Derwent Dams
The Upper Valley of the Derwent is a deep
valley surrounded by gritstone edges and dominated by three
great reservoirs, constructed by the Derwent Valley Water
Board primarily to provide water for Sheffield, Derby, Nottingham
and Leicester.
The upper two dams, Howden and Derwent,
were constructed between 1901 and 1916 and they were such
a large undertaking that a village called Birchinlee was constructed
in the upper valley to house the workers and a narrow-gauge
railway was built between Howden Dam and the Midland Railway
at Bamford. Traces of both these may still be seen. The dams
were opened in 1916.
In 1935 an even larger project began downstream of the two
earlier dams - the construction of Ladybower
Dam, which flooded the area around the junction of the Derwent
with the Ashop. This project, first mooted in the early 1920s,
caused considerable controversy because it involved the flooding
of two villages; Ashopton - which lay at the junction of the
Ashop and the Derwent - and Derwent, which lay upstream on
the Derwent River.
Despite protests the dam went ahead and was finished in 1943,
and opened by King George VI, though the reservoir took a
further two years to fill. At the time this was the largest
reservoir in Britain.
Now the only visible reminder of Derwent and Ashopton is
the old packhorse bridge from Derwent village, which was dismantled
and re-erected at Slippery Stones. Derwent village can still
be seen in very dry summers such as 1959, 1976 and 1995, and
the spire of the church was left standing until 1959, when
it was demolished.
Another claim to fame for the Derwent Reservoirs
is their association with the 'Dambuster' squadron of the
RAF, for they used the Derwent to practise for their famous
raid on the Ruhr dams. Since then this event has been regularly
commemorated in the Derwent valley with fly-pasts of old bombers
and aerial displays. There is a small museum on this theme
in the west tower of the Derwent Dam.
In recent years forestry has become an important factor here
and much of the sides of the Upper Derwent Valley
have been clothed in conifers. This has made a considerable
change to the look of the valley and altered the ecology.
This is a beautiful and popular area which acts as a magnet
for visitors in fine weather, so at weekends the valley is
full of walkers, cyclists, fell-runners and just plain tourists.
There is a Forestry Commission information centre and car-park
at Fairholmes, just below Derwent Dam, run
in cooperation with the Peak National Park. (Open daily Easter
- end October and winter weekends. Telephone 01433 650953).
The centre also offers bicycle hire (tel: 01433 651261), toilets
and refreshments.
|