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Sandford Lock

Sandford Lock
Approaching Sandford Lock from downstream
51°42′29″N 1°13′59″W / 51.708048°N 1.233104°W / 51.708048; -1.233104
WaterwayRiver Thames
CountyOxfordshire
Maintained byEnvironment Agency
OperationHydraulic
First built1631
Latest built1973
Length53.03 m (174 ft 0 in) [1]
Width6.62 m (21 ft 9 in)[1]
Fall2.69 m (8 ft 10 in)[1]
Above sea level176'
Distance to
Teddington Lock
89 miles
Power is available out of hours
Sandford Lock
River Thames
weir
Iffley Lock rollers and weir
Hinksey Stream
A423(T) Isis Bridge
Kennington Railway Bridge
Rose Isle
Fiddlers Elbow
weir
weir
Sandford Lock and mill
River Thames

Sandford Lock is a lock on the River Thames in England, situated at Sandford-on-Thames which is just south of Oxford. The first pound lock was built in 1631 by the Oxford-Burcot Commission although this has since been rebuilt. The lock has the deepest fall of all locks on the Thames at 8 ft 9in (2.69m) and is connected to a large island which is one of three at this point. The lock lies at the end of Church Lane in Sandford on Thames.

Upstream from the lock, the main weir connects the second island to the opposite bank on the Kennington, Oxfordshire side. This is the location of the infamous Sandford Lasher, a treacherous weirpool where many have drowned. Another weir links the two lower islands.

History edit

There was a mill here built by the Knights Templar in around 1294. There are also records of a ferry and a fish weir in medieval times. In the reign of Edward III there is an account of the immemorial conflict between millers and bargemen when "the men of Oxon broke down the locks of Sandford". This was probably at the navigation weir or flash lock on the old river channel behind the second island. This was described in 1624 as ‘Great Lockes’. It was replaced in 1631 when the Oxford-Burcot Commission built one of the first pound locks in England here. The lock was passed on to the Thames Navigation Commission in 1790 and lengthened in 1795, under the direction of Daniel Harris, the Oxford gaoler, at a cost of nearly £1,800. In 1836 a new lock was built on the current site alongside the old one and a lock house was ordered in 1839. The old lock has since been filled in after an incident when a miller opened the sluices and caused damage to the embankments. Its position is still visible (the position of the upper gates can be seen in the stonework above the present upper gates). An iron bridge above the lock was built between 1866 and 1877.[2] The latest rebuild of the lock was in 1972.

Sandford Lasher edit

 
A newspaper report of the 1921 drowning incident

Sandford Lasher, or weir, is on the left bank well upstream of Sandford Lock. The pool below the weir has been notorious since the 19th century because of the number of individuals who have drowned there. Weirs, like the one at Sandford Lasher, generate powerful currents that can trap and hold a victim (and often attempted rescuers) underwater at the base of the structure; hence their reputation as "drowning machines".

Henry Fawcett, a student of University College, Oxford, drowned while swimming in May 1833.[3] John Richardson Currer, brother of Charles Savile Roundell and student of Balliol College, Oxford drowned in February 1840 while attempting to row a skiff through the lasher pool.[4] A 16-year-old pupil of the Cowley Diocesan School, Edward John Templar, the son of the Vicar of Great Coxwell, drowned on 21 May 1864 after diving into the water and saving the life of another boy, a non-swimmer who had accidentally fallen into the weirpool.[5] Clarence Sinclair Collier, a 19-year-old student of Balliol College, drowned in June 1879. He and another student were boating above the weir, but the boat overturned and both they and the boat were carried by the current over the weir and into the lasher pool, where Collier drowned.[6] He is commemorated by a memorial on the wall of the antechapel at Baliol College.[7]

At the weir, a 19th-century obelisk records the deaths of five Christ Church students who drowned here - Richard Phillimore and William Gaisford in 1843; George Dasent in 1872 and Michael Llewelyn Davies and Rupert Buxton in 1921. William Gaisford was the son of Thomas Gaisford, the dean of Christ Church. He got into difficulties while swimming on 23 June 1843. His friend, Richard Phillimore, entered the water to save him, but both young men drowned.[8] Richard Phillimore was the son of Dr Joseph Phillimore, the Regius Professor of Civil Law.[9] They are buried in Christ Church Cathedral and also commemorated by two memorial tablets in the north walk of the Cathedral cloisters.[10] Michael Llewelyn Davies was the foster son of writer J. M. Barrie, and one of the main inspirations for the character of Peter Pan. He and Rupert Buxton, the son of Sir Thomas Buxton, 4th Baronet, both drowned on 19 May 1921 in the Sandford Lasher[11] in reportedly calm water. Buxton had recently celebrated his 21st birthday and Llewelyn Davies was just short of his 21st birthday. The Sandford Lasher Weir is being used again to generate hydroelectric power (see below) making the memorial obelisk inaccessible. It may be viewed from various points around Sanford Pool, easily accessible from the Kennington side of the River Thames.

