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River Swift

River in Leicestershire and Warwickshire, England

River Swift

Summary

River in Leicestershire and Warwickshire, England

FieldValue
nameRiver Swift
imageLutterworth-River Swift - geograph.org.uk - 1178133.jpg
image_captionRiver Swift near Lutterworth
pushpin_mapWarwickshire
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the mouth within Warwickshire
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1England
subdivision_type3Counties
subdivision_name3Leicestershire, Warwickshire
subdivision_type4Towns
subdivision_name4Lutterworth, Rugby
length23 km
source1_locationUpper Bruntingthorpe, Leicestershire
mouthConfluence with River Avon
mouth_locationRugby, Warwickshire
mouth_coordinates
basin_size80 km2

The River Swift is a 14-mile (23 km) long tributary of the River Avon that rises in south Leicestershire, and flows through the town of Lutterworth before joining the Avon at its confluence at Rugby in Warwickshire in the English Midlands.

Course

The source of the river is a stream that rises at an altitude of 142 m near to Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome in Leicestershire, on the watershed division between the Avon and Soar catchments. The Swift passes the village of Walton and then Kimcote, where it meets a number of small streams that drain the headwaters of the catchment. The river continues in a south-westerly direction, passing to the north of Walcote then through the Misterton Marshes, a Site of Special Scientific Interest, before reaching the M1 motorway bridge and the town of Lutterworth.

The river passes to the south of the town, where it is crossed by the Rugby road, near to the site of the ‘lost’ St Johns the Baptist hospital. After passing beneath the Lutterworth bypass, the Swift continues south-west until it reaches the Bransford Bridge crossing under the A5. This road follows the course of Watling Street, the Roman road that linked London to Wroxeter.

Downstream of the bridge the river passes the site of the deserted medieval village of Cestersover, and then the modern village of Churchover. At this point a canal feeder takes water from the river to supply the nearby canal. After passing beneath the M6 motorway, and past the hamlet of Cosford, the river then flows directly south through the Swift Valley Nature Reserve, passes Brownsover Hall and then through the Swift Valley industrial estate. It is crossed by the Oxford Canal on an aqueduct, and then passes a retail park to join the River Avon, between Brownsover and Rugby.

The River Swift connected to the original route of the Oxford Canal near Cosford in order to feed water to the canal. In 1785 there was a proposal to make the river navigable from Cosford to Lutterworth by the construction of flash locks. This proposal however never came to fruition. The River Swift is still an important feeder to the northern Oxford Canal.

Catchment

The Swift joins the Avon in Rugby}}

The Swift catchment lies between that of the Avon and Welland to the east, the River Sowe to the west, and the River Soar and its tributaries to the north, it covers an area of 80 km2.

In terms of geology of the catchment is underlain primarily by Lias Clay and mudstones, with an overlying layer of glacially deposited till, sands and gravels. This impermeable clay means that the Swift can become responsive in terms of runoff to heavy rainfall events.

Flooding

The Swift has a minor history of flooding along its course, especially in Lutterworth, flood events being recorded in 1875, 1931 and most recently in 2008. A flood warning and alert service exists for the catchment, in conjunction with that for the Upper Avon and the Clay Coton brook.

In February 2012, a mother and her three children had to be rescued from their car when it was swept downstream from the ford between Churchover and Harborough Magna, after it had broken down in the floodwaters whilst crossing the river.

History

Following the condemnation of John Wycliffe by the Catholic Church at the Council of Constance as a heretic, the Council decreed that his body and bones were to be exhumed and scattered far from a burial place of the church, in accordance with canonical and lawful sanctions. After some delay, his remains were burned and his ashes were drowned in the River Swift, which flows through Lutterworth.

References

References

  1. "Water Framework Directive Surface Water Classification Status and Objectives 2012 csv files (GB109054043940)". Environment-agency.gov.uk.
  2. "River Swift". warwickshireflyfishers.co.uk 2.
  3. "Get-a-map online". [[Ordnance Survey]].
  4. "Environment Agency What's in your Backyard". Environment Agency.
  5. (April 2018). "The Hospital of St. John the Baptist - Excavations at Mill Farm Lutterworth". le.ac.uk.
  6. Ordnance Survey. (2009). "140- Leicester, Coventry & Rugby". Ordnance Survey.
  7. "The Development of Transport in Rugby by Peter H Elliott". Warwickshire Railways.
  8. "Strategic Flood Risk Assessment Harborough District Update 2017". Harborough District Councils.
  9. "Flood Warning Area Detail". Environment Agency.
  10. "news-Terror-of-family-trapped-in-rising-flood-water". therugbyobserver.
  11. (2018). "Heretics and believers: a history of the English Reformation". Yale University Press.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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