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River Hull

The River Hull is a navigable river in the East Riding of Yorkshire in Northern England. It rises from a series of springs to the west of Driffield, and enters the Humber Estuary at Kingston upon Hull. Following a period when the Archbishops of York charged tolls for its use, it became a free navigation. The upper reaches became part of the Driffield Navigation from 1770, after which they were again subject to tolls, and the section within the city of Hull came under the jurisdiction of the Port of Hull, with the same result.

River Hull
The tidal barrier and the Millennium Bridge at the mouth of the river
Course of the river within the East Riding of Yorkshire
Location
CountryEngland
CountyEast Riding of Yorkshire
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationDriffield
 • elevation65 ft (20 m)
MouthHumber Estuary
 • location
Kingston upon Hull
 • coordinates
53°44′20.17″N 0°19′52.3″W / 53.7389361°N 0.331194°W / 53.7389361; -0.331194
 • elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Discharge 
 • locationHempholme Lock[1]
 • average3.4 m3/s (120 cu ft/s)[1]
River Hull
Elmswell Beck
Little Driffield Beck
Driffield Trout Stream
Driffield Railway Bridge
Feeder
River Head bridge
Driffield Basin
Locks (5)
Frodingham Beck
Corpslanding Bridge
River Hull
Emmotland Junction
Bethells Bridge
Scurf Dyke
Driffield Navigation
Beverley and Barmston Drain
Struncheon Hill Lock and weir
River Hull
(from here to Humber)
Aike Beck
Leven Canal
Arram Beck
 A1035  New Hull bridge
Hull bridge
Grovehill lift bridge, Weel
Beverley Beck
 A1033  Ennerdale Link bridge
Sutton Road Bridge
 A1165  Stoneferry bridge
Hull swing railway bridge
Wilmington Bridge
Sculcoates Bridge
Beverley and Barmston Drain
Scott Street Bridge
 A165  North Bridge
Dry dock (to Queens Dock)
Drypool Bridge
Drypool basin + Victoria Dock
 A63  Myton Swing Bridge, Hull
Tidal Barrier
Humber Estuary

Most of its course is through low-lying land that is at or just above sea level, and regular flooding has been a long-standing problem along the waterway. Drainage schemes to alleviate it were constructed on both sides of the river. The Holderness Drainage scheme to the east was completed in 1772, with a second phase in 1805, and the Beverley and Barmston Drain to the west was completed in 1810. Since 1980, the mouth of the river has been protected by a tidal barrier at the estuary, which can be closed to prevent tidal surges entering the river system and causing flooding upriver.

Most of the bridges which cross the river are movable, to allow shipping to pass. There are six swing bridges; four bascule bridges, two of which have twin leaves, one for each carriageway of the roads which they carry; and three Scherzer lift bridges, which are a type of rolling bascule bridge. The former Scott Street Bridge (taken out of use 1994 and dismantled 2020) was originally powered from a high pressure water main maintained by the first public power distribution company in the world.

Etymology edit

The name Hull is probably of Brittonic origin.[2] The name may derive from *hūl, an element related to *hū- meaning "boil, soak, seethe" (< Old Celtic *seu-; c.f. River Sill in Europe).[2]

Course edit

The source of the River Hull is in the Yorkshire Wolds. It rises from a series of springs to the west of Driffield, near the site of the medieval village of Elmswell. The Elmswell Beck flows eastwards from these, and is joined by the Little Driffield Beck, which flows southwards from Little Driffield. It continues as the Driffield Beck, flowing around the south-western edge of Driffield, where it is joined by the Driffield Trout Stream. After the junction, it becomes the River Hull or the West Beck and flows to the east, before turning south to reach Corps Landing. For much of the route below Driffield, the Driffield Navigation runs parallel to the river.[3]

The river from Corps Landing to its mouth is navigable. At Emmotland, it is joined by the Frodingham Beck, which is also navigable, and leads to the canal into Driffield, which forms the major part of the Driffield Navigation. Scurf Dyke joins from the west and is followed by Struncheon Hill lock, which marks the end of the Navigation, and the official start of the navigable River Hull. Below here, the river is tidal. The tidal range of tides can be up to 7 feet (2.1 m) in winter and 4 feet (1.2 m) in summer.[4] Just above the lock, the Beverley and Barmston Drain, which collects water from the catchwater drains on either side of the main channel, flows under the navigation in a tunnel, and runs just to the west of the river almost to its mouth.[5] Below the lock, the surrounding land is almost at sea level, and the river is constrained by flood banks on both sides.[6]

 
Grovehill (Weel) Bridge, Beverley

On its route southwards, the river passes the former junction with Aike Beck, once navigable to Lockington Landing, but the stream was subsequently re-routed to join the Arram Beck. The Leven Canal used to join on the east bank, but the entrance lock has been replaced by a sluice. The Arram Beck flows in from the west, and then the river is crossed by Hull Bridge, the cause of repeated disagreement between the owners of the Driffield Navigation and the Corporation of Beverley, who owned the bridge.[7] Just above Beverley Beck, which joins from the west, is Grovehill Bridge, now a lift bridge but once a ferry bridge.[8]

Once the river reaches the outskirts of Hull, its course is marked by a series of bridges, most of which open to allow boats to pass. There are swing bridges, lift bridges and bascule bridges, and the river becomes part of the Port of Hull.[9] The river, which is the dividing line between West and East Hull, bisects the city's industrial area. The bridges can cause traffic delays during high tides, though river traffic is less than it once was. The Beverley and Barmston Drain rejoins the river above Scott Street Bridge.[6] Below North Bridge, an unused dry dock on the west bank marks the former entrance to Queens Dock. Below Drypool Bridge, a muddy basin on the east bank was once the entrance to Drypool Basin and Victoria Dock.[10] The river reaches its confluence with the Humber Estuary in the centre of Kingston upon Hull.[6] At its mouth, a tidal barrier has been constructed to prevent tidal surges from entering the river. In the past, these had regularly flooded the town and the flat countryside to the north.[11]

History edit

The River Hull has served as a navigation and a drainage channel, and has been subject to the conflicts that this usually creates, as water levels need to be raised for navigation, but lowered for efficient drainage. In 1213, the Archbishops of York laid claim to the river, and declared their right to navigate on a 24-foot (7.3 m) channel. A number of fish-weirs made navigation difficult, and the Archbishop negotiated their removal in 1296, so that a wharf could be established at Grovehill to serve the town of Beverley. By 1321, river rights had been extended to the charging of tolls. One-third of a shilling (4d equivalent to 1.7p decimal currency) was charged for each bushel carried on the river between Emmotland and the Humber, but the merchants of Hull were unhappy with this; eventually the river had free navigation, and goods could be carried on it without toll. The Arram Beck was also exempt from all tolls. It has remained free, except for 1 mile (1.6 km) from the mouth, which is part of the Port of Hull and is under the control of Hull Corporation.[12]

The outlet of the river onto the Humber is thought to have changed in the early medieval period. The original outlet has been identified at a place called Limekiln creek. A second channel Sayers Creek was cut or widened, with both outlets existing simultaneously at one point. Limekiln creek was subsequently reduced in flow to the level of a drain.[13]

 
The Hull and Barnsley Railway Bridge, built in 1885

The lower river was bordered by salt marshes in medieval times, when efforts were first made to drain them. Further upstream, channels were cut through the fens in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries by the monks of Meaux Abbey, primarily to enable travel by boat, but these gradually became part of the drainage system.[12] John Smeaton, when asked by the merchants of Driffield to advise on ways to allow keels to reach their town, suggested a small cut of about 1.2 miles (1.9 km) including one lock, from the river near Wansford. The merchants sought a second opinion, and John Grundy, Jr. suggested a much longer canal, running for 5 miles (8.0 km) from Fisholme on the Frodingham Beck. When fully opened in 1770, the new route was some 3 miles (4.8 km) shorter than the river, which follows an extremely winding course in its upper reaches.[7] The river above Aike was now considered to be part of the Driffield Navigation, and tolls were charged for its use.[4] Also in this period the first cut of the Holderness Drain was made, enabled by an act of 1764, originally outfalling onto the river. In addition to the drainage works to the east of the river, the banks were raised for 17 miles (27 km) on the east side, to prevent flooding.[14][15]

Although beyond their jurisdiction, the Navigation commissioners attempted to extend their powers, to improve the river below the junction with Aike Beck. They particularly wanted to replace the stone Hull Bridge, near Beverley, with a swing bridge, which would make it easier for keels to reach Frodingham bridge. The Corporation of Beverley objected, because the bridge was the main route of communication between Beverley and Holderness, and the commissioners instead dredged parts of the river to improve access.[7] Plans to improve Hull Bridge were again resisted by Beverley Corporation in 1799, but an agreement was finally reached in 1801, and an Act of Parliament was obtained in July of that year. William Chapman acted as engineer, as the act authorised the construction of towpaths, a new cut between Bethels Bridge and the lock at Struncheon Hill, to avoid a long loop in the river, and rebuilding of the bridge. The bridge cost £500, half of which was met by Richard Bethell, the owner of the Leven Canal, on condition that the tolls for passing through it were reduced significantly.[16]

