Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox river Beverley Brook is a Template:Convert-long river in the south-western suburbs of London, England. It rises in Worcester Park and joins the River Thames to the north of the Putney Embankment at Barn Elms, having flowed through the green spaces of Wimbledon Common, Richmond Park, Barnes Common and Putney Lower Common on its course. It is followed for much of its course by the Beverley Brook Walk.<ref name=bbw>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The brook has a catchment area of Template:Convert.<ref name=WildPRO>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

EtymologyEdit

The name is derived from the former presence in the river of the European beaver (Castor fiber), a species extinct in Britain since the sixteenth century. The Middle English word for beaver was bever, the word for meadow was ley (or lei or various other spellings, still rarely used today as lea) and brook meant stream, as it does today. Beverley Brook was thus the Beaver-Meadow Stream.<ref name=bbw/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

For some Template:Convert to the south of Richmond Park, the brook is followed by the A3 trunk road from London to Portsmouth and that stretch of the road is named Beverley Way in consequence.<ref name=os>OpenStreetMap</ref>

CourseEdit

From source to Wimbledon CommonEdit

Beverley Brook rises at the top of a hill in a shady area at Cuddington Recreation Ground in Worcester Park then flows north in an approximately Template:Convert long culvert under several residential streets and the A2043 road, emerging into an open culvert across the 4 lane interchange from The Brook pub. From here the brook flows for about Template:Convert alongside Green Lane and past Green Lane Primary School to a bridge under the Raynes Park to Epsom railway line. North of the railway, it flows about Template:Convert through the suburb of Motspur Park and passes under the A3 for the first time, before reaching Beverley Park, where the Pyl Brook joins from the east.<ref name=inwood>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=os/>

From the mouth of the Pyl Brook, the strengthened Beverley Brook flows north for just under Template:Convert, passing under the London to Southampton railway line and across Malden Golf Club before passing under the A3 for a second time. From the north side of the A3, the Beverley Brook Walk follows, at times more closely than others, the brook to its mouth. From the A3, the brook passes through a residential area for about Template:Convert before passing under Coombe Lane and entering Wimbledon Common at its extreme south-western corner.<ref name=bbw/><ref name=os/>

Wimbledon Common and Richmond ParkEdit

After entering Wimbledon Common, the brook passes along the western edge of the common for some Template:Convert before passing under the A3 for a third time. Along this stretch the lightly managed woodland of the common rises to the east of the brook, with the A3 some distance to the west. Except for the playing fields, the whole of the common, including Beverley Brook, is both a Site of Special Scientific Interest and a Special Area of Conservation. Towards the south (upstream) end of the common, Fishpond Wood and Beverley Meads nature reserve lies a few metres east of the stream.<ref name=bbw/><ref name=os/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

After passing under the A3, the brook then flows northeast for Template:Convert through Richmond Park, the largest of London's Royal Parks. The park is a Site of Special Scientific Interest and a National Nature Reserve and was first enclosed by Charles I in 1637. It contains many ancient oak trees that pre-date its enclosure, as well as herds of red deer and fallow deer. Within the park the Beverley Brook creates a water feature used by the deer, smaller animals, water grasses and some water lilies. Along this stretch the brook is followed by the Tamsin Trail as well as the Beverley Brook Walk.<ref name=bbw/><ref name=os/>

Richmond Park to the ThamesEdit

File:Beverley Brook between Barnes Green and Barnes Common (01).jpg
The Beverly Brook as it passes between Barnes Green and Barnes Common
File:Beverley Brook from Thames towpath.jpg
Beverley Brook from Thames towpath, just before it discharges into the River Thames

After leaving Richmond Park, the brook flows for some Template:Convert, passing alongside Palewell Common and the Bank of England Sports Ground, before passing under the A205 Upper Richmond Road and reaching Priest's Bridge. At Priest's Bridge, a weir and culvert exist to take flood water directly to the Thames.<ref name=bbw/><ref name=os/>

The brook then continues some Template:Convert in a north-easterly direction, passing under both the Waterloo to Reading and Hounslow Loop railway lines in close succession, before reaching Barnes Green and Barnes Common. Here the brook flows under a footbridge linking the two open spaces. Despite the Thames being under Template:Convert to the north-west along this stretch, the brook here turns east and heads across the base of the peninsular formed by the larger river's meander around Barnes.<ref name=bbw/><ref name=os/>

The brook then flows for another Template:Convert through the south of Barnes, passing between the Barnes playing fields to the north and Putney Lower Common to the south, and joins the River Thames between Barn Elms and Leader's Gardens.<ref name=bbw/><ref name=os/><ref name=inwood/>

Beverley Brook as a boundaryEdit

The Beverley Brook lies entirely within Greater London but flows through a number of London boroughs. It rises in the borough of Sutton, which it remains in until Green Lane Primary School, where it briefly becomes the boundary between the boroughs of Sutton and Kingston upon Thames, before becoming the boundary between the boroughs of Kingston upon Thames and Merton. This historic South West London boundary continues for the next Template:Convert until just before the brook flows into Richmond Park, where the brook briefly becomes the boundary between the boroughs of Kingston on Thames and Wandsworth.<ref name=osemap>Template:Cite map</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Once in Richmond Park, the river passes into the borough of Richmond. After leaving Richmond Park, the brook briefly forms the boundary between the boroughs of Richmond and Wandsworth, before flowing back into the borough of Richmond near Priest's Bridge. It remains in that borough until it reaches Putney Lower Common, where it again forms the boundary between the boroughs of Richmond and Wandsworth as far as the Thames.<ref name=osemap/>

TributariesEdit

Beverley Brook's longest tributary is Pyl Brook, Template:Convert long,<ref name="WildPRO"/> which is a Local Nature Reserve.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It flows from Sutton through Lower Morden to join it at Beverley Park in New Malden.<ref name=inwood/> Both brooks are on the Environment Agency's watchlist of rivers susceptible to flooding.Template:Cite needed

Environmental improvementsEdit

For much of the twentieth century, Beverley Brook was joined by poorly treated sewage from a sewage works in Green Lane, Worcester Park. Since some pipe redirection enabling the removing of the works and the introduction of improved treatment methods in 1998, the range of wildlife species in the river has steadily increased.Template:Cite needed

At Wimbledon Common, Beverley Brook has banks reinforced with wooden "toe-boarding", which prevents use by water voles,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and there is scope for further such improvements.Template:Clarification needed

In fictionEdit

Beverley Brook is a regular character in Ben Aaronovitch's series of urban fantasy police procedural novels Rivers of London. She describes her kind thus: "'Orisa', said Beverley. 'We're Orisa. Not spirits, not local geniuses – Orisa'."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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