 
Sandford Weir in 2018, showing the hydroelectric equipment installed there. The Victorian obelisk is visible at centre-right.
 
Sandford Lock full, looking downstream
 
Sandford Lock empty from the tail gates

Reach above the lock edit

After the third island which is Fiddler's Elbow the river makes a sharp turn at Rose Isle. On the west bank is the town of Kennington, Oxfordshire. Further upstream are Kennington Railway Bridge where the Hinksey Stream joins the Thames again and Isis Bridge carrying the Oxford southern by-pass.

The Thames Path follows the western bank to Iffley Lock crossing the Hinksey Stream on the Kennington Towpath bridge.

Hydroelectric power edit

Construction of Sandford Hydro, a hydroelectric power scheme began here in 2011, with the three Archimedes screws being operational from 2018.[12][13][14]

Literature and the media edit

Sandford Lasher and its dangers are described in chapter 18 of Jerome K Jerome's Three Men in a Boat (1889).

The pool under Sandford lasher, just behind the lock, is a very good place to drown yourself in. The undercurrent is terribly strong, and if you once get down into it you are all right. An obelisk marks the spot where two men have already been drowned, while bathing there; and the steps of the obelisk are generally used as a diving-board by young men now who wish to see if the place really IS dangerous.

Jerome was a close personal friend of J.M. Barrie, and so probably knew Michael Llewelyn Davies.

It is also mentioned in The Dictionary of the Thames by Charles Dickens, Jr.[15]

It is notorious to all rowing men and habitue's of the river that Sandford Lasher has almost yearly demanded its tale of victims and it is almost inconceivable that people will continue year after year to tempt fate in this and other equally dangerous places

In Tom Brown at Oxford, by Thomas Hughes, first published in 1861, the eponymous, principal character has a narrow escape after accidentally rowing a skiff over the weir and into the lasher. Sandford Lock is briefly mentioned in The Four Feathers by A.E.W. Mason (1902). It is also briefly mentioned in the poem The Burden of Itys by Oscar Wilde.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Environment Agency Dimensions of locks on the River Thames". web page. Environmental Agency. 8 November 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Dimensions given in metres
  2. ^ Fred. S. Thacker The Thames Highway: Volume II Locks and Weirs 1920 - republished 1968 David & Charles
  3. ^ Jackson's Oxford Journal | date=25 May 1833 | https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results/1833-05-25
  4. ^ Jackson's Oxford Journal | date=8 February 1840 | issue=4528 https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results/1840-02-08
  5. ^ "A Young Gentleman Drowned at Oxford". The Standard. No. 12418. London. 28 May 1864. p. 5.
  6. ^ "The Death of an Undergraduate by Drowning at Oxford". The Star. No. 156. Saint Peter Port, England. 10 June 1879.
  7. ^ Jones, John. "Memorial Inscriptions". Balliol College Archives & Manuscripts. Balliol College Oxford. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  8. ^ G.V. Cox (1870). Recollections of Oxford. Macmillan. p. 330.
  9. ^ "Fatal Accident". The Ipswich Journal. No. 5437. Ipswich. 1 July 1843.
  10. ^ Michael Popkin (2001). . OXFORD INSCRIPTIONS - Inscribed Stones and Plaques in Oxford. Archived from the original on 24 April 2002. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  11. ^ Paul Goldsack River Thames: In the Footsteps of the Famous 2003 English Heritage/Bradt
  12. ^ "Case Study: Sandford Hydro". Low Carbon Hub. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Oxford's Sandford Hydro power plant in pictures". Oxford Mail. 27 March 2018.
  14. ^ "Thames hydro-power set to make a splash". Oxford Mail. 27 April 2013.
  15. ^ Dickins, Charles (1883). Dickens's Dictionary of the Thames. London: Macmillan and Company. p. 19.