 
Wilmington Bridge, now used as a cycleway and footbridge

Passage through Hull had long been difficult, because of the number of ships which used the river for loading and unloading goods. In 1794, the merchants of Beverley had advocated the building of docks at Hull, with a separate entrance, so that traffic to the upper river would not be impeded, while the Driffield Navigation had unsuccessful attempted to get a clause inserted into the Act of Parliament which the Hull Dock Company obtained in 1840, to ensure free passage for vessels, and the removal of tolls for boats not using the docks. The Navigation Company also received complaints from the Beverley and Barmston Drainage Commissioners, who believed that water levels were being kept at a higher level than was good for drainage.[16]

In 1980, the Environment Agency constructed a tidal barrier at the mouth of the river. The structure spans the river, and a huge steel gate, weighing 202 tonnes, can be lowered into the waterway, effectively sealing the river from the Humber, and preventing tidal surges from moving up the river and flooding parts of the city and the low-lying areas beyond.[17] The gate was initially lowered about twelve times a year, and protects around 17,000 properties. In 2009, a £10 million upgrade of the structure was started, to ensure it would stay operational for a further 30 years. The upgrade included a new drive mechanism, which raises and lowers the gate, and pivots it when it is at the top of the structure, so that it lies horizontally rather than vertically. It also included a new control system.[18] In July 2017 the barrier was granted Grade II listed status.[17] Plans have been considered to build a barrage at the mouth of the Hull where it joins the Humber Estuary to maintain a constant water level as it passes through the city. The idea was first raised by the Abercrombie report, which considered how to redevelop Hull after significant destruction during the Second World War. The estimated cost of such a project was around £195 million in 2007.[19][20]

Traffic edit

 
Freighter near Scott Street Bridge 1990

Because the river was a free river, there are no figures for traffic on the lower river. However, it connected to a number of waterways on which tolls were collected, and so an indication of the traffic can be gained from the figures for these waterways. The main cargoes on Beverley Beck in 1730 were coal, bricks, turfs and wool, together with cereal crops, consisting of wheat, barley, oats and malt. Receipts from tolls more than doubled between 1732 and 1748, after which the tolls were let to an independent collector. The annual rent charged for this privilege doubled again between 1748 and 1792.[21] There was a steady expansion of trade on the Driffield Navigation during the same period, as the dividends paid to shareholders rose from 1.5 to 4 per cent. In 1789, Bainton, Boyes and Co negotiated a lump sum payment to cover coal from the Aire and Calder Navigation to their new carpet factory and the export of their carpets in the downstream direction. The factory later became a corn mill.[22]

Toll rentals continued to increase on the Beverley Beck, rising from £190 to £435 between 1793 and 1835. Some 31,185 tons of cargo were carried in 1838.[23] In 1817, a steam packet service started to run between Driffield and Hull. Three return trips each week were made, but the journey times were too long, and an advertisement in 1825 indicated that the engine had been altered and an express steam packet service would commence. Three boats were recorded as trading between Driffield and Hull every other day in a directory of Yorkshire published in 1823. Traffic for 1832 included 7,394 chaldrons of coal, 18,173 quarters of wheat, 7,745 quarters of oats, 19,396 quarters of barley and 4,555 sacks of flour. An additional 1,564 quarters of wheat and 8,194 sacks of flour were carried to or from Foston Mill, reached from Frodingham Beck.[24] A regular carrier also operated between the Leven Canal and Hull once a week.[25]

Between 1848 and 1905, traffic on Beverley Beck more than trebled, from 33,498 tons to 101,540 tons. Coal and other minerals accounted for around one quarter of the traffic in 1905, while goods carried in 1906 included fertiliser, burnt ore, flour and scrap metal. Commercial traffic continued into the 1970s, when tolls of £2,365 were collected on 28,169 tons of cargo.[26] Traffic on the Driffield Navigation was relatively steady between 1871 and 1905, falling slightly from 35,654 to 32,666 tons. Goods carried included coal, linseed, cottonseed, wheat, flour and artificial manures. In 1922, £7 of income was received from pleasure craft using the navigation. Traffic declined during the 1930s, with commercial traffic finally ceasing in 1944. The Leven Canal carried 4,242 tons in 1888 and 4,546 in 1905, but then succumbed to road competition, and closed in 1935.[27]

Drainage edit

 
River Hull at Wawne

The problems of flooding of the land adjacent to the river were addressed by the construction of catchwater drains to both sides of it. The east side of the river was protected by the Holderness Drainage scheme. John Grundy worked on plans for the scheme which would protect 11,000 acres (4,500 ha) of low-lying land to the north-east of Hull. John Smeaton was also involved, although the final report was largely Grundy's work, and an Act of Parliament to authorise the work was passed on 5 April 1764. The Trustees for the scheme wrote to Grundy and Smeaton in May 1764, asking them to work on the project. Grundy's wife had died only a fortnight previously, and the two engineers corresponded, but besides valuable comment on Grundy's plans for the outfall sluice, Smeaton had no further involvement, and it was Grundy who ran the project, which included 17 miles (27 km) of barrier bank along the east side of the river. John Hoggard acted as Superintendent for the scheme, while Joseph Page was appointed as resident engineer, to oversee the construction of the drains and the outfall sluice. Grundy made regular visits until October 1767, by which time the sluice and the main drainage channels were completed, at which point he and Page moved on, while Hoggard oversaw additional work on the drains and banks, which lasted for several more years. By the time of its completion in 1772, the scheme had cost £24,000.[28]

Despite the Holderness scheme, there were still problems near Leven and Weel, and William Jessop spent a month inspecting the area before writing a report in July 1786. His plan advocated separating the water which fell on the uplands to the north and flowed through the low-lying areas, from the local drainage of those low-lying areas. George Plummer carried out most of the subsequent survey work on Jessop's behalf, although Jessop surveyed the River Hull in 1787, to identify how the outfall could be improved. Jessop visited the works from time to time, making seven visits between 1789 and 1792, while the day to day oversight of the scheme was handled by Plummer as resident engineer. Plummer was succeeded by Anthony Bower, who was engineer from 1792 to 1795, and the whole scheme was completed in 1805, having cost £16,000.[29]

In 1796, Robert Chapman was asked to report on possible solutions for flooding to the west. His report formed the basis for the Beverley and Barmston Drainage Act, which was passed by Parliament in June 1798. Chapman was appointed as engineer for the scheme, which would cost £115,000, and would provide flood defences and drainage for 12,600 acres (5,100 ha) of land to the west of the river. The project included the construction of 23 miles (37 km) of drainage cuts, and building embankments along 20 miles (32 km) of the river. At Hull, an outfall sluice was constructed, and the drain passed through tunnels under eleven waterways, including the Beverley Beck. 27 bridges were built to carry roads over the drain, and the whole project was finished in 1810.[30]

River crossings edit

There are several bridges in the Hull area which cross the River Hull. Details of them are shown in the following table, starting from that furthest north and moving south to the river mouth.

Bridge Date built Notes
New Hull Bridge, Beverley 1974[31] A fixed flat deck concrete bridge, carrying the A1035 Tickton bypass
Hull Bridge, Beverley 1976 A fixed foot bridge, which replaced a 1913-built steel rolling bridge once Tickton bypass opened.
Grovehill Bridge, Beverley 1953[8] A truss-girder lift bridge, which replaced a ferry bridge
Ennerdale Link Bridges 1997 Twin bascule bridges.[32][33] These completed the Ennerdale Link bypass construction of which started c.1992, with the river crossing originally intended to be a tunnel.[34] Work on the tunnel was halted in 1994 after difficulties with the ground conditions were encountered. Instead bridges designed by Rendel Palmer and Tritton based on those already installed at Stoneferry were used.[35] The work was part of a wider scheme of roads around Hull to give better access to the docks (via Hedon Road) from the Beverley South Western bypass (A1079).[36] The new bridge was a twin bascule bridge each with 250t bridge decks and a total weight of 800t, in including the 600t counterbalance.[37]
Sutton Road Bridge 1939[38] A Scherzer type rolling lift bridge. Built by Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company, with elegant Art Deco / Neo-Georgian style operating houses.
Stoneferry Bridge 1988–91[39] Twin bascule bridges with 105-foot (32 m) leaves, one for each direction of traffic. Designed by Rendel Palmer and Tritton, and built by Cementation Construction. Replaced a 1905 swing bridge, and earlier ferry, thought to have originally been a ford at this point.
Hull Bridge 1885 Steel bowstring span swing bridge. Grade II Listed 1994. Built by the Hull and Barnsley Railway in 1885, still used by freight trains.[40]
Wilmington Swing Bridge 1907 A Grade II Listed railway swing bridge, built by the North Eastern Railway. It opened on 7 May 1907, and replaced the original 1853 bridge. Railway use ceased in 1968, and it is now used as a footpath and cycleway.[41]
Sculcoates Bridge 1874 Sculcoates Bridge, a wrought iron swing bridge, was opened in 1875.[42][43] The bridge consisted of a fixed span on the east bank of 27 feet (8.2 m) and a counterbalanced swing span made of 113 feet (34 m) girders, with a river span of 56 feet (17 m). The design was by J. Fox district engineer, the bridge was constructed by the Bridge and Roofing Co. of Darlaston. Total cost was £18,000.[44]

Grade II listed in 1994.[43] This is the oldest river bridge in the city, and connects the areas of Wilmington, Kingston upon Hull and Sculcoates

