River Hyndburn

Hyndburn
River Hyndburn at Church Bridge.
Location
CountryEngland
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationGoodshaw Hill, Rossendale (as Woodnook Water)
Mouth 
 • location
Hyndburn Brook, south of Dunkenhalgh.

The River Hyndburn is a minor river in Lancashire, England. Beginning as Woodnook Water on the slopes of Goodshaw Hill, it passes through Stone Fold, Rising Bridge and Baxenden where it is augmented by streams from Thirteen Stone Hill and continues to the Woodnook area of Accrington.[1] Near St James Church, it collects Broad Oak Water (recorded in 1800 as the River Grange), becoming the River Hyndburn.[2][3] It heads northward through the town centre, collecting Pleck Brook and turning west, flowing under the East Lancashire railway line viaduct and continuing to Church.

Here it turns northward again, meeting Hyndburn Brook just before it passes under the M65 motorway bridge to the south of Dunkenhalgh,[4][5] which continues past Clayton-le-Moors and Great Harwood, ultimately joining the River Calder. Today, much of the course of the river and parts of its tributaries run underground through culverts.[1] The Hyndburn borough of Lancashire is named after the river.

  1. ^ a b "OL21" (Map). South Pennines. 1:25,000. Explorer. Ordnance Survey. 2015. ISBN 9780319242605.
  2. ^ Lancashire and Furness (Map). 1 : 2,500. County Series. Ordnance Survey. 1892.
  3. ^ Crossley, Richard Shaw (2013), Accrington Through The 19th Century, lulu.com, p. 8, ISBN 978-1300775966
  4. ^ Lancashire (Map). 1 : 2,500. Ordnance Survey. 1911. Sheet LXIII.10.
  5. ^ "Hyndburn". Catchment Data Explorer. Environment Agency. Retrieved 5 July 2019.

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