External links edit

  • River Thames at Sandford Lock at waterscape.com
Next crossing upstream River Thames Next crossing downstream
Kennington Railway Bridge Sandford Lock Nuneham Railway Bridge
Next lock upstream River Thames Next lock downstream
Iffley Lock
2.70 km (1.68 mi) [1]
Sandford Lock
Grid reference: SP531013
Abingdon Lock
7.38 km (4.59 mi)[1]
  1. ^ a b "Environment Agency Distances between locks on the River Thames". web page. Environmental Agency. 19 November 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012. Distances given in km

sandford, lock, approaching, from, downstream51, 708048, 233104, 708048, 233104waterwayriver, thamescountyoxfordshiremaintained, byenvironment, agencyoperationhydraulicfirst, built1631latest, built1973length53, width6, fall2, above, level176, distance, tedding. Sandford LockApproaching Sandford Lock from downstream51 42 29 N 1 13 59 W 51 708048 N 1 233104 W 51 708048 1 233104WaterwayRiver ThamesCountyOxfordshireMaintained byEnvironment AgencyOperationHydraulicFirst built1631Latest built1973Length53 03 m 174 ft 0 in 1 Width6 62 m 21 ft 9 in 1 Fall2 69 m 8 ft 10 in 1 Above sea level176 Distance to Teddington Lock89 milesPower is available out of hours vteSandford Lock Legend River Thames weir Iffley Lock rollers and weir Hinksey Stream A423 T Isis Bridge Kennington Railway Bridge Rose Isle Fiddlers Elbow weir weir Sandford Lock and mill River Thames Sandford Lock is a lock on the River Thames in England situated at Sandford on Thames which is just south of Oxford The first pound lock was built in 1631 by the Oxford Burcot Commission although this has since been rebuilt The lock has the deepest fall of all locks on the Thames at 8 ft 9in 2 69m and is connected to a large island which is one of three at this point The lock lies at the end of Church Lane in Sandford on Thames Upstream from the lock the main weir connects the second island to the opposite bank on the Kennington Oxfordshire side This is the location of the infamous Sandford Lasher a treacherous weirpool where many have drowned Another weir links the two lower islands Contents 1 History 2 Sandford Lasher 3 Reach above the lock 4 Hydroelectric power 5 Literature and the media 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThere was a mill here built by the Knights Templar in around 1294 There are also records of a ferry and a fish weir in medieval times In the reign of Edward III there is an account of the immemorial conflict between millers and bargemen when the men of Oxon broke down the locks of Sandford This was probably at the navigation weir or flash lock on the old river channel behind the second island This was described in 1624 as Great Lockes It was replaced in 1631 when the Oxford Burcot Commission built one of the first pound locks in England here The lock was passed on to the Thames Navigation Commission in 1790 and lengthened in 1795 under the direction of Daniel Harris the Oxford gaoler at a cost of nearly 1 800 In 1836 a new lock was built on the current site alongside the old one and a lock house was ordered in 1839 The old lock has since been filled in after an incident when a miller opened the sluices and caused damage to the embankments Its position is still visible the position of the upper gates can be seen in the stonework above the present upper gates An iron bridge above the lock was built between 1866 and 1877 2 The latest rebuild of the lock was in 1972 Sandford Lasher edit nbsp A newspaper report of the 1921 drowning incident Sandford Lasher or weir is on the left bank well upstream of Sandford Lock The pool below the weir has been notorious since the 19th century because of the number of individuals who have drowned there Weirs like the one at Sandford Lasher generate powerful currents that can trap and hold a victim and often attempted rescuers underwater at the base of the structure hence their reputation as drowning machines Henry Fawcett a student of University College Oxford drowned while swimming in May 1833 3 John Richardson Currer brother of Charles Savile Roundell and student of Balliol College Oxford drowned in February 1840 while attempting to row a skiff through the lasher pool 4 A 16 year old pupil of the Cowley Diocesan School Edward John Templar the son of the Vicar of Great Coxwell drowned on 21 May 1864 after diving into the water and saving the life of another boy a non swimmer who had accidentally fallen into the weirpool 5 Clarence Sinclair Collier a 19 year old student of Balliol College drowned in June 1879 He and another student were boating above the weir but the boat overturned and both they and the boat were carried by the current over the weir and into the lasher pool where Collier drowned 6 He is commemorated by a memorial on the wall of the antechapel at Baliol College 7 At the weir a 19th century obelisk records the deaths of five Christ Church students who drowned here Richard Phillimore and William Gaisford in 1843 George Dasent in 1872 and Michael Llewelyn Davies and Rupert Buxton in 1921 William Gaisford was the son of Thomas Gaisford the dean of Christ Church He got into difficulties while swimming on 23 June 1843 His friend Richard Phillimore entered the water to save him but both young men drowned 8 Richard Phillimore was the son of Dr Joseph Phillimore the Regius Professor of Civil Law 9 They are buried in Christ Church Cathedral and also commemorated by two memorial tablets in the north walk of the Cathedral cloisters 10 Michael Llewelyn Davies was the foster son of writer J M Barrie and one of the main inspirations for the character of Peter Pan He and Rupert Buxton the son of Sir Thomas Buxton 4th Baronet both drowned on 19 May 1921 in the Sandford Lasher 11 in reportedly calm water Buxton had recently celebrated his 21st birthday and Llewelyn Davies was just short of his 21st birthday The Sandford Lasher Weir is being used again to generate hydroelectric power see below making the memorial obelisk inaccessible It may be viewed from various points around Sanford Pool easily accessible from the Kennington side of the River Thames nbsp Sandford Weir in 2018 showing the hydroelectric equipment installed there The Victorian obelisk is visible at centre right nbsp Sandford Lock full looking downstream nbsp Sandford Lock empty from the tail gatesReach above the lock editAfter the third island which is Fiddler s Elbow the river makes a sharp turn at Rose Isle On the west bank is the town of Kennington Oxfordshire Further upstream are Kennington Railway Bridge where the Hinksey Stream joins the Thames again and Isis Bridge carrying the Oxford southern by pass The Thames Path follows the western bank to Iffley Lock crossing the Hinksey Stream on the Kennington Towpath bridge Hydroelectric power editConstruction of Sandford Hydro a hydroelectric power scheme began here in 2011 with the three Archimedes screws being operational from 2018 12 13 14 Literature and the media editSandford Lasher and its dangers are described in chapter 18 of Jerome K Jerome s Three Men in a Boat 1889 The pool under Sandford lasher just behind the lock is a very good place to drown yourself in The undercurrent is terribly strong and if you once get down into it you are all right An obelisk marks the spot where two men have already been drowned while bathing there and the steps of the obelisk are generally used as a diving board by young men now who wish to see if the place really IS dangerous Jerome was a close personal friend of J M Barrie and so probably knew Michael Llewelyn Davies It is also mentioned in The Dictionary of the Thames by Charles Dickens Jr 15 It is notorious to all rowing men and habitue s of the river that Sandford Lasher has almost yearly demanded its tale of victims and it is almost inconceivable that people will continue year after year to tempt fate in this and other equally dangerous places In Tom Brown at Oxford by Thomas Hughes first published in 1861 the eponymous principal character has a narrow escape after accidentally rowing a skiff over the weir and into the lasher Sandford Lock is briefly mentioned in The Four Feathers by A E W Mason 1902 It is also briefly mentioned in the poem The Burden of Itys by Oscar Wilde See also editLocks on the River Thames Crossings of the River ThamesReferences edit a b c Environment Agency Dimensions of locks on the River Thames web page Environmental Agency 8 November 2012 Retrieved 17 November 2012 Dimensions given in metres Fred S Thacker The Thames Highway Volume II Locks and Weirs 1920 republished 1968 David amp Charles Jackson s Oxford Journal date 25 May 1833 https www britishnewspaperarchive co uk search results 1833 05 25 Jackson s Oxford Journal date 8 February 1840 issue 4528 https www britishnewspaperarchive co uk search results 1840 02 08 A Young Gentleman Drowned at Oxford The Standard No 12418 London 28 May 1864 p 5 The Death of an Undergraduate by Drowning at Oxford The Star No 156 Saint Peter Port England 10 June 1879 Jones John Memorial Inscriptions Balliol College Archives amp Manuscripts Balliol College Oxford Retrieved 31 October 2012 G V Cox 1870 Recollections of Oxford Macmillan p 330 Fatal Accident The Ipswich Journal No 5437 Ipswich 1 July 1843 Michael Popkin 2001 Brave Deeds and Tragedies OXFORD INSCRIPTIONS Inscribed Stones and Plaques in Oxford Archived from the original on 24 April 2002 Retrieved 27 November 2009 Paul Goldsack River Thames In the Footsteps of the Famous 2003 English Heritage Bradt Case Study Sandford Hydro Low Carbon Hub Retrieved 3 May 2019 Oxford s Sandford Hydro power plant in pictures Oxford Mail 27 March 2018 Thames hydro power set to make a splash Oxford Mail 27 April 2013 Dickins Charles 1883 Dickens s Dictionary of the Thames London Macmillan and Company p 19 External links editRiver Thames at Sandford Lock at waterscape com Next crossing upstream River Thames Next crossing downstream Kennington Railway Bridge Sandford Lock Nuneham Railway Bridge Next lock upstream River Thames Next lock downstream Iffley Lock 2 70 km 1 68 mi 1 Sandford LockGrid reference SP531013 Abingdon Lock 7 38 km 4 59 mi 1 a b Environment Agency Distances between locks on the River Thames web page Environmental Agency 19 November 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Distances given in km Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandford Lock amp oldid 1167410536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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