Yarrow Reservoir

Yarrow Reservoir

Overlooking Rivington Pike
Location Lancashire
Coordinates 53°38′10″N 2°34′3″W / 53.63611°N 2.56750°W / 53.63611; -2.56750Coordinates: 53°38′10″N 2°34′3″W / 53.63611°N 2.56750°W / 53.63611; -2.56750
Type Reservoir
Primary inflows River Yarrow
Primary outflows River Yarrow
Basin countries United Kingdom
Settlements Chorley, Lancashire

Yarrow Reservoir - named after the River Yarrow - is a reservoir in the Rivington chain in Anglezarke, Lancashire, England, and has a storage capacity second to Anglezarke Reservoir. Construction of the reservoir, designed by Liverpool Borough Engineer Thomas Duncan, began in 1867.[1]

In 2002, several tons of fish were transported to this reservoir when the Upper Rivington reservoir was completely drained for essential maintenance work.[2]

The construction of Yarrow Reservoir was described in Wm. Fergusson Irvine's book "A Short History Of The Township Of Rivington" :

On the banks of the reservoir is a 'face in the wall' - an effigy carved into a large stone on top of the dry stone wall, which is said to depict an inspector who worked for the Liverpool Corporation and made workers' lives a misery.

The construction of the reservoir meant that a small hamlet called Alance was flooded, centred on the rebuilt Alance Bridge, and a large dwelling was demolished - Turner's Farm - which lives on in current maps only in name as Turner's Embankment.[3]

References

  1. Rivington Reservoirs (main scheme), Engineering Timelines, retrieved 2010-11-21
  2. Book : Smith, MD. About Anglezarke, Wyre Publishing, 2002. (ISBN 0-9526187-6-1) (page 42)
  3. What Lies Beneath, retrieved 2014-03-23
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