Wellesbourne, Brighton

The Wellesbourne flowed into the English Channel at Pool Valley (pictured in 2010). It was culverted at this point in 1793.
A pond at this location outside All Saints Church, Patcham was the main source of the Wellesbourne.

The Wellesbourne (also spelt Wellsbourne, and occasionally Whalesbone)[1] is a lost river[2] which originally flowed into the English Channel in Brighton, part of the English seaside city of Brighton and Hove. It flowed southwards from Patcham, a village on the edge of the city, down the steep-sided valley along which the A23 London Road and the railway line to London now run. It was always an intermittent stream (a winterbourne) which flowed mostly in the winter and after periods of significant rainfall, and after a waterworks was built in 1889 it permanently stopped flowing.

  1. ^ Gilbert 1975, p. 35.
  2. ^ Carder 1990, §201.

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