Scott Street Bridge
defunct
1901 Construction of the bridge connecting Scott Street in the west with Lime and Jenning streets in the east began October 1901, with and estimated cost of £20,000.[45]

A double bascule bridge. The bridge, bridgemasters hut, railings and lamps were Grade II listed in 1994.[46] It was permanently raised in 1994 as the structure was too weak to carry traffic,[47] and the cost of full repair was estimated at £5 million.[48] In 2018, Banksy visited this bridge and left a piece of graffiti to honour Hull's year as City of Culture.[49]

Scott Street Bridge was finally removed in 2020.[50]

North Bridge 1928–32 There has been a bridge at this point (close to the North Gate of the city walls) since 1541, before which there was a ferry. The bridge here has been modified, rebuilt and enlarged several times.[51] A hydraulically operated horizontal drawbridge was constructed in 1870 connecting Charlotte Street and Witham.[51][52]

In 1925 plans were submitted for a new bridge; of which one costed at £275,000 with a straightened approach road approximately 30 yards (27 m) north of the 1870 bridge was accepted.[51][53] The bridge was contracted in 1927 for £86,100 to the Widnes Foundry (1295) Ltd,[54] who constructed as a Scherzer rolling lift bridge (or "Walking lift bridge"). The bridge was Grade II listed in 1994.[55]

Drypool Bridge 1961 Scherzer rolling lift bridge – a type of Bascule bridge[56]

Replaced an earlier swing bridge, also known as Drypool Bridge or Salthouse Lane Bridge, sanctioned 1885, with construction beginning 1887, and opening 1889, at a cost of £18,550, with the main ironwork assembled by J. Butler and Co., of Stanningley, Leeds; the river walls and approaches by T.B Mather of Hull. The bridge was hydraulically powered from a supply provided by the Hull Hydraulic Power Company.[51][57][58] Image.[59]

Scale Lane Footbridge[60] 2011–13 Pedestrian swing bridge between Scale Lane (west) and Tower Street (east). An award-winning design by Renato Benedetti.[61] Originally scheduled to open late 2010,[62][63] delayed due to winding up of funding agencies as a result of the late-2000s recession,[64][65] main span installation began 25 February 2012.[66] The bridge was officially opened in June 2013.[67]
Myton Swing Bridge 1981[68] An asymmetric cable stayed box girder steel swing bridge on the A63 Garrison Road, with spans of 182.2 and 93.4 feet (55.5 and 28.5 m).[69][70][71]
South Bridge
defunct
1865–1944 Toll Bridge. Also known as the "Ha'penny Bridge", it was built to give better access to the newly built Victoria Dock. Closed 1934.[72] Swing bridge located between Blackfriargate and Humber Street (between present Myton Bridge and Tidal Barrier).[73] Image.[74] The engineer was John Hawkshaw, the contractor was Henry Grissell (Regent's Canal Ironworks Co.).[75]
Millennium Bridge[76] 2001 A pedestrian swing bridge giving access to The Deep, with a span of 102 feet (31 m)
 
Drypool Bridge, raised to allow a freighter to pass

The present Drypool Bridge was designed by W. Morris, the Hull City Engineer, and it was built in Hull. The previous wrought iron swing bridge, which had opened in 1888, was too narrow, with a carriageway which was 16 feet (4.9 m) wide.[77] It was closed in May 1959, so that it could be demolished[78] and Morris's new bridge opened in March 1961.[79]

Scott Street Bridge had gradually deteriorated, and a public consultation was held in 1986, to determine its future. By that time a 10-ton weight limit had been imposed on traffic using the bridge, because of its poor structural state. Three suggestions were made as to its future. These were to close and demolish it, to refurbish it at an estimated cost of £1.6 million, and to build a new bridge on the same site but a different alignment, to eliminate the awkward turn at the west end, which was costed at £2 million.[80] None of these actions have been taken, as the bridge leaves were raised in 1994, and have remained raised ever since. Consideration was given in 2007 to preserving two of the hydraulic rams which operated the bridge, during planning to demolish the structure. The Hull Hydraulic Power Company was set up in 1872, and by 1876 was operating a pumping station on Machell Street. This supplied water to a high pressure main which ran from Wellington Street to Sculcoates Bridge, and was used by local industries to power machinery, including the bridge when it was constructed. Although the power company closed in the 1940s, it made Hull the first city in the world to have a public system of power distribution.[81]

 
Scott Street Bridge 1990

The design for the Ennerdale Link road included a tunnel under the river. Initial investigations suggested that there was a layer of boulder clay below the alluvium of the river bed, and that a chalk aquifer was below the clay.[82] Construction work started in July 1991.[83] A cofferdam was built on the east bank, and the cutting which would have provided access to the twin-bore tunnel was nearly excavated when a 6.6-foot (2.0 m) hole appeared in the river bed, and the entire site flooded. A 3-month investigation took place, which suggested that it would be difficult to finish the tunnel and maintain the integrity of the aquifer. Despite some £10 million having been spent on the project, it was abandoned[82] in 1993.[83] A contract for a replacement bridge was awarded in June 1995[84] and the river was crossed by twin lift bridges, which were opened in April 1997. The project had cost £30 million, compared to an original budget of just £13 million.[83]

A tunnel was successfully constructed under the river in 2001. The 6.2-mile (10.0 km) long sewer runs from the city centre to a treatment works at Salt End. It was excavated using two tunnelling machines, which were manufactured in Canada and were named Maureen and Gloria. The tunnel was officially opened on 21 August 2001, when a Mini car was driven through it, recreating scenes from the film The Italian Job.[85] Before 1897, there had been a ferry at Grovehill, and a shipyard on the east bank, owned by Joseph Scarr. To assist his workers to reach the shipyard, Scarr designed and built a ferry bridge, which cost him £300.[86] It consisted of a large rectangular pontoon, above which was fitted a bridge deck with handrails. Two jack screws enabled the deck to be raised or lowered in relation to the pontoon, so that it remained at approximately the same height, whatever the state of the tide. On the eastern bank, Scarr constructed a variable-height landing, but the landing on the west bank was constructed by Beverley Council, and was fixed. Scarr campaigned to have a variable landing here as well, and was prepared to fund it, but his requests were always rejected. The fixed landing made access to the bridge difficult at high tides.[87] When a boat needed to pass, the west end was freed, and the pontoon swung round to lie parallel to the bank, either upstream or downstream, depending on the state of the tide. It would then be winched back into position by a small barrel winch. At night the bridge was closed and moored beside the bank.[88]

Responsibility for the bridge was taken over by Beverley Council before the Second World War. Its condition deteriorated, and in 1948, they attempted to replace it with a footbridge around 400 yards (370 m) further upstream. Because the ferry rights had been in existence for more than 600 years, an Act of Parliament was needed, and this was thwarted by a petition containing 84 signatures, presented by the people of Weel to the House of Lords. Plans for a new lift bridge were drawn up, and it was opened on 19 October 1953.[89]

In 1913, the Hull Bridge upstream of Beverley, which had caused so much disagreement in the 18th century until it had been replaced in 1801, was demolished by the County Council, who installed a steel rolling bridge in its place. Once the Tickton Bypass bridge had been built a short distance upstream, it no longer needed to carry road traffic, and it was replaced by a footbridge in 1976.[31]

At the other end of the river, the Millennium Bridge was opened in 2001. There was once a ferry at this point, before 1865,[90] which gave access to the Victoria Dock, opened in 1850. South Bridge replaced the ferry in 1865, making it easier for workers to reach the dock. The swing footbridge was closed in 1934, but was not demolished until 1944.[91]

Water quality edit

The Environment Agency measure the water quality of the river systems in England. Each is given an overall ecological status, which may be one of five levels: high, good, moderate, poor and bad. There are several components that are used to determine this, including biological status, which looks at the quantity and varieties of invertebrates, angiosperms and fish. Chemical status, which compares the concentrations of various chemicals against known safe concentrations, is rated good or fail.[92]

The water quality of the River Hull system was as follows in 2016.

Section Ecological Status Chemical Status Overall Status Length Catchment Channel
Driffield Navigation[93] Good Good Good artificial
Lowthorpe/Kelk/Foston Bks from Source to Frodingham Beck[94] Poor Good Poor 10.4 miles (16.7 km) 35.90 square miles (93.0 km2)
Old Howe/Frodingham Beck to R Hull[95] Moderate Good Moderate 4.2 miles (6.8 km) 9.81 square miles (25.4 km2) heavily modified
Hull from West Beck to Arram Beck[96] Moderate Good Moderate 6.6 miles (10.6 km) 1.72 square miles (4.5 km2) heavily modified
Ella Dyke[97] Moderate Good Moderate 4.2 miles (6.8 km) 2.00 square miles (5.2 km2) heavily modified
High Hunsley to Woodmansey Area[98] Good Good Good 4.3 miles (6.9 km) 5.87 square miles (15.2 km2) artificial
Hull from Arram Beck to Humber[99] Moderate Good Moderate 9.1 miles (14.6 km) 9.34 square miles (24.2 km2) heavily modified

The reasons for the quality being less than good include sewage discharge and physical modification of the channel.

