed in 1904. [Fred. S. Thacker "The Thames Highway: Volume II Locks and Weirs" 1920 - republished 1968 David & Charles]
Access to the lock
The lock can be reached on foot from the
A308 road and is behind the Runnymede Hotel.Reach above the lock
The reach runs through
Runnymede toOld Windsor . Immediately on the Buckinghamshire bank is a major water input and management facility atHythe End that supplies theStaines Reservoirs andKing George VI Reservoir . There are then riverside dwellings at Hythe End, particularly on the Island. This is followed by woods along the bank in whichMagna Carta Island is tucked away followed byPats Croft Eyot placed a little further out. Further on are more riverside dwellings atWraysbury and onFriary Island . The Surrey bank has riverside houses and then opens out into a recreation area. Following that are the Runnymead meadows and the end of these are marked by theEdwin Lutyens gate houses. The "Bells of Ouseley" pub here is supposed to commemorate the bells ofOsney Abbey which were brought downstream at the dissolution and disappeared into the mud at this point. There is a built-up stretch at Old Windsor (which is now Berkshire). There are no river crossings on this reach.The reach is home to
Wraysbury Skiff and Punting Club .Egham Regatta is held near Hythe End in June and Wraysbury and Old Windsor Regatta is held there in August. Pleasure boats from the recreation ground also ply the Thames here.Thames Path
The
Thames Path runs along the Surrey bank all the way to Old Windsor Lock.Literature and the Media
In
Three Men in a Boat ,Jerome K Jerome records"Harris and I began to think that Bell Weir lock must have been done away with ... It was half-past seven when we were through .... We had originally intended to go on to Magna Carta Island....But somehow we did not feel that we yearned for the picturesque nearly so much now as we had earlier in the day. A bit of water between a coal barge and a gasworks would have quite satisfied us for that night"'
See also
*
Locks on the River Thames
*Rowing on the River Thames References
External links
* [http://www.visitthames.co.uk/poi_detail/139/2160/poi_detail.html Bell Weir Lock] at visitthames.co.uk
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