River Beane

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Beane
River
RiverBeaneHertford.jpg
Weir on the River Beane, Hartham Common
Country United Kingdom
Source
 - location Nr. Sandon, Hertfordshire
 - elevation 90 m (295 ft)
Mouth
 - location Hertford, Hertfordshire
into River Lea
Length 17.8 km (11 mi)

The River Beane is a short river in the county of Hertfordshire, England. A tributary of the River Lea, it rises to the south-west of Sandon in the hills northeast of Stevenage and joins the Lea at Hartham Common in Hertford.

Watermills

In medieval times there were a number of watermills in the Beane valley. Sele Mill, upstream of Hertford, was mentioned in the Domesday Book.[1] Its main claim to fame is that it was temporarily converted for use as a paper mill and was, as far as is known, the earliest paper mill in England. It is not clear when paper production began there, although 1488 has been suggested,[2] but it was certainly underway in the 1490s. Paper from Sele Mill was used in publications from that decade, and the mill was visited by Henry VII. Despite this sign of royal favour, it did not stay in production for long.[3]

Abstraction

The Beane valley remains mainly rural in character. However, Hertfordshire's population increased substantially in the second half of the twentieth century, and the consequent demand for water has affected rivers such as the Beane and the Mimram. In the case of the Beane, a licence was given to abstract water near Aston for Stevenage's water supply. The river has since been adversely affected by over-exploitation of the chalk aquifer in its upper reaches. The photo shows a section south of Walkern where since the 1990s there has been only seasonal flow. The river was once big enough to power a watermill at Walkern and support watercress beds.

The lower Beane is more robust and there is regular flow through Watton-at-Stone, Stapleford and Waterford until the confluence with the River Lea. However, overall the river has performed badly in assessments by the Environment Agency of flow level.

Restoration

The management plan for the river includes the objective that there is adequate flow along the length of the river to support a ‘good status’ chalk stream ecology (as defined by Water Framework Directive).[4] Affinity Water has been told to take less water from its pumping station near Aston, even though obtaining water from a less environmentally damaging source is difficult as the River Lea's catchment area as a whole is under pressure.

One possible approach to the restoration of the upper Beane is to use recycled water from sewage treatment works. Currently sewage from the Stevenage area bypasses the river, being pumped down the Beane valley to Rye Meads near Hertford for treatment.[5]

References

  1. SELE HOUSE including front railings (1268844)
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Richard L. Hills, ‘Tate, John (c.1448–1507/8)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 accessed 24 June 2015
  4. Catchment management plan
  5. Waste Water Report, Halcrow Group

External links


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