Points of interest edit

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Allison, K. J., ed. (1969). "22. Communications : Bridges". A History of the County of York East Riding: Volume 1: The City of Kingston upon Hull. British History Online. Retrieved 5 December 2013. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Allison, K. J., ed. (1989). "41. Boundaries and Communications : Roads and Bridges". A History of the County of York East Riding: Volume 6: The borough and liberties of Beverley. British History Online. Retrieved 18 November 2010. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Crosby, Kathleen (1980). The Old Grovehill Ferry Bridge. Lockington Publishing Co. ISBN 0-905490-15-0.
  • Cumberlidge, Jane (2009). Inland Waterways of Great Britain (8th Ed.). Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson. ISBN 978-1-84623-010-3.
  • Hadfield, Charles (1972). The Canals of Yorkshire and North East England (Vol 1). David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5719-0.
  • Hadfield, Charles (1973). The Canals of Yorkshire and North East England (Vol 2). David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5975-4.
  • Marsh, Terry; Hannaford, Jamie (2008). (PDF). Natural Environment Research Council. ISBN 978-0-9557672-2-7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 October 2014.
  • McNicol, Colin (2002). . Highgate Publications (Beverley). ISBN 978-1-902645-24-7. Archived from the original on 13 October 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  • Skempton, Sir Alec; et al. (2002). A Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland: Vol 1: 1500 to 1830. Thomas Telford. ISBN 0-7277-2939-X.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Marsh & Hannaford 2008, p. 53
  2. ^ a b James, Alan. "The Brittonic Language in the Old North" (PDF). Scottish Place Name Society. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  3. ^ Ordnance Survey, 1:25,000 Explorer map, Sheets 294, 295
  4. ^ a b Cumberlidge 2009, pp. 114–115
  5. ^ Hadfield 1972, p. 85
  6. ^ a b c Ordnance Survey, 1:25,000 Explorer map, Sheet 293
  7. ^ a b c Hadfield 1972, pp. 86–89
  8. ^ a b Crosby 1980, p. 31
  9. ^ Cumberlidge 2009, p. 153
  10. ^ Ordnance Survey, 1:10,560 map, 1938/46 edition
  11. ^ "Hull barrier turns tide on threat". Transport Network. 30 January 2008. from the original on 6 December 2020.
  12. ^ a b Hadfield 1972, pp. 83–84
  13. ^ Sources:
    • Sheahan, J. J.; Whellan, T. (1855). History and Topography of the City of York; the East Riding of Yorkshire and a portion of the West Riding. Vol. 1. pp. 31–32. All the local historians, except Mr. Frost, assert that the River Hull in former times discharged itself into the Humber to the eastward of the present river; but that gentleman found abundant evidence in the registers and histories of the Abbey of Meaux, to show that its ancient course lay to the westward of the present channel
    • Sheahan, J. J.; Whellan, T. (1857). History and Topography of the City of York; the East Riding of Yorkshire and a portion of the West Riding. Vol. 2. p. 11. At a very early period, long anterior to the time that the situation of Hull attracted the attention of Edward I., the River Hull had experienced the change in its course [...] the old river was formerly on the west side of the town — the inlet, known by the name of Lime Kiln Creek being a part of it
    • Frost, Charles (1827). "3. Of the change which took place in the course of the River Hull in the Thirteenth Century". Notices relative to the early history of the town and port of Hull. J.B. Nichols. pp. 28–39.
  14. ^ "DIE Veneris, 30° Martii.", House of Lords Journal, His Majesty's Stationery Office, 30 (21–30), March 1764, "An Act for draining, preserving, and improving, the Low Grounds and Carrs lying and being in the Parishes, Townships, Hamlets, Lordships, Precincts, and Territories, of Sutton, Ganstead, Swine, Benningholme, Benningholme Grange, and Fairholme, North Skirlaugh, Rowton, Arnold, Long Riston, Leven, Heigholme and Hallytree-Holme, Brandes-Burton, and Bursall, Eske, Tickton, Weel, Rowth, Meaux, and Waghen otherwife Wawn, in Holderness, in the East Riding of the County of York." The Question was put, "Whether this Bill shall pass?" It was Resolved in the Affirmative.
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  53. ^ "A Hull Bridge Scheme". The Engineer. Vol. 140. 14 August 1925. p. 174.
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    • "Hull". The Electrical Review. 53: 862. July–December 1903. It is proposed, as an experiment, to work the Salthouse Lane Bridge across the River Hull by electricity
    • "The Drypool Bridge, Hull". The Engineer. Vol. 69. 1890. pp. 4, 6.
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  71. ^ "Footprints on a global landscape, 150 years of improving the built environment" (PDF). Hyder Consulting. p. 64. Retrieved 3 March 2011. Cable-stayed box-girder swing bridge, main span 83m. Awarded Structural Steel Design Award, British Constructional Steel Association and the British Steel Corporation, 1981.
  72. ^ McNicol, Colin. . Victoria Dock Village Hall Community Association. Archived from the original on 13 October 2011. Retrieved 23 August 2011.
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  74. ^ Johnson, Joseph A. "The Ha'penny Bridge, Hull". Hull Museums Collections. Hull City Council. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
  75. ^ Maw, William H.; Dredge, James (1872). Hull South Bridge. Published at the offices of "Engineering". pp.115–117. ISBN 9780608411842. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help) Plates LXIII, LXIV
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  87. ^ Crosby 1980, pp. 9–14.
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  99. ^ "Hull from Arram Beck to Humber". Catchment Data Explorer. Environment Agency. Retrieved 13 July 2018.

External links edit

  • Tour of the River Hull by boat
  • Google Maps Satellite View
  • Video footage of the Hull Tidal Barrier and the Millennium Bridge

