The
River Teme (Welsh
Afon Tefeidiad) rises in Mid Wales
, south of Newtown
in Powys
, and flows
through Ludlow
in Shropshire
, then to the north of Tenbury Wells
on the Shropshire/Worcestershire border there, on its way to
join the River Severn south of Worcester
. The whole of the River Teme was designated
as an
SSSI, by
English Nature, in 1996.
The river is crossed by a number of historic bridges including one
at Tenbury Wells that was rebuilt by
Thomas Telford following flood damage in
1795.
Etymology
The name Teme is similar to many other river names in England,
testament to the name's ancient origin.
Similar names include
River
Team
, River Thames, River Thame
and River Tame.
Scholars now believe these names and the older names Temese and
Tamesis derive from
Brythonic
Tamesa, possibly meaning 'the dark one'.
Geography

Source of the River Teme
The river
source is in Mid Wales on Cilfaesty
Hill in the Kerry
Hills
near Dolfor, south of Newtown. Two other
rivers - the
River Ithon and the
River Mule - rise within 500 metres.
It flows
across the border into England
close to
Knighton
. From there to its confluence with the River
Severn, at Worcester (about 60 miles/100 km downstream) it
flows through the counties of Herefordshire
, Shropshire and Worcestershire. The upper
reaches of the river are usually steep with fast flowing but
relatively shallow waters. There are some
water mills, and a number of
weirs, including several at the historic town of
Ludlow. Below Tenbury Wells the river is more tranquil but still
shallow, with strong cross currents. Water levels in the Teme are
highly variable, something which has been made worse in recent
years through increases in water extraction for agriculture use.

River Teme at Ludlow
During its journey the river flows over Upper Ludlow
shales and
Devonian sandstones.
The
River
Clun
flows into the Teme at Leintwardine
in north Herefordshire. The River Corve flows into the Teme just outside
Ludlow and the Ledwyche Brook flows
into the Teme at Burford
on the Herefordshire/Shropshire border.
The Kyre
Brook flows into the Teme at Tenbury Wells, and the River
Rea
flows into the Teme at Newnham Bridge
, Worcestershire, a few miles south of Cleobury
Mortimer
, a small Shropshire town.
The Teme falls nearly 500 metres during its length from a height of
506 metres above
sea level at its source
to just 14 metres above sea-level at its confluence with the River
Severn.
The Teme has in recent times often bursts its banks. June and July
2007 saw serious floods in a number of areas, including
Leintwardine, Tenbury Wells and Ludlow although the watercourse
that flooded the latter location was a tributary, the River
Corve.
It is the 14th
longest river in the United
Kingdom; top-10 for England and Wales.
.jpg/200px-Brehms_Het_Leven_der_Dieren_Zoogdieren_Orde_4_Vischotter_(Lutra_vulgaris).jpg)
otters
Nature
The Teme is a clean river and after many years of decline the
population of
otters is recovering,
but obstructions keep
salmon numbers at a low
level.
Recreational use
Fishing
Fishing is popular on many stretches of the
Teme, with its
barbel fishing being
particularly noted.
Leisure boating
Leisure
boats have long been used on the river and rowing boats can still
be hired at The Linney Park, Ludlow
. An
annual
coracle regatta is held on the Teme.
In June
2005 it was held at Leintwardine
. In June 2006, the 12th regatta was held at
Mortimer's Cross.
A
Countryside Agency report in
September 2003 entitled
Improving access for canoeing on inland
waterways: A study of the feasibility of access agreements
stated:
oadwas area is available at
http://www.ukriversguidebook.co.uk/midengland/temetenbury.htmInformation
on canoeing on the Teme in the Ludlow area is available at
http://www.ukriversguidebook.co.uk/midengland/teme.htm -
information on the Tenbury Wells to Br
Leisure boating in the past
Historical evidence of leisure boating includes:
- Old maps show a few boat houses along the river in
Worcestershire.
- Billings Directory 1855 mentions Boat House, evidently
a farmhouse, at Eastham (five miles downstream of Tenbury Wells).
Boat House Farm still exists at Eastham
- The boathouse at Newnham Bridge (three miles downstream of
Tenbury Wells) was large enough, and substantial enough, to be
converted into a house.
- At Tenbury Wells in 1886, people were rescued during floods
using a boat that had broken loose from its mooring so there must
have been at least one boat on the river at that time.
- Down Along Temeside includes an account of travelling
by boat from Ludford Mill to Orleton (a couple of miles upstream of
Stanford Bridge) in the early 20th century.
- Tenbury Wells and the Teme Valley includes a
photograph taken at Little Hereford described as 'Boating on the
Teme in 1905'. The author mentions two gentlemen from Oxford who in
1894 travelled up the Teme from Worcester to Ludlow in 17.5 hours,
and returned (downstream) in 9 hours.
Commercial navigation
Navigation to Powick Mill
There is
no doubt that the final from Powick
bridge and
Mill to its confluence with the river
Severn that the Teme is (or was) navigable. There was a
coal wharf near Powick Bridge,
belonging with the mill, whose owner had the right to use a towing
path to the river Severn. In the 18th century,
pig iron was brought up the river to Powick
forge (as the mill then was). In 1810
it was reported that "The Teme is also navigable for barges from
its junction with the Severn near Powick upwards to a small
distance above Powick Bridge. The river having considerable
declivity its navigation is soon interrupted by shoals and
shallows"
Above Powick Mill
Except for its lowest reaches, there is no substantial evidence
that the river was navigable by barges.
