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Slimbridge

Civil parishes in GloucestershireStroud DistrictUse British English from March 2015Villages in Gloucestershire
Gloucester and Sharpness Canal at Patch Bridge
Gloucester and Sharpness Canal at Patch Bridge

Slimbridge is a village and civil parish near Dursley in Gloucestershire, England. It is best known as the home of the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust's Slimbridge Reserve which was started by Sir Peter Scott.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Slimbridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Slimbridge
Moorend Lane,

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Wikipedia: SlimbridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.728 ° E -2.378 °
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Address

Moorend Lane

Moorend Lane
GL2 7DF , Slimbridge
England, United Kingdom
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Gloucester and Sharpness Canal at Patch Bridge
Gloucester and Sharpness Canal at Patch Bridge
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Nearby Places

River Cam, Gloucestershire
River Cam, Gloucestershire

The River Cam is a small river in Gloucestershire, England. It flows for 12 miles (20 km) north-westwards from the Cotswold Edge, across the Vale of Berkeley, into the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal.The river rises on the Cotswold escarpment above the village of Uley, and flows through Dursley, Cam and Cambridge to the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal as a feeder to that waterway. Before the canal was opened in 1827, the Cam flowed into the River Severn at Frampton Pill, Frampton on Severn.The lower river was improved for navigation when the canal was built, and became known as the Cambridge Arm with one entrance lock leading to a basin and wharf at Cambridge, the limit of navigation due to mill weirs and low bridges on the Bristol to Gloucester road. The lock was missing and the basin abandoned by 1901. Most of the straightened channel has survived as flood defence improvements and is potentially still navigable, but the entrance is now blocked by a very low bridge at the site of the former lock. It is thought that the legal right to navigation may still be in force, which is potentially relevant for recreational canoeing, kayaking and stand-up paddleboarding users to enjoy unimpeded access. Upstream from the town of Dursley, the river is known as the River Ewelme. A new fish and eel pass and an additional second channel were dug by the Environment Agency just east of Cambridge in 2014. This drew criticism from local people as no money had been spent on flood defences.

Cam railway station
Cam railway station

Cam railway station served the village of Cam in Gloucestershire, England. The station was on the short Dursley and Midland Junction Railway line which linked the town of Dursley to the Midland Railway's Bristol to Gloucester line at Coaley Junction. The railway, just 2.5 miles (4 km) long, ran along the valley of the river Cam. Cam station was situated at northern end of the village, close to the cloth mill of Hunt and Winterbotham, to which there was a siding.The station opened with the line in 1856 and consisted of a single platform with a brick building and a wooden goods shed. It was the only intermediate station on the line and all passenger trains called there. Journeys between Coaley Junction railway station and Dursley took only 10 minutes and around half a dozen trains were provided each day, with excursion traffic in the summer. The trains that ran on the line were affectionately known as the "Dursley Donkey".Passenger traffic was vulnerable to competition from buses and services ceased on 10 September 1962. Goods services at Cam also finished then, but the line remained open to goods traffic from Dursley under British Rail regularly to 1966 and irregularly to 1968, and even after that the line was retained as a private siding, finally closing in 1970. Cam station was demolished and no trace now remains. Coaley Junction, where the Dursley line joined the main line, remained open for passenger traffic until 1965 when it was closed with the withdrawal of stopping train services between Bristol and Gloucester. However, local pressure for a station resulted in the opening of a new station close to Coaley in 1994, and this is known as Cam and Dursley.