River Orwell
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The River Orwell is a river in the county of Suffolk, England. Its source river, above the tidal limit, is known as the River Gipping. It broadens into an estuary at Ipswich and flows into the North Sea at Felixstowe after joining with the River Stour at Shotley. In the name Orwell, Or- comes from an ancient river name which is probably pre-Celtic, but -well is probably Anglo-Saxon. [1]
The writer Eric Blair chose the pen name under which he would later become famous, George Orwell, because of his love for the river[2].
The Orwell is a popular river for sailing. Interest originally centred on the hamlet of Pin Mill (featured in two children's novels by Arthur Ransome: We Didn't Mean to go to Sea and Secret Water) and its "hard". Since the 1970s marinas have opened at Levington (Suffolk Yacht Harbour, pictured), Woolverstone, Fox's just outside Ipswich, and two marinas in the old Ipswich Wet Dock.
[edit] References
- ^ Oxford Dictionary of British Place Names (2003)
- ^ George Orwell Biography. Retrieved on 9 July 2006.