river, hull, navigable, river, east, riding, yorkshire, northern, england, rises, from, series, springs, west, driffield, enters, humber, estuary, kingston, upon, hull, following, period, when, archbishops, york, charged, tolls, became, free, navigation, upper. The River Hull is a navigable river in the East Riding of Yorkshire in Northern England It rises from a series of springs to the west of Driffield and enters the Humber Estuary at Kingston upon Hull Following a period when the Archbishops of York charged tolls for its use it became a free navigation The upper reaches became part of the Driffield Navigation from 1770 after which they were again subject to tolls and the section within the city of Hull came under the jurisdiction of the Port of Hull with the same result River HullThe tidal barrier and the Millennium Bridge at the mouth of the riverCourse of the river within the East Riding of YorkshireLocationCountryEnglandCountyEast Riding of YorkshirePhysical characteristicsSource locationDriffield elevation65 ft 20 m MouthHumber Estuary locationKingston upon Hull coordinates53 44 20 17 N 0 19 52 3 W 53 7389361 N 0 331194 W 53 7389361 0 331194 elevation0 ft 0 m Discharge locationHempholme Lock 1 average3 4 m3 s 120 cu ft s 1 vteRiver HullLegendElmswell BeckLittle Driffield BeckDriffield Trout StreamDriffield Railway BridgeFeederRiver Head bridgeDriffield BasinLocks 5 Frodingham BeckCorpslanding BridgeRiver HullEmmotland JunctionBethells BridgeScurf DykeDriffield NavigationBeverley and Barmston DrainStruncheon Hill Lock and weirRiver Hull from here to Humber Aike BeckLeven CanalArram Beck A1035 New Hull bridgeHull bridgeGrovehill lift bridge WeelBeverley Beck A1033 Ennerdale Link bridgeSutton Road Bridge A1165 Stoneferry bridgeHull swing railway bridgeWilmington BridgeSculcoates BridgeBeverley and Barmston DrainScott Street Bridge A165 North BridgeDry dock to Queens Dock Drypool BridgeDrypool basin Victoria Dock A63 Myton Swing Bridge HullTidal BarrierHumber EstuaryMost of its course is through low lying land that is at or just above sea level and regular flooding has been a long standing problem along the waterway Drainage schemes to alleviate it were constructed on both sides of the river The Holderness Drainage scheme to the east was completed in 1772 with a second phase in 1805 and the Beverley and Barmston Drain to the west was completed in 1810 Since 1980 the mouth of the river has been protected by a tidal barrier at the estuary which can be closed to prevent tidal surges entering the river system and causing flooding upriver Most of the bridges which cross the river are movable to allow shipping to pass There are six swing bridges four bascule bridges two of which have twin leaves one for each carriageway of the roads which they carry and three Scherzer lift bridges which are a type of rolling bascule bridge The former Scott Street Bridge taken out of use 1994 and dismantled 2020 was originally powered from a high pressure water main maintained by the first public power distribution company in the world Contents 1 Etymology 2 Course 3 History 4 Traffic 5 Drainage 6 River crossings 7 Water quality 8 Points of interest 9 See also 10 Bibliography 10 1 References 11 External linksEtymology editThe name Hull is probably of Brittonic origin 2 The name may derive from hul an element related to hu meaning boil soak seethe lt Old Celtic seu c f River Sill in Europe 2 Course editThe source of the River Hull is in the Yorkshire Wolds It rises from a series of springs to the west of Driffield near the site of the medieval village of Elmswell The Elmswell Beck flows eastwards from these and is joined by the Little Driffield Beck which flows southwards from Little Driffield It continues as the Driffield Beck flowing around the south western edge of Driffield where it is joined by the Driffield Trout Stream After the junction it becomes the River Hull or the West Beck and flows to the east before turning south to reach Corps Landing For much of the route below Driffield the Driffield Navigation runs parallel to the river 3 The river from Corps Landing to its mouth is navigable At Emmotland it is joined by the Frodingham Beck which is also navigable and leads to the canal into Driffield which forms the major part of the Driffield Navigation Scurf Dyke joins from the west and is followed by Struncheon Hill lock which marks the end of the Navigation and the official start of the navigable River Hull Below here the river is tidal The tidal range of tides can be up to 7 feet 2 1 m in winter and 4 feet 1 2 m in summer 4 Just above the lock the Beverley and Barmston Drain which collects water from the catchwater drains on either side of the main channel flows under the navigation in a tunnel and runs just to the west of the river almost to its mouth 5 Below the lock the surrounding land is almost at sea level and the river is constrained by flood banks on both sides 6 nbsp Grovehill Weel Bridge BeverleyOn its route southwards the river passes the former junction with Aike Beck once navigable to Lockington Landing but the stream was subsequently re routed to join the Arram Beck The Leven Canal used to join on the east bank but the entrance lock has been replaced by a sluice The Arram Beck flows in from the west and then the river is crossed by Hull Bridge the cause of repeated disagreement between the owners of the Driffield Navigation and the Corporation of Beverley who owned the bridge 7 Just above Beverley Beck which joins from the west is Grovehill Bridge now a lift bridge but once a ferry bridge 8 Once the river reaches the outskirts of Hull its course is marked by a series of bridges most of which open to allow boats to pass There are swing bridges lift bridges and bascule bridges and the river becomes part of the Port of Hull 9 The river which is the dividing line between West and East Hull bisects the city s industrial area The bridges can cause traffic delays during high tides though river traffic is less than it once was The Beverley and Barmston Drain rejoins the river above Scott Street Bridge 6 Below North Bridge an unused dry dock on the west bank marks the former entrance to Queens Dock Below Drypool Bridge a muddy basin on the east bank was once the entrance to Drypool Basin and Victoria Dock 10 The river reaches its confluence with the Humber Estuary in the centre of Kingston upon Hull 6 At its mouth a tidal barrier has been constructed to prevent tidal surges from entering the river In the past these had regularly flooded the town and the flat countryside to the north 11 History editThe River Hull has served as a navigation and a drainage channel and has been subject to the conflicts that this usually creates as water levels need to be raised for navigation but lowered for efficient drainage In 1213 the Archbishops of York laid claim to the river and declared their right to navigate on a 24 foot 7 3 m channel A number of fish weirs made navigation difficult and the Archbishop negotiated their removal in 1296 so that a wharf could be established at Grovehill to serve the town of Beverley By 1321 river rights had been extended to the charging of tolls One third of a shilling 4d equivalent to 1 7p decimal currency was charged for each bushel carried on the river between Emmotland and the Humber but the merchants of Hull were unhappy with this eventually the river had free navigation and goods could be carried on it without toll The Arram Beck was also exempt from all tolls It has remained free except for 1 mile 1 6 km from the mouth which is part of the Port of Hull and is under the control of Hull Corporation 12 The outlet of the river onto the Humber is thought to have changed in the early medieval period The original outlet has been identified at a place called Limekiln creek A second channel Sayers Creek was cut or widened with both outlets existing simultaneously at one point Limekiln creek was subsequently reduced in flow to the level of a drain 13 nbsp The Hull and Barnsley Railway Bridge built in 1885The lower river was bordered by salt marshes in medieval times when efforts were first made to drain them Further upstream channels were cut through the fens in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries by the monks of Meaux Abbey primarily to enable travel by boat but these gradually became part of the drainage system 12 John Smeaton when asked by the merchants of Driffield to advise on ways to allow keels to reach their town suggested a small cut of about 1 2 miles 1 9 km including one lock from the river near Wansford The merchants sought a second opinion and John Grundy Jr suggested a much longer canal running for 5 miles 8 0 km from Fisholme on the Frodingham Beck When fully opened in 1770 the new route was some 3 miles 4 8 km shorter than the river which follows an extremely winding course in its upper reaches 7 The river above Aike was now considered to be part of the Driffield Navigation and tolls were charged for its use 4 Also in this period the first cut of the Holderness Drain was made enabled by an act of 1764 originally outfalling onto the river In addition to the drainage works to the east of the river the banks were raised for 17 miles 27 km on the east side to prevent flooding 14 15 Although beyond their jurisdiction the Navigation commissioners attempted to extend their powers to improve the river below the junction with Aike Beck They particularly wanted to replace the stone Hull Bridge near Beverley with a swing bridge which would make it easier for keels to reach Frodingham bridge The Corporation of Beverley objected because the bridge was the main route of communication between Beverley and Holderness and the commissioners instead dredged parts of the river to improve access 7 Plans to improve Hull Bridge were again resisted by Beverley Corporation in 1799 but an agreement was finally reached in 1801 and an Act of Parliament was obtained in July of that year William Chapman acted as engineer as the act authorised the construction of towpaths a new cut between Bethels Bridge and the lock at Struncheon Hill to avoid a long loop in the river and rebuilding of the bridge The bridge cost 500 half of which was met by Richard Bethell the owner of the Leven Canal on condition that the tolls for passing through it were reduced significantly 16 nbsp Wilmington Bridge now used as a cycleway and footbridgePassage through Hull had long been difficult because of the number of ships which used the river for loading and unloading goods In 1794 the merchants of Beverley had advocated the building of docks at Hull with a separate entrance so that traffic to the upper river would not be impeded while the Driffield Navigation had unsuccessful attempted to get a clause inserted into the Act of Parliament which the Hull Dock Company obtained in 1840 to ensure free passage for vessels and the removal of tolls for boats not using the docks The Navigation Company also received complaints from the Beverley and Barmston Drainage Commissioners who believed that water levels were being kept at a higher level than was good for drainage 16 In 1980 the Environment Agency constructed a tidal barrier at the mouth of the river The structure spans