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Haarlem Mill

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15-550: Haarlem Mill , on the River Ecclesbourne in Wirksworth , Derbyshire , was an early cotton mill . Built by Richard Arkwright , it was the first cotton mill in the world to use a steam engine , though this was used to supplement the supply of water to the mill's water wheel , not to drive the machinery directly. The site of the mill, including an older corn mill , was leased by Arkwright in 1777. Construction of

30-569: Is immediately to its west and the hamlet of Ireton Wood a mile to its south. The village lies on the B5023 road that connects Wirksworth and Duffield . However the main bus service, route 6.1 operated by Trentbarton , is between Matlock and Belper. Idridgehay railway station (re-opened in 2008) is on the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway , a community-owned and locally managed heritage railway venture having reopened and operate

45-551: The Ecclesbourne ends it is about 10 metres wide. The area around the confluence is popular with visitors and a good area for angling. After the river has met the Derwent, the railway line joins the main line to Derby . The River Ecclesbourne is a popular fishing river, known for producing good-quality fish, especially in its lower reaches. It supports a population of brown trout . Species of conservation interest found along

60-400: The Ecclesbourne include white-clawed crayfish , kingfisher , otter and water vole . Threats include pollution, weirs that restrict fish migration, and invasive Himalayan balsam . The river is one of 25 river catchments chosen by Defra for a Pilot Catchment Project, with the aim of encouraging co-operation between various agencies and interested parties to improve water quality, as part of

75-653: The Hannages further down the railway tracks, where it powered the mills at the bottom of Wirksworth. The housing estate of Spring Close has recently been built over the area of the Meerbrook Sough; the Engine House still remains in its original place, but has recently been renovated into a house. After leaving Wirksworth the River Ecclesbourne is now a fairly large river. It flows slowly through

90-607: The UK's commitment to the EU Water Framework Directive . Idridgehay Idridgehay is a village in the civil parish of Idridgehay and Alton , in the Amber Valley district of Derbyshire , England. The population of this parish at the 2011 census was 275. Idridgehay lies south of the town Wirksworth west of the town of Belper in the valley of the River Ecclesbourne . Idridgehay Green

105-684: The fields below the National Stone Centre, Ravenstor. The main source is about 100 metres down the railway tracks from Ravenstor railway station , where the Meerbrook Sough Mine area lies. The Meerbrook Sough drained water from the nearby quarries and led them in a tunnel to Whatstandwell where the excess water from the Sough joined the River Derwent towards Ambergate . The source of the Ecclesbourne contributed to

120-482: The fields, collecting smaller streams as it goes (among them the Alton Brook and Holm Brook), to its next port of call, the village of Idridgehay . Further down, the Ecclesbourne flows through Turnditch . After leaving Turnditch the Ecclesbourne increases in volume and speed. In some areas the river is piped underground to reduce the risk of flooding, but this rarely happens any more. A few miles beyond Turnditch

135-481: The mill building in brick and stone was completed by June 1780, and the reported death of a young man attempting to climb on the water wheel suggests that it was operational at this date. After initially investigating the purchase of a steam engine from the Birmingham firm of Boulton and Watt , Arkwright installed a reciprocating steam engine , probably manufactured by Francis Thompson of Ashover , to supplement

150-414: The occasionally inadequate water supply. This was a medium-sized engine with a 26-foot-long (7.9 m) beam, an 18-foot-diameter (5.5 m) flywheel a 30-inch-diameter (760 mm) cylinder and a stroke of 5 feet (1.5 m). Similar to engines commonly used at the time to pump out nearby mines , it operated 24 hours a day, powering two pumps. By 1789 the mill was employing almost 200 people, but it

165-432: The rectangular Sough Reservoir, which transported water up to the quarries around Wirksworth. This reservoir was located at the bottom left area of Fanny Shaws Park. The Meerbrook Sough Engine House was built in the middle of the Sough area and powered the waterworks of the Sough and made materials for the quarries. Below Fanny Shaws Park and skatepark the Ecclesbourne leaves the Sough area and goes underground and reappears in

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180-416: The river enters the village of Duffield . The Ecclesbourne School , the village's secondary school, is built on its banks in the village centre. The Ecclesbourne then flows out of Duffield and leaves the railway after flowing underneath its tracks. It reappears and flows through a few more fields before joining the River Derwent , which has just come down from Milford and Belper . At the confluence where

195-485: The upper part of the town of Wirksworth , flows for 9 miles to Duffield , and then enters the River Derwent just outