River Wandle
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The River Wandle is a right-bank tributary of the River Thames in south London, England. With a total length of about Template:Convert, the river passes through the London boroughs of Croydon, Sutton, Merton and Wandsworth, where it reaches the Thames. A short headwater – the Caterham Bourne – is partially in Surrey, the historic county of the river's catchment. Tributaries of the Wandle include Carshalton Ponds and Norbury Brook.
The Wandle Trail follows the course of the river from Croydon to Wandsworth.
Toponym
The name is thought to derive from a back-formation of Wandsworth (Template:Langx meaning Wendle's Enclosure).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
History and boundaries
In the pleistocene before the carving of the Mole Gap, water lapped the north of the area between the North Downs and Greensand Hills known as the Vale of Holmesdale taking the Caterham or Coulsdon Bourne routes, to form the much less deep Merstham Gap, a wind gap.<ref>Natural England - Geodiversity Template:Webarchive</ref> In more recent times, precipitation on the local central, small section of the long escarpment percolates through the chalk and reappears as springs in central Croydon, Beddington, and Carshalton. The occasional stream, known as the Bourne, which runs through the Caterham valley (and Smitham Bottom in Coulsdon) is a source of the River Wandle but only surfaces after heavy rainfall.<ref name=malden>Template:Cite web</ref> A series of ditches and culverts carries the water from Purley to Croydon.
For many centuries the River Wandle rose from springs including the garden of Blunt House, South End, Croydon and Brighton Road to enter and flow through the Haling neighbourhood in the south of Croydon. It ran along Southbridge Road and upon reaching Old Town it reached a maximal Template:Convert across and began to divide into smaller channels. The grounds of the Old Palace and Scarbrook Hill had springs engineered with ponds, streams and canals where fish swam, especially trout. Over the years, it became renowned for its fish, and is mentioned in works such as William Camden's Britannia (1586) and Izaak Walton's The Compleat Angler (1653).<ref name=":0">Ackroyd, P. (2012). London Under. London: Vintage Books. Template:ISBN</ref> Lord Nelson would fish in its waters, leading his mistress, Lady Hamilton, to rename the Wandle, as it flowed through her garden, the "River Nile", in Nelson's memory.<ref name=":0" />
However, as Croydon's population grew and use of the water closet increased, the Old Town streams became little more than open sewers and were filled in or culverted from 1840 after outbreaks of typhoid and cholera.<ref name="croy">Template:Cite web</ref>
The Wandle then flowed through Pitlake and on through two marshy fields – Froggs Mead and Stubbs Mead – drained to form Wandle Park in 1890. Local springs were used to form a boating lake in the park, but frequent drying up problems led to the lake being filled in and the river was culverted in 1967. In 2012, the Wandle was restored to the surface in Wandle Park. From there, the river continues underground, through where the gas works used to stand, under the Purley Way road past Waddon Ponds and appears on the surface at Richmond Green road, where a small green buffer to its north acts as the green after the footpath at the end of Mill Lane in Waddon, Croydon.<ref>Map Template:Webarchive created by Ordnance Survey, courtesy of English Heritage</ref>
For part of its length, the Wandle forms the boundary between the London Boroughs of Croydon and Lambeth and, further downstream bounds Merton and Wandsworth. Shortly before reaching the Thames the navigable Bell Lane Creek splits from the river, rejoining close to the confluence.
Localities adjoining the river and its mentioned main tributaries include: Croydon, Waddon, Beddington, Wallington, Carshalton, The Wrythe, Hackbridge, Mitcham, Ravensbury, St Helier, Morden, Merton Abbey, Colliers Wood, South Wimbledon, Summerstown, and Wandsworth. Honeywood Museum, in Carshalton Village, includes displays and an interactive map about the River Wandle and its influence on the life of the area.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Headwaters
Intermittently visible watercourses
Rain falling on part of the North Downs mainly filters through a thin topsoil into chalk and emerges on the spring line and in gentle ravines carved by water erosion. At the top of the catchment, the Wandle has four main headwaters historically noted as winterbournes — streams which only flow when the water table is high.<ref name=croy/>
Two such streams, culverted, combine in Central Croydon beneath Bourne Street to form the Wandle which emerges immediately north-west in Wandle Park. The Wandle is piped part-way-through neighbouring New South Quarter to flow under Purley Way (formerly Waddon Marsh Lane) and part of its retail park. From its central gathering the flow is westwards (or WSW) until merging with the Carshalton branch. On its route the early Wandle surfaces to receive springs at a long lake Waddon Ponds beside Mill Lane, Croydon.
The Coulsdon Bourne and linked Caterham Bourne south of Croydon town centre ran in wet seasons. They have been culverted since before 1900. When the water table is medium or high these waters meet at Purley, run in a culvert the length of the Brighton Road, South Croydon, and merge into the surface water drains and culverts in the town centre (which become much of the above stream).
The Norbury Brook
Template:Main Template:Annotated image The Norbury Brook is in its western section for parochial boundaries called the Graveney River. Aggregated streams combine under Grant Road, Addiscombe. Straightened, it roughly bounds Croydon and Lambeth Boroughs forming the ancient boundary of Croydon and Norwood (once the large woodland in Norbury parish). Its long, culverted mouth with the Wandle is in Tooting Graveney – it meets the Wandle fronting the Haydons Road part of Wimbledon in the Borough of Merton.
Industry
The river has been well-used since Roman times; in the 17th century Huguenots were attracted by the cloth and textile mills which lined the banks of the river. It was heavily industrialised in the 18th and 19th centuries, during the Industrial Revolution, and was declared one of the most polluted rivers in England.Template:Citation needed The main industries then were tobacco and textiles. The river was used to power 68 water wheels, of which only a few survive, such as at Merton Abbey Mills for the production of paper, print and tapestries.<ref>Template:Cite book Retrieved 29 August 2013.</ref>
The Liberty print works (latterly Merton Abbey Mills) and Merton Board Mills dominated the riverscape with the board mills being demolished in the 1990s (the site was redeveloped into a Sainsbury’s Savacentre). Local concentration of heavy industry resulted in multiple leats being cut during the 18th century; a remnant of the old courses, the Pickle, is two ditches, one running beneath Liberty Avenue. The former leat has become the main river next to Merton Abbey Mills craft village.
Clean-ups of the Wandle have improved the water quality dramatically, leading to a return of the river's brown trout. This improvement in water quality has also seen other fish thrive with stocks of chub, roach and dace all flourishing once again with the most popular angling spots being in Hackbridge and Colliers Wood.Template:Citation needed
Local nature reserves
A stretch of the river between Trewint Street and Plough Lane in Merton has been designated as the Lower Wandle Local Nature Reserve (LNR). It is lined by mature trees and patches of grassland.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> South of the Lower Wandle, an area of wetland between the River Wandle and the Wandle trail is the Wandle Meadow Nature Park LNR.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Another LNR adjacent to the Wandle is the Wandle Valley Wetland in Carshalton.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2017, a new nature reserve was created in Bell Lane Creek at the confluence of the Wandle and the Thames, by removing a half-tide weir that had been installed in the 1980s. This had been built as the first part of a project to create a marina, however it had ceased to work some years previously. Restoring it would allow the tide to clear out silt and restore a natural tidal river. In addition, a section of the Thames river wall was lowered as part of the Wandsworth Riverside Quarter residential development, to allow reeds and vegetation to develop and provide a more natural sloping embankment. As part of the project, layers of contaminated sediment were dredged from the site, to restore a gravel bed and restore a wildlife habitat measuring roughly a hectare in size.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Incidents