the river and a huge steel gate weighing 202 tonnes can be lowered into the waterway effectively sealing the river from the Humber and preventing tidal surges from moving up the river and flooding parts of the city and the low lying areas beyond 17 The gate was initially lowered about twelve times a year and protects around 17 000 properties In 2009 a 10 million upgrade of the structure was started to ensure it would stay operational for a further 30 years The upgrade included a new drive mechanism which raises and lowers the gate and pivots it when it is at the top of the structure so that it lies horizontally rather than vertically It also included a new control system 18 In July 2017 the barrier was granted Grade II listed status 17 Plans have been considered to build a barrage at the mouth of the Hull where it joins the Humber Estuary to maintain a constant water level as it passes through the city The idea was first raised by the Abercrombie report which considered how to redevelop Hull after significant destruction during the Second World War The estimated cost of such a project was around 195 million in 2007 19 20 Traffic edit nbsp Freighter near Scott Street Bridge 1990Because the river was a free river there are no figures for traffic on the lower river However it connected to a number of waterways on which tolls were collected and so an indication of the traffic can be gained from the figures for these waterways The main cargoes on Beverley Beck in 1730 were coal bricks turfs and wool together with cereal crops consisting of wheat barley oats and malt Receipts from tolls more than doubled between 1732 and 1748 after which the tolls were let to an independent collector The annual rent charged for this privilege doubled again between 1748 and 1792 21 There was a steady expansion of trade on the Driffield Navigation during the same period as the dividends paid to shareholders rose from 1 5 to 4 per cent In 1789 Bainton Boyes and Co negotiated a lump sum payment to cover coal from the Aire and Calder Navigation to their new carpet factory and the export of their carpets in the downstream direction The factory later became a corn mill 22 Toll rentals continued to increase on the Beverley Beck rising from 190 to 435 between 1793 and 1835 Some 31 185 tons of cargo were carried in 1838 23 In 1817 a steam packet service started to run between Driffield and Hull Three return trips each week were made but the journey times were too long and an advertisement in 1825 indicated that the engine had been altered and an express steam packet service would commence Three boats were recorded as trading between Driffield and Hull every other day in a directory of Yorkshire published in 1823 Traffic for 1832 included 7 394 chaldrons of coal 18 173 quarters of wheat 7 745 quarters of oats 19 396 quarters of barley and 4 555 sacks of flour An additional 1 564 quarters of wheat and 8 194 sacks of flour were carried to or from Foston Mill reached from Frodingham Beck 24 A regular carrier also operated between the Leven Canal and Hull once a week 25 Between 1848 and 1905 traffic on Beverley Beck more than trebled from 33 498 tons to 101 540 tons Coal and other minerals accounted for around one quarter of the traffic in 1905 while goods carried in 1906 included fertiliser burnt ore flour and scrap metal Commercial traffic continued into the 1970s when tolls of 2 365 were collected on 28 169 tons of cargo 26 Traffic on the Driffield Navigation was relatively steady between 1871 and 1905 falling slightly from 35 654 to 32 666 tons Goods carried included coal linseed cottonseed wheat flour and artificial manures In 1922 7 of income was received from pleasure craft using the navigation Traffic declined during the 1930s with commercial traffic finally ceasing in 1944 The Leven Canal carried 4 242 tons in 1888 and 4 546 in 1905 but then succumbed to road competition and closed in 1935 27 Drainage edit nbsp River Hull at WawneThe problems of flooding of the land adjacent to the river were addressed by the construction of catchwater drains to both sides of it The east side of the river was protected by the Holderness Drainage scheme John Grundy worked on plans for the scheme which would protect 11 000 acres 4 500 ha of low lying land to the north east of Hull John Smeaton was also involved although the final report was largely Grundy s work and an Act of Parliament to authorise the work was passed on 5 April 1764 The Trustees for the scheme wrote to Grundy and Smeaton in May 1764 asking them to work on the project Grundy s wife had died only a fortnight previously and the two engineers corresponded but besides valuable comment on Grundy s plans for the outfall sluice Smeaton had no further involvement and it was Grundy who ran the project which included 17 miles 27 km of barrier bank along the east side of the river John Hoggard acted as Superintendent for the scheme while Joseph Page was appointed as resident engineer to oversee the construction of the drains and the outfall sluice Grundy made regular visits until October 1767 by which time the sluice and the main drainage channels were completed at which point he and Page moved on while Hoggard oversaw additional work on the drains and banks which lasted for several more years By the time of its completion in 1772 the scheme had cost 24 000 28 Despite the Holderness scheme there were still problems near Leven and Weel and William Jessop spent a month inspecting the area before writing a report in July 1786 His plan advocated separating the water which fell on the uplands to the north and flowed through the low lying areas from the local drainage of those low lying areas George Plummer carried out most of the subsequent survey work on Jessop s behalf although Jessop surveyed the River Hull in 1787 to identify how the outfall could be improved Jessop visited the works from time to time making seven visits between 1789 and 1792 while the day to day oversight of the scheme was handled by Plummer as resident engineer Plummer was succeeded by Anthony Bower who was engineer from 1792 to 1795 and the whole scheme was completed in 1805 having cost 16 000 29 In 1796 Robert Chapman was asked to report on possible solutions for flooding to the west His report formed the basis for the Beverley and Barmston Drainage Act which was passed by Parliament in June 1798 Chapman was appointed as engineer for the scheme which would cost 115 000 and would provide flood defences and drainage for 12 600 acres 5 100 ha of land to the west of the river The project included the construction of 23 miles 37 km of drainage cuts and building embankments along 20 miles 32 km of the river At Hull an outfall sluice was constructed and the drain passed through tunnels under eleven waterways including the Beverley Beck 27 bridges were built to carry roads over the drain and the whole project was finished in 1810 30 River crossings editThere are several bridges in the Hull area which cross the River Hull Details of them are shown in the following table starting from that furthest north and moving south to the river mouth Bridge Date built NotesNew Hull Bridge Beverley 1974 31 A fixed flat deck concrete bridge carrying the A1035 Tickton bypassHull Bridge Beverley 1976 A fixed foot bridge which replaced a 1913 built steel rolling bridge once Tickton bypass opened Grovehill Bridge Beverley 1953 8 A truss girder lift bridge which replaced a ferry bridgeEnnerdale Link Bridges 1997 Twin bascule bridges 32 33 These completed the Ennerdale Link bypass construction of which started c 1992 with the river crossing originally intended to be a tunnel 34 Work on the tunnel was halted in 1994 after difficulties with the ground conditions were encountered Instead bridges designed by Rendel Palmer and Tritton based on those already installed at Stoneferry were used 35 The work was part of a wider scheme of roads around Hull to give better access to the docks via Hedon Road from the Beverley South Western bypass A1079 36 The new bridge was a twin bascule bridge each with 250t bridge decks and a total weight of 800t in including the 600t counterbalance 37 Sutton Road Bridge 1939 38 A Scherzer type rolling lift bridge Built by Cleveland Bridge amp Engineering Company with elegant Art Deco Neo Georgian style operating houses Stoneferry Bridge 1988 91 39 Twin bascule bridges with 105 foot 32 m leaves one for each direction of traffic Designed by Rendel Palmer and Tritton and built by Cementation Construction Replaced a 1905 swing bridge and earlier ferry thought to have originally been a ford at this point Hull Bridge 1885 Steel bowstring span swing bridge Grade II Listed 1994 Built by the Hull and Barnsley Railway in 1885 still used by freight trains 40 Wilmington Swing Bridge 1907 A Grade II Listed railway swing bridge built by the North Eastern Railway It opened on 7 May 1907 and replaced the original 1853 bridge Railway use ceased in 1968 and it is now used as a footpath and cycleway 41 Sculcoates Bridge 1874 Sculcoates Bridge a wrought iron swing bridge was opened in 1875 42 43 The bridge consisted of a fixed span on the east bank of 27 feet 8 2 m and a counterbalanced swing span made of 113 feet 34 m girders with a river span of 56 feet 17 m The design was by J Fox district engineer the bridge was constructed by the Bridge and Roofing Co of Darlaston Total cost was 18 000 44 Grade II listed in 1994 43 This is the oldest river bridge in the city and connects the areas of Wilmington Kingston upon Hull and SculcoatesScott Street Bridgedefunct 1901 Construction of the bridge connecting Scott Street in the west with Lime and Jenning streets in the east began October 1901 with and estimated cost of 20 000 45 A double bascule bridge The bridge bridgemasters hut railings and lamps were Grade II listed in 1994 46 It was permanently raised in 1994 as the structure was too weak to carry traffic 47 and the cost of full repair was estimated at 5 million 48 In 2018 Banksy visited this bridge and left a piece of graffiti to honour Hull s year as City of Culture 49 Scott Street Bridge was finally removed in 2020 50 North Bridge 1928 32 There has been a bridge at this point close to the North Gate of the city walls since 1541 before which there was a ferry The bridge here has been modified rebuilt and enlarged several times 51 A hydraulically operated horizontal drawbridge was constructed in 1870 connecting Charlotte Street and Witham 51 52 In 1925 plans were submitted for a new bridge of which one costed at 275 000 with a straightened approach road approximately 30 yards 27 m north of the 1870 bridge was accepted 51 53 The bridge was contracted in 1927 for 86 100 to the Widnes Foundry 1295 Ltd 54 who constructed as a Scherzer rolling lift bridge or Walking lift bridge The bridge was Grade II listed in 1994 55 Drypool Bridge 1961 Scherzer rolling lift bridge a type of Bascule bridge 56 Replaced an earlier swing bridge also known as Drypool Bridge or Salthouse Lane Bridge sanctioned 1885 with construction beginning 1887 and opening 1889 at a cost of 18 550 with the main ironwork assembled by J Butler and Co of Stanningley Leeds the river walls and approaches by T B Mather of Hull The bridge was