Today’s post is about one of my favourite local places, Thames Lock in Weybridge, Surrey. Thames Lock is the first lock of the Wey and Godalming Navigations. One of Britain’s earliest man-made navigable waterways, the Navigations, which run for just under 20 miles from the Thames at Weybridge to Godalming, preceded the canal age by a century. Now owned and managed by the National Trust, the Navigations and their towpath provide a tranquil green corridor through some of Surrey’s most built up areas and a pleasant, easy route through some of its loveliest countryside.
The Navigations were the brainchild of Sir Richard Weston of Sutton Place. The first ten miles from the Thames were opened in 1653 and extended to Godalming by 1764. The principal cargo was timber from Surrey’s forests destined for the shipbuilding yards on the banks of the Thames. But the Navigations were also an important route for the transport of wheat, flour and numerous other cargoes, including, in the early 1920s, a number of aircraft from Brooklands. Today, the Navigations are plied by pleasure boats rather than commercial barges and the towpath is frequented by walkers and cyclists rather than the horses that used to pull the barges.
The entrance to the Navigations from the Thames at Weybridge is misleadingly insignificant in appearance, barely noticeable but for the sign on a post in the river. Yet it is the location for an exciting passage in local writer, H G Wells’s classic, The War of the Worlds, which concludes as follows:
‘I staggered through the leaping, hissing water towards the shore. Had my foot stumbled, it would have been the end. I fell helplessly, in full sight of the Martians, upon the broad, bare, gravelly spit that runs down to mark the angle of the Wey and Thames. I expected nothing but death.’ (1898)
While not as challenging as evading Martian invaders, finding Thames Lock, where the towpath begins, can be difficult on foot. A path, known as Church Walk, runs from the side of the Old Crown, a 17th century Grade II listed pub on Thames Street to Radnor Road. The lock can be reached either via Jessamy Road, which bisects Church Walk or, further along Church Walk, via a small path to the right that leads over a pretty white and green footbridge.
Both routes lead to Whittet’s Ait, an island between the River Wey and the Navigations. If you follow the gravel footpath beside the public park there, you will come to the lock. It is a delightful spot, with benches on which you can while away a few minutes or hours watching narrow boats negotiate the lock. In spring and summer, planters outside the lock keeper’s cottage froth with flowers and it is not unusual to find a local artist at work capturing the idyllic scene.
The towpath begins on the other side, accessed via an iron bridge over the lock. Before crossing, however, it is worth stopping at the lock keeper’s cottage where a free map can be obtained and you can buy a booklet of circular walks along the Navigations.
The present cottage was built by the National Trust in 1975 as a replica of its eighteenth century predecessor. On the other side of the lock, beside the towpath, stand the stables that used to shelter the horses as they waited for the next barges to arrive. Now they contain a small display on the history and wildlife of the Navigations.
Next to the Lock stands a development of waterside apartments on what was the site of paper, iron and oil seed mills from 1791 to 1963 when the last of many fires on the site finally put paid to further milling. One account of the fire describes how the water was alight with the highly flammable oil.
The Navigations are an important habitat for wildlife, from beautiful damselflies …
… to slightly more weird and wonderful critters.
You may even meet an occasional ship’s dog.
What a gorgeous place. Looks like it is filled with colorful history. And I love that photo of the dog, probably because he looks like my very own fur-ball 🙂
Thanks. It is a very sweet dog 🙂
just beautiful.. : )
Thank you 🙂
Wonderful post Rachael with great photos and facts. As you know I too love it here 🙂
Thanks, Karen. I still have hope that we will manage to resume our walks together one day. 🙂
Would be nice once we both get sorted, I enjoyed them 🙂
What a beautiful place… and great literary connection! Love that ships’s dog :O)
Thanks, Barbara. I thought you might like the Wells. 🙂
Great journey in these photographs…
Thank you, Helen 🙂
Another enjoyable post, Rachael. Looks like some nice walking.
Thank you. It is. I have walked the whole length but not in one go. I hope to do that one day.
Definitely, there look to be some splendid strolling and boating spots here! Thank you for another enjoyable post, Rachael. Makes me want to visit England again soon!
Thank you, Tricia. If you do, you must look us up. 🙂
That would be great fun! Certainly, I will keep you posted if, after we spin the globe, we end up in the UK. 🙂
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Thank you for taking wonderful pictures of our boat and Lily the dog. Our boat is moored on the Wey and is called Take Wine and we do often. We love the Wey, in all seasons.
Victoria and Peter Maxwell
Lovely pictures of Take Wine at Thames Lock and our dog Lily. Thank you.
Victoria and Peter Maxwell
Hi
How lovely to hear from you. I remember meeting you very well, and photographing your lovely dog. I hope you received the pictures I emailed you at the time.
Rachael
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