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Encyclopedia > Upper Derwent Valley

The Upper Derwent Valley is an area of the Peak District National Park in Derbyshire, England. Its most significant features are the Derwent Dams (Derwent Dam and Howden Dam) which form Howden Reservoir, Derwent Reservoir and Ladybower Reservoir.


In 1899, the Derwent Valley Water Board was set up to supply water to Derby City, Leicester, Nottingham and Sheffield, and the two Gothic-style dams were built across the River Derwent to create Howden Reservoir (1912) and Derwent Reservoir (1916).


West of the Derwent, a large village known as 'Tintown' was created for the 'navvies' - the workers who built the dams, and their families, many of whom came from the Elan Valley Reservoirs in Wales. For a detailed description and photos, see: Birchinlee.

Enlarge
Pack Horse bridge in the Upper Derwent Valley.

Over the decades, demand increased to the point where another reservoir was required. The larger Ladybower Reservoir necessitated the flooding of the villages of Derwent and Ashopton, with the occupants being relocated. A packhorse bridge with a preservation order on it also had to be moved, and was rebuilt at Slippery Stones, north of Howden Reservoir. The bodies in the churchyard were exhumed and reburied at Bamford. The reservoir was completed in 1945.


The topographical similarity between the Upper Derwent Valley and the Ruhr Valley of Germany led to the Dams being used as a practice environment for the Lancaster bombers of the 617 Dam Busters Squadron in 1943 prior to their attack on the Ruhr dams. The Dam Busters film was subsequently filmed at the Derwent Dams, and the area sees occasional commemorative fly-pasts by the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight.


The reservoirs cover 19,850 hectares, and can hold 463,692 million litres. The main beneficiary of the reservoirs' water is Sheffield, less than 15km away.


The area is good for rare birds, including Black Grouse and Goshawk.


The highest peak in the area is Back Tor, at 538 metres.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Derwent Reservoir walks - Howden Reservoir walk - The Dambusters Dam walk - walks in Yorkshire (803 words)
A circuit of the Upper Derwent valley and its reservoirs makes one of the finest low routes in the Peak, but for many it is too long and involves some road waking.
This 17th-century bridge once spanned the river further south at Derwent village, but the construction of the Ladybower dam, which began in 1935, meant that the whole area would be submerged beneath the waters of the Derwent.
Nearly two miles later it reaches the Derwent Dam, where there is a memorial to 617 Squadron ­ the Dambusters, who buzzed this place on low-level practices for their May 1943 raid on Moehne and Eder Dams in Germany.
The Derwent Dams provide water for Sheffield, Derby, Nottingham and Leicester (684 words)
The Upper Valley of the Derwent is a deep valley surrounded by gritstone edges and dominated by three great reservoirs, constructed by the Derwent Valley Water Board primarily to provide water for Sheffield, Derby, Nottingham and Leicester.
The upper two dams, Howden and Derwent, were constructed between 1901 and 1916 and they were such a large undertaking that a village called Birchinlee was constructed in the upper valley to house the workers and a narrow-gauge railway was built between Howden Dam and the Midland Railway at Bamford.
Derwent village can still be seen in very dry summers such as 1959, 1976 and 1995, and the spire of the church was left standing until 1959, when it was demolished.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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