hydraulically powered from a supply provided by the Hull Hydraulic Power Company 51 57 58 Image 59 Scale Lane Footbridge 60 2011 13 Pedestrian swing bridge between Scale Lane west and Tower Street east An award winning design by Renato Benedetti 61 Originally scheduled to open late 2010 62 63 delayed due to winding up of funding agencies as a result of the late 2000s recession 64 65 main span installation began 25 February 2012 66 The bridge was officially opened in June 2013 67 Myton Swing Bridge 1981 68 An asymmetric cable stayed box girder steel swing bridge on the A63 Garrison Road with spans of 182 2 and 93 4 feet 55 5 and 28 5 m 69 70 71 South Bridgedefunct 1865 1944 Toll Bridge Also known as the Ha penny Bridge it was built to give better access to the newly built Victoria Dock Closed 1934 72 Swing bridge located between Blackfriargate and Humber Street between present Myton Bridge and Tidal Barrier 73 Image 74 The engineer was John Hawkshaw the contractor was Henry Grissell Regent s Canal Ironworks Co 75 Millennium Bridge 76 2001 A pedestrian swing bridge giving access to The Deep with a span of 102 feet 31 m nbsp Drypool Bridge raised to allow a freighter to passThe present Drypool Bridge was designed by W Morris the Hull City Engineer and it was built in Hull The previous wrought iron swing bridge which had opened in 1888 was too narrow with a carriageway which was 16 feet 4 9 m wide 77 It was closed in May 1959 so that it could be demolished 78 and Morris s new bridge opened in March 1961 79 Scott Street Bridge had gradually deteriorated and a public consultation was held in 1986 to determine its future By that time a 10 ton weight limit had been imposed on traffic using the bridge because of its poor structural state Three suggestions were made as to its future These were to close and demolish it to refurbish it at an estimated cost of 1 6 million and to build a new bridge on the same site but a different alignment to eliminate the awkward turn at the west end which was costed at 2 million 80 None of these actions have been taken as the bridge leaves were raised in 1994 and have remained raised ever since Consideration was given in 2007 to preserving two of the hydraulic rams which operated the bridge during planning to demolish the structure The Hull Hydraulic Power Company was set up in 1872 and by 1876 was operating a pumping station on Machell Street This supplied water to a high pressure main which ran from Wellington Street to Sculcoates Bridge and was used by local industries to power machinery including the bridge when it was constructed Although the power company closed in the 1940s it made Hull the first city in the world to have a public system of power distribution 81 nbsp Scott Street Bridge 1990The design for the Ennerdale Link road included a tunnel under the river Initial investigations suggested that there was a layer of boulder clay below the alluvium of the river bed and that a chalk aquifer was below the clay 82 Construction work started in July 1991 83 A cofferdam was built on the east bank and the cutting which would have provided access to the twin bore tunnel was nearly excavated when a 6 6 foot 2 0 m hole appeared in the river bed and the entire site flooded A 3 month investigation took place which suggested that it would be difficult to finish the tunnel and maintain the integrity of the aquifer Despite some 10 million having been spent on the project it was abandoned 82 in 1993 83 A contract for a replacement bridge was awarded in June 1995 84 and the river was crossed by twin lift bridges which were opened in April 1997 The project had cost 30 million compared to an original budget of just 13 million 83 A tunnel was successfully constructed under the river in 2001 The 6 2 mile 10 0 km long sewer runs from the city centre to a treatment works at Salt End It was excavated using two tunnelling machines which were manufactured in Canada and were named Maureen and Gloria The tunnel was officially opened on 21 August 2001 when a Mini car was driven through it recreating scenes from the film The Italian Job 85 Before 1897 there had been a ferry at Grovehill and a shipyard on the east bank owned by Joseph Scarr To assist his workers to reach the shipyard Scarr designed and built a ferry bridge which cost him 300 86 It consisted of a large rectangular pontoon above which was fitted a bridge deck with handrails Two jack screws enabled the deck to be raised or lowered in relation to the pontoon so that it remained at approximately the same height whatever the state of the tide On the eastern bank Scarr constructed a variable height landing but the landing on the west bank was constructed by Beverley Council and was fixed Scarr campaigned to have a variable landing here as well and was prepared to fund it but his requests were always rejected The fixed landing made access to the bridge difficult at high tides 87 When a boat needed to pass the west end was freed and the pontoon swung round to lie parallel to the bank either upstream or downstream depending on the state of the tide It would then be winched back into position by a small barrel winch At night the bridge was closed and moored beside the bank 88 Responsibility for the bridge was taken over by Beverley Council before the Second World War Its condition deteriorated and in 1948 they attempted to replace it with a footbridge around 400 yards 370 m further upstream Because the ferry rights had been in existence for more than 600 years an Act of Parliament was needed and this was thwarted by a petition containing 84 signatures presented by the people of Weel to the House of Lords Plans for a new lift bridge were drawn up and it was opened on 19 October 1953 89 In 1913 the Hull Bridge upstream of Beverley which had caused so much disagreement in the 18th century until it had been replaced in 1801 was demolished by the County Council who installed a steel rolling bridge in its place Once the Tickton Bypass bridge had been built a short distance upstream it no longer needed to carry road traffic and it was replaced by a footbridge in 1976 31 At the other end of the river the Millennium Bridge was opened in 2001 There was once a ferry at this point before 1865 90 which gave access to the Victoria Dock opened in 1850 South Bridge replaced the ferry in 1865 making it easier for workers to reach the dock The swing footbridge was closed in 1934 but was not demolished until 1944 91 Water quality editThe Environment Agency measure the water quality of the river systems in England Each is given an overall ecological status which may be one of five levels high good moderate poor and bad There are several components that are used to determine this including biological status which looks at the quantity and varieties of invertebrates angiosperms and fish Chemical status which compares the concentrations of various chemicals against known safe concentrations is rated good or fail 92 The water quality of the River Hull system was as follows in 2016 Section Ecological Status Chemical Status Overall Status Length Catchment ChannelDriffield Navigation 93 Good Good Good artificialLowthorpe Kelk Foston Bks from Source to Frodingham Beck 94 Poor Good Poor 10 4 miles 16 7 km 35 90 square miles 93 0 km2 Old Howe Frodingham Beck to R Hull 95 Moderate Good Moderate 4 2 miles 6 8 km 9 81 square miles 25 4 km2 heavily modifiedHull from West Beck to Arram Beck 96 Moderate Good Moderate 6 6 miles 10 6 km 1 72 square miles 4 5 km2 heavily modifiedElla Dyke 97 Moderate Good Moderate 4 2 miles 6 8 km 2 00 square miles 5 2 km2 heavily modifiedHigh Hunsley to Woodmansey Area 98 Good Good Good 4 3 miles 6 9 km 5 87 square miles 15 2 km2 artificialHull from Arram Beck to Humber 99 Moderate Good Moderate 9 1 miles 14 6 km 9 34 square miles 24 2 km2 heavily modifiedThe reasons for the quality being less than good include sewage discharge and physical modification of the channel Points of interest editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Point Coordinates Links to map resources OS Grid Ref NotesSource 54 00 29 N 0 28 32 W 54 0081 N 0 4755 W 54 0081 0 4755 Source TA000579 Springs near ElmswellDriffield Railway bridge 53 59 42 N 0 26 16 W 53 9949 N 0 4377 W 53 9949 0 4377 Driffield Railway bridge TA025565 River Hull below hereCorpslanding 53 57 41 N 0 22 49 W 53 9614 N 0 3803 W 53 9614 0 3803 Corpslanding TA063529 Limit of navigationEmmotland Junction 53 57 03 N 0 21 10 W 53 9509 N 0 3527 W 53 9509 0 3527 Emmotland Junction TA082517 Frodingham BeckStruncheon Hill lock 53 56 02 N 0 21 26 W 53 9339 N 0 3571 W 53 9339 0 3571 Struncheon Hill lock TA079498 Driffield NavigationLeven Canal 53 53 23 N 0 23 42 W 53 8896 N 0 3949 W 53 8896 0 3949 Leven Canal TA055449 disused entrance lockBeverley Beck 53 50 24 N 0 23 41 W 53 8399 N 0 3946 W 53 8399 0 3946 Beverley Beck TA057393 entrance lockEnnerdale Link bridge 53 47 38 N 0 21 32 W 53 7938 N 0 3589 W 53 7938 0 3589 Ennerdale Link bridge TA082343 A1033Stoneferry bridge 53 46 03 N 0 19 49 W 53 7675 N 0 3302 W 53 7675 0 3302 Stoneferry bridge TA101314 A1165Sculcoates bridge Chapman Street 53 45 15 N 0 19 44 W 53 7542 N 0 3290 W 53 7542 0 3290 Sculcoates bridge Chapman Street Disused listed bridgeBeverley amp Barmston Drain 53 45 06 N 0 19 58 W 53 7518 N 0 3329 W 53 7518 0 3329 Beverley amp Barmston Drain TA100296 SluiceTidal Barrier 53 44 24 N 0 19 51 W 53 7399 N 0 3307 W 53 7399 0 3307 Tidal Barrier TA101283 Just above River HumberSee also edit nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Transport portalRivers of the United KingdomBibliography editAllison K J ed 1969 22 Communications Bridges A History of the County of York East Riding Volume 1 The City of Kingston upon Hull British History Online Retrieved 5 December 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Allison K J ed 1989 41 Boundaries and Communications Roads and Bridges A History of the County of York East Riding Volume 6 The borough and liberties of Beverley British History Online Retrieved 18 November 2010 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Crosby Kathleen 1980 The Old Grovehill Ferry Bridge Lockington Publishing Co ISBN 0 905490 15 0 Cumberlidge Jane 2009 Inland Waterways of Great Britain 8th Ed Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson ISBN 978 1 84623 010 3 Hadfield Charles 1972 The Canals of Yorkshire and North East England Vol 1 David and Charles ISBN 0 7153 5719 0 Hadfield Charles 1973 The Canals of Yorkshire and North East England Vol 2 David and Charles ISBN 0 7153 5975 4 Marsh Terry Hannaford Jamie 2008 UK Hydrometric Register PDF Natural Environment Research Council ISBN 978 0 9557672 2 7 Archived from the original PDF on 31 October 2014 McNicol Colin 2002 Hull s Victoria Dock Village Highgate Publications Beverley ISBN 978 1 902645 24 7 Archived from the original on 13 October 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Skempton Sir Alec et al 2002 A Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland Vol 1 1500 to 1830 Thomas Telford ISBN 0 7277 2939 X References edit a b Marsh amp Hannaford 2008 p 53 a b James Alan The Brittonic Language in the Old North PDF Scottish Place Name Society Retrieved 29 April 2021 Ordnance Survey 