place

Bashall Brook

England river stubsLancashire geography stubsRivers of LancashireRivers of Ribble Valley
Bashall Brook and the road to Clitheroe
Bashall Brook and the road to Clitheroe

Bashall Brook is a minor river in Lancashire, England. It is 7.09 miles (11.41 km) long and has a catchment area of 6.86 square miles (1,777.68 ha).The stream rises at Browsholme Tarn on Browsholme Moor descending through Braddup Clough where it collects Elm Clough and flows south and east past Bashall Eaves, meeting Cow Hey Brook before turning northeast to collect Hollins Clough near Back Ridge Farm. It again turns south, passing the Shireburn Caravan Park at Waddington before joining the River Ribble at the Low Moor area of Clitheroe.

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

Bashall Brook
B6243, Ribble Valley

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Bashall BrookContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.8701 ° E -2.4157 °
placeShow on map

Address

Ribblesdale swimming pool

B6243
BB7 3LA Ribble Valley
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Bashall Brook and the road to Clitheroe
Bashall Brook and the road to Clitheroe
Share experience

Nearby Places

Edisford Bridge
Edisford Bridge

Edisford Bridge (or Eadsford) is a toll-free, nine-span bridge over the River Ribble near Clitheroe, Lancashire, England. A Grade II listed structure and a Scheduled monument, located about a mile WSW of the centre of town, it crosses the river to the civil parish of Great Mitton. The bridge carries the two-lane traffic of the B6243 Edisford Road.The age of the current sandstone bridge is uncertain, it has been heavily modified, but the oldest parts are possibly of late-medieval construction. A bridge already existed here in 1339, as a grant of pontage was issued to fund repairs after damage by a flood. The nine spans vary in width, four arches crossing the river channel on the east side and a further five partly buried arches with a tight bend over meadow land on the west. On the northern side, three of the spans are pointed arches with Gothic ribs on the soffits, the rest being segmental. The piers have triangular cutwaters, and the parapets are solid with a string course.The largest arch is the second from the eastern side at 17.98 metres (59.0 ft) across, it is thought to have replaced two earlier arches before 1799, when it featured in a painting by J. M. W. Turner. Before 1903 the bridge was widened over its full length on the southern, downstream, side from c.2.4 metres (8 ft) to about 6.1 metres (20 ft).The bridge was Grade II listed in two stages, the four arches at the eastern end (then within the municipal borough of Clitheroe) on 19 May 1950, and remaining the five arches (in Bowland Rural District) on 16 November 1954. It has also been listed as a Scheduled Monument.