Online Encyclopedia

SEVERN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 724 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SEVERN  , a

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river of Wales and England . It rises on the N.E. side of Plinlimmon, on the S.W. border of Montgomeryshire, and flows with a nearly semicircular course of about 210 M. to the Bristol Channel; the
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direct distance from its source to its mouth is about 8o m . Its Welsh name is Hafren, and its
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Roman name was Sabrina . Through Montgomeryshire its course is at first in a S.E. direction, and for the first 15 M. it flows over a rough precipitous bed . At Llanidloes it bends towards the N.E., passing Newtown and Welshpool; this
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part of the valley bearing the name of the Vale of Powis . It receives the Vyrnwy near Melverley, and forms a mile of the Welsh border, and then turning in an E.S.E. direction enters Shropshire, and waters the broad rich plain of Shrewsbury, after which it bends southward past Ironbridge and
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Bridgnorth to
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Bewdley in Worcestershire . In Shropshire it receives a number of tributaries, the chief of which is the Tern . Continuing its southerly course through Worcester-
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shire it passes
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Stourport, where it receives the
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Stour (
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left), and Worcester, shortly after which it receives the Teme (right) . It enters Gloucestershire close to
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Tewkesbury, where it receives the Upper
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Avon (left), after which, bending in a S.W. direction, it passes the city of Gloucester, below which it becomes estuarine and tidal . A high
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bore or tidal
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wave, for which the Severn is notorious, may
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reverse the flow as high up as Tewkesbury Lock (134 M. above Gloucester), and has sometimes caused
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great destruction . The estuary merges into the Bristol Channel at the point where it receives on the left the
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Lower or Bristol Avon, and on the right the Wye . The source lies at an
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elevation of about 2000 ft.; the fall from Llanidloes is about 55o ft., from Newtown 365 ft. and from Shrewsbury, 90 M. above Gloucester, 18o ft .

The scenery of the upper valley is

wild and picturesque, and that of the lower river is at some points very beautiful . The course between the height of the Wrekin and
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Wenlock Edge (despite the manufacturing towns on the banks at this point), the valley above Bewdley, where the
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Forest of Wyre
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borders the left
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bank, and the
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fine position of Worcester, with its
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cathedral rising above the river, may be noticed . The distance from Gloucester to Avonmouth is 44 m., but the upper part of the estuary is tortuous, and, owing to the bores and shifting shoals, difficult of navigation: On this account the Gloucester and Berkeley
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Ship Canal, 164 m. in length, was constructed, admitting vessels of 350 tons to Gloucester from the docks at Sharpness on the estuary . The navigation extends up to Arley, above Bewdley, 47 M. from Gloucester, but is principally used up to Stourport (43 m.), from which the
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Staffordshire and Worcestershire canal gives access to the Wolverhampton
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industrial
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district and the Trent and
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Mersey navigation . The Berkeley canal and the Worcester and
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Birmingham canal are maintained by the Sharpness New Docks and Gloucester and Birmingham navigation
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company . There is connexion with the
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Thames by the Stroudwater canal from Framilode on the estuary, joining the Thames and Severn canal near
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Stroud . The Wye is in part navigable; the Bristol Avon gives access to the great
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port of Bristol, and the Upper Avon is in part navigable . The Severn is a good salmon river, and is famous for its lampreys, while many of the tributaries afford fine trout-fishing, such as the Teme and the Vyrnwy . The drainage
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area of the Severn is 685o sq. m., including the Wye and the Bristol Avon, or 4350 sq. m. without these rivers . Severn Tunnel.—The first
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bridge above the mouth of the Severn is that near Sharpness, which carries the Great Westernand Midland joint railway between Berkeley Road and Lydbrook Junction . But the Severn tunnel, carrying the Great Western; railway under the estuary 14 m. below the bridge, forms the direct route between the south of England and South Wales . Before the tunnel was made there was a steam ferry at a point known as " New Passage," where a ferry had existed from early times .

The steam ferry was opened in connexion with the Bristol and South Wales

Union railway in 1863, and was subsequently taken over by the Great Western company .
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Parliamentary powers to construct the tunnel were obtained by this company in 1872, and
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work began in the following
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year . The originator of the scheme and chief engineer was Mr Charles Richard-son, and
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Sir John Hawkshaw was consulting engineer . The
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principal difficulty encountered in the construction was the tendency to flooding, owing both to the river breaking into the
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works, and, more especially, to the underground springs encountered, one of which when tapped completely flooded the works at a
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rate of 6000 gallons per minute, and delayed the work for more than a year . In 1879, after this disaster, the contract for the whole work was let to Mr T . A . Walker . The
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total length of the tunnel is 4 m . 624 yds., of which 2i m. are beneath the river . On the east side the cutting leading to the tunnel has a gradient of I in too, which is continued in the tunnel itself until the deepest part is reached beneath the river-channel known as " the Shoots," which has a
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depth of about 6o ft. at low tide and too at high tide (ordinary spring) . Beneath this the rails run level for 12 chains, after which the ascent of the tunnel and cutting on the west side is on a gradient of I in 90 . At Sudbrook on the west side there is a pumping and ventilating station .

The tunnel was completed in 1886; the

time for passenger trains between Bristol and
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Cardiff was immediately reduced by nearly one
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half, and the value of the new route was especially apparent in connexion with the
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mineral
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traffic between the South Wales
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coal-field and
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London and the ports of the south of England .

End of Article: SEVERN
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SEVERINUS
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SEVERN TUNNEL (4 M. 281 chains in length)

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