21st century hazardous discharges
On 17 September 2007, Sodium hypochlorite was accidentally flushed into the Wandle from Thames Water's Beddington sewage works.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The chemical was being used to clean its tertiary treatment screens. Its use is permitted if captured ("re-circulated") for further treatment. The discharge killed over 2,000 fish of various species. The sewerage undertaker failed to notify the Environment Agency – its site manager thought it was minor. The company apologised; it offered to meet local angling clubs and the Wandle Trust to discuss restocking and long-term support for the Trust's work.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The regulator fined the provider £125,000 and legal costs.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2009 it was the greatest penalty for a one-day unlawful discharge into controlled waters.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2010 a High Court judge found the fine was under the statutory rules governing pollution penalties "manifestly" excessive, reducing it to £50,000, noting Thames Water had donated £500,000 to clean up the river.<ref>Thames Water fine for toxic spill in River Wandle cut BBC News, 15 February 2010</ref>
On 18 February 2025, an estimated 4,000 Litres of diesel was released into the river, polluting it from Beddington to Wandsworth. The source was reportedly a storage tank at a bus depot in Thornton Heath, Croydon.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Makeup
The predominant geology of the south part is chalk interspersed with flint and narrow alluvial gravel beds in the south. London clay overlaid with patches of gravel topped by deeper humus forms the north; the top soil, tempered by the chalk beneath is less acidic where still seasonally turned in the south.
The river has since the 18th century been largely terraformed with tributary artificial channels (becoming surface water drains) and runoff ditches. It has its relatively few underground (culverted) stretches; these are in Croydon.
Water quality
The Environment Agency measures 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.<ref>Template:Cite web File:Open Government Licence logo.svg Text was copied from this source, which is available under an Open Government Licence v3.0. © Crown copyright.</ref>
| Section | Ecological Status |
Chemical Status |
Overall Status |
Length | Catchment | Channel |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Template:Waterqual title | Template:Waterqual bad | Template:Waterqual fail | Template:Waterqual bad | Template:Convert | Template:Convert | heavily modified |
| Template:Waterqual title | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Waterqual fail | Template:Waterqual mod | Template:Convert | Template:Convert | heavily modified |
Namesakes
- Current
- The Wandle River in South Island, New Zealand.
- The SS Wandle, four successive steamships. Three were built for the local Wandsworth, Wimbledon and Epsom District Gas Company.
- Former
In the 1980s Wandle was designated as one of the London bus districts. Its logo was a water wheel above the London Transport roundel.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Landmarks
- Current
- A signposted link to the Thames Path exists in the north including its riverside at Wandsworth Park
- Bridges, one with an information plaque, cross the river at Wandsworth High Street and its central park, dotted with high rise housing.
- Plough Lane football stadium since 2020
- Former
- Plough Lane football stadium to 1998
- Wimbledon Stadium – greyhound racing track to 2017
- Site of the Ram Brewery – to 2006
See also
Further reading
- "River Wandle Companion and Wandle Trail Guide" by Bob Steel, with Derek Coleman. Culverhouse Books 2012, 248pp fully illustrated. Paperback and hardback. Template:ISBN and Template:ISBN . See http://www.wandlebook.co.uk
- The Wandle Group edited by Doug Cluett and John Phillips The Wandle Guide Sutton Leisure Services 1997 Template:ISBN
Notes and references
External links
- The Wandle Trust
- Wandle News
- Template:Usurped
- River Wandle on UK Rivers Guidebook
- The Wandle Piscators fishing club
- Nature Conservation Plan for the Lower Wandle Local Nature Reserve, Merton Council, 2001
Template:River item boxTemplate:Coord Template:LNRs in Greater London
- Pages with broken file links
- Rivers of London
- Rivers of Surrey
- Geography of the London Borough of Croydon
- Geography of the London Borough of Sutton
- Geography of the London Borough of Merton
- Geography of the London Borough of Wandsworth
- Common land in London
- Local nature reserves in Greater London
- Thames drainage basin
- Tributaries of the River Thames