Claims have been made
that traffic on the Teme began in Roman
times and 'continued in Norman times, when
it is known the stone for the mill at Ashford Carbonel
was brought from Caen
in the 14th
century, using water transport all the way'. However no
unequivocal documentary or archaeological evidence has been adduced
in support of this.
William Sandys who
between 1636 and 1639 made the Avon) navigable from Tewkesbury
to Stratford-upon-Avon
was at the same time also authorised to improve the
Teme between Worcester and Ludlow. There is however no
evidence that he did so, perhaps due to his having used up all his
resources on the Avon. Having failed to recover the Avon after the
Restoration, Sir William Sandys and his son undertook work on the
Wye and
Lugg.
Ferries formerly existed at Rochford, at Cotheridge and at Clifton
on Teme.
Some very local navigation is indicated by a
newspaper advertisement in 1750 that the miller at Stanford-on-Teme
had a boat for sale, capable of carrying 10
tons. However, with no locks available, this vessel would
have been unable to pass mill weirs.
Pictures,
allegedly of Ludlow
or its
castle with a river and boats (thought to date from c.1830), such
as A painting allegedly of Dinham Bridge, Ludlow.
are probably at least partly derived from the artist's
imagination.
This subject was debated at length in 2006 in the
Journal of
Railway and Canal Historical Society.
Cultural influences
A.E. Housman wrote the following verse, which makes
reference to the River Teme:
Settlements on the River Teme
(source)
Felindre
Beguildy
Llanfair Waterdine
Knucklas
KnightonBucknellBrampton Bryan
Leintwardine
BurringtonBromfieldLudlow
Ashford Bowdler
Ashford Carbonel
Little Hereford
Tenbury Wells
Rochford
Newnham Bridge
EasthamStockton-on-Teme
Stanford
BridgeShelsley Walsh
Shelsley Beauchamp
Clifton-upon-Teme
Martley
Knightwick
Broadwas
Lulsley
BrockaminLeigh
Bransford
Powick
Worcester
(Confluence with River Severn)
References
- Teme Valley Times, Spring 2007, p2
- Ekwall, E., English Place-Names (4th ed), OUP, 1960,
ISBN 0-19-869103-3, pp 459, 463, 464
- Wendy Thompson Improving access for canoeing on inland
waterways: A study of the feasibility of access agreements
for the Countryside Agency September 2003
- The Teme Valley a blog on the Herfordshre
& Worcestershire Earth Heritage Trust website
- Ordnance Survey: Worcester & Droitwich
Spa
- You Tube - video of flooding
- Ludlow Advertiser
- S. M. Macdonald, C. F. Mason, I. S. Coghill The Otter and Its Conservation in the River Teme
Catchment The Journal of Applied Ecology, Vol. 15, No. 2 (Aug.,
1978), pp. 373-384 doi:10.2307/2402597
- Local Environment Focus: Focus Local
environmental issues in Bishop's Castle, Church Stretton, Craven
Arms, Knighton, Ludlow, Cleobury Mortimer, Tenbury Wells,
Whitbourne, Colwall and Worcester | issue 2. This citation needs a
page number
- Tales From The Teme Bloor's Barbel Bulletin -
December 2001
- Tenbury Wells and the Teme Valley, 2007, p2
- Ludlow "England's finest market town" - Country
Life
- Leintwardine Coracle Society Annual
Regatta
- Ordnance Survey, six-inch maps (1st edition), various:
accessible at www.old-maps.co.uk.
- Billings Directory lists "Eckley Vincent, farmer, Boat House"
at Eastham in 1855.
- Internal framing of barn at Boat House farm,
Eastham, Worcestershire
- Northern Area Development Control Committee
Minutes of the Malvern Hills District Council, 6 October 2004.
- F. Wayland Joyce, Tenbury - Some Record of its History
(1931)
- Richard Holding, Down Along Temeside (1963).
- Howard Miller, Tenbury Wells and the Teme Valley
(1996).
- H. Lloyd, The Quaker Lloyds in the Industrial
Revolution (1975), 148-50.
- William Pitt, A General View of the Agriculture of the
County of Worcester With Observations on the Means of Its
Improvement (Board of Agriculture, Great Britain)[1]
- Colin Green. Severn Traders, Black Dwarf Publications
(1999), ISBN 0-9533028-2-2. p.33.
- I. Cohen 'The non-tidal Wye and its navigation'
Transactions of the Woolhope Naturalists Field Club 34
(1955), 83-101; P. King, 'The River Teme and Other Midlands
Navigations' Journal of Railway and Canal Historical
Society 35(5) (July 2006), 350-1.
- A History of the County of Worcester: volume 4: 'Parishes:
Rochford' (1924), pp. 317-19. Date accessed: 29 May 2007.
- A History of the County of Worcester: volume 4: 'Parishes:
Cotheridge' (1924), pp. 255-60. Date accessed: 29 May
2007.
- A History of the County of Worcester: volume 4: 'Parishes:
Clifton upon Teme' (1924), pp. 246-55. Date accessed: 29 May
2007.
- C. Hadfield, Canals of the West Midlands (1969),
58-9.
- Pat Jones 'Navigation on the river Teme' Journal of Railway
and Canal Historical Society 35(4) (March 2006), 293-300.
- Peter King 'The River Teme and Other Midland Navigations'
Journal of Railway and Canal Historical Society 35(5)
(July 2006), 348-55. Correspondence about this also appears in the
two subsequent issues.
External links
Further reading
- Bradford, John (2008) The River Teme - A journey following
the river from Worcester to its source, Hunt End Books ISBN
978-0-9549813-5-8
- Charteris, Bob (2006) The Teme Valley Way - Sauce to
Source, Exposure Publishing ISBN 978-1-84685-098-1
See also