1 25 000 Explorer map Sheets 294 295 a b Cumberlidge 2009 pp 114 115 Hadfield 1972 p 85 a b c Ordnance Survey 1 25 000 Explorer map Sheet 293 a b c Hadfield 1972 pp 86 89 a b Crosby 1980 p 31 Cumberlidge 2009 p 153 Ordnance Survey 1 10 560 map 1938 46 edition Hull barrier turns tide on threat Transport Network 30 January 2008 Archived from the original on 6 December 2020 a b Hadfield 1972 pp 83 84 Sources Sheahan J J Whellan T 1855 History and Topography of the City of York the East Riding of Yorkshire and a portion of the West Riding Vol 1 pp 31 32 All the local historians except Mr Frost assert that the River Hull in former times discharged itself into the Humber to the eastward of the present river but that gentleman found abundant evidence in the registers and histories of the Abbey of Meaux to show that its ancient course lay to the westward of the present channel Sheahan J J Whellan T 1857 History and Topography of the City of York the East Riding of Yorkshire and a portion of the West Riding Vol 2 p 11 At a very early period long anterior to the time that the situation of Hull attracted the attention of Edward I the River Hull had experienced the change in its course the old river was formerly on the west side of the town the inlet known by the name of Lime Kiln Creek being a part of it Frost Charles 1827 3 Of the change which took place in the course of the River Hull in the Thirteenth Century Notices relative to the early history of the town and port of Hull J B Nichols pp 28 39 DIE Veneris 30 Martii House of Lords Journal His Majesty s Stationery Office 30 21 30 March 1764 An Act for draining preserving and improving the Low Grounds and Carrs lying and being in the Parishes Townships Hamlets Lordships Precincts and Territories of Sutton Ganstead Swine Benningholme Benningholme Grange and Fairholme North Skirlaugh Rowton Arnold Long Riston Leven Heigholme and Hallytree Holme Brandes Burton and Bursall Eske Tickton Weel Rowth Meaux and Waghen otherwife Wawn in Holderness in the East Riding of the County of York The Question was put Whether this Bill shall pass It was Resolved in the Affirmative Skempton 2002 pp 280 1 368 372 Appendix II pp 832 834 a b Hadfield 1973 pp 298 306 a b Historic England Tidal Surge Barrier River Hull 1446522 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 July 2017 Hull tidal barrier gets 10M overhaul New Civil Engineer 22 June 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2013 Wood Alexandra 17 April 2007 Cost of fitting lock system on River Hull put at 195m Yorkshire Post Retrieved 26 April 2013 Environment and Transport Overview and Scrutiny Commission Minutes 74 River Hull And Humber Strategies Hull City Council 5 February 2008 Archived from the original on 4 October 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2013 Hadfield 1972 pp 84 86 Hadfield 1972 pp 88 89 Hadfield 1972 p 300 Hadfield 1972 pp 304 305 Hadfield 1972 p 308 Hadfield 1972 pp 429 430 Hadfield 1972 pp 432 433 Skempton 2002 p 281 Skempton 2002 pp 368 372 Skempton 2002 p 126 a b Allison 1989 pp 161 169 Ennerdale Link Bridge www movablebridges org uk Retrieved 9 February 2016 Bascule Bridges Ennerdale Link Road Hull The Architects Journal 206 46 1997 New tunnel under River Hull provides east west link Highways and Transportation 39 10 1992 Tunnel dropped for two bridges The Surveyor 6 1994 UK REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME 1986 90 EUROPEAN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT FUND Commission of the European Communities 1987 7D 3 31 Routes Du Monde Vol 7 1998 List of historically interesting structures in Hull Sutton Road Bridge Hull City Council Archived from the original on 4 October 2011 Retrieved 18 November 2010 Janberg Nicolas Structures Stoneferry Bridge Structurae Retrieved 18 November 2010 Historic England River Hull Railway Bridge Bankside 1197656 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 26 April 2013 Dyson Mark Site Record Sculcoates Station Disused Stations Retrieved 4 December 2010 The Hull Times 16 January 1875 p 6 a b Historic England Sculcoates Bridge 1197693 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 January 2015 Sculcoates Bridge Kingston upon Hull PDF The Engineer Vol 39 2 April 1875 pp 227 228 Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2015 Miscellanae PDF The Engineer Vol 92 4 October 1901 p 355 Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2015 Historic England LIFTING BRIDGE BRIDGEMASTERS OFFICE RAILINGS AND LAMPS 1291608 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 9 July 2015 Planning Committee Minutes Tuesday 16th January 2007 2 00 p m Room 77 Guildhall Hull Hull City Council 16 January 2007 212 Scott Street Bridge Archived from the original on 11 October 2011 Jones Mark Collinson Mike May 2007 Report to Riverside Area Committee the Planning Committee Scott Street Bridge Report No DRP 20062007 1823 Hull City Council Archived from the original on 13 October 2011 3 1 Scott Street Bridge dates from 1901 It was Listed in 1994 at which time it was complete and operable However very shortly afterwards an assessment of the load carrying capacity identified that the bridge was unable to carry any vehicular loading It was fixed in the open position to allow river traffic movement 4 1 c Cost of repairs is estimated to be in excess of 5million Latest Banksy graffiti unveiled in Hull BBC News BBC 26 January 2018 Retrieved 29 January 2018 Hull s Banksy bridge finally dismantled after artwork saved Hull Live 17 September 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2021 a b c d Allison 1969 pp 387 397 53 44 50 N 0 19 46 W 53 747269 N 0 329502 W 53 747269 0 329502 Ordnance survey 1891 1 500 also 1938 46 1 10560 map shows both bridges relative A Hull Bridge Scheme The Engineer Vol 140 14 August 1925 p 174 Miscellanea The Engineer Vol 144 21 October 1927 p 455 Historic England New North Bridge George Street 1292933 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 26 April 2013 Glazzard Paul Drypool Bridge Hull Geograph Project Retrieved 18 November 2010 Sources Engineering Notes A Proposed New Bridge at Hull The Building News and Engineering Journal 47 36 1885 At a meeting of the Bridge Committee of the Hull Corporation last week the Borough Engineer Mr J F Sharp submitted plans for a proposed bridge across the River Hull between Salthouse lane Staith and Clarence street It is a swing bridge 133ft long 35ft in the extreme width and calculated to carry a load of 25 tons Hull The Electrical Review 53 862 July December 1903 It is proposed as an experiment to work the Salthouse Lane Bridge across the River Hull by electricity The Drypool Bridge Hull The Engineer Vol 69 1890 pp 4 6 53 44 43 N 0 19 42 W 53 745299 N 0 328458 W 53 745299 0 328458 Ordnance survey 1892 1 500 Drypool Bridge Hull Lordline Retrieved 26 April 2013 The Kingston upon Hull City Council Scale Lane Bridge Scheme Statutory Instruments 2008 No 1373 Highways England The National Archives 2008 Retrieved 18 November 2010 World Architecture Festival 2014 day two winners announced Dezeen Magazine 2 October 2014 Retrieved 8 October 2016 Iconic Hull landmark in the making This is Hull and East Riding 24 March 2010 Retrieved 18 November 2010 Bridge will be a link for growth across the city This is Hull and East Riding 17 March 2010 Retrieved 18 November 2010 Delayed 7 5m bridge for Hull s Old Town will finally swing into action This is Hull and East Riding 15 February 2011 Archived from the original on 18 February 2011 Retrieved 8 April 2011 New River Hull bridge to swing into action six years later This is Hull and East Riding 3 July 2012 Archived from the original on 7 July 2012 Retrieved 3 July 2012 Bridge carrying regeneration hopes gets ready to ride high Yorkshire Post Johnston Publishing 24 February 2012 Retrieved 25 February 2012 Hull s new pedestrian bridge is formally opened BBC News 28 June 2013 Retrieved 28 June 2013 Janberg Nicolas Structures Myton Bridge Structurae Retrieved 18 November 2010 Troyano Leonardo Fernandez 2003 Bridge engineering a global perspective Thomas Telford publishing pp 726 ff ISBN 978 0 7277 3215 6 Award Winning Steel Structures Metal Construction Welding Institute 14 68 1982 Footprints on a global landscape 150 years of improving the built environment PDF Hyder Consulting p 64 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Cable stayed box girder swing bridge main span 83m Awarded Structural Steel Design Award British Constructional Steel Association and the British Steel Corporation 1981 McNicol Colin History of the Dock Victoria Dock Village Hall Community Association Archived from the original on 13 October 2011 Retrieved 23 August 2011 53 44 24 N 0 19 51 W 53 740125 N 0 330772 W 53 740125 0 330772 see Ordnance Survey map 1891 92 1910 1928 1 2500 Johnson Joseph A The Ha penny Bridge Hull Hull Museums Collections Hull City Council Retrieved 26 April 2013 Maw William H Dredge James 1872 Hull South Bridge Published at the offices of Engineering pp 115 117 ISBN 9780608411842 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Plates LXIII LXIV Projects Pedestrian Access Swing Bridge at The Deep Hull Qualter Hall Retrieved 8 February 2021 Port of Hull Journal 46 4 4 1958 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Hull Times 23 May 1959 p 7 Hull Times 11 March 1961 p 5 Yorkshire Post 11 June 1986 Water hydraulic rams at Scott Street Bridge Hull City Council 3 July 2007 Archived from the original on 4 October 2011 Retrieved 4 December 2010 a b Hayward David June 1993 Hull Holed Up New Civil Engineer quoted on University of the West of England Groundwater Case Studies p 8 a b c Booth Phil 24 July 1997 Ennerdale Bridge Yorkshire Post p 8 Contract awarded for Ennerdale Bridge Hull Daily Mail 27 June 1995 Mini to star in Hull Job stunt BBC News 16 August 2001 Retrieved 18 November 2010 Crosby 1980 pp 8 9 Crosby 1980 pp 9 14 Crosby 1980 pp 19 20 Crosby 1980 pp 27 31 Ordnance Survey 1 2500 map 1856 McNicol 2002 p 1 Glossary see Biological quality element Chemical status and Ecological status Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 15 May 2017 Driffield Navigation Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 11 July 2018 Lowthorpe Kelk Foston Bks from Source to Frodingham Beck Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 13 July 2018 Old Howe Frodingham Beck to R Hull Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 13 July 2018 Hull from West Beck to Arram Beck Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 13 July 2018 Ella Dyke Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 13 July 2018 High Hunsley to Woodmansey Area Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 13 July 2018 Hull from Arram Beck to Humber Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Retrieved 13 July 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to River Hull Tour of the River Hull by boat Google Maps Satellite View Video footage of the Hull Tidal Barrier and the Millennium Bridge Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title River Hull amp oldid 1174775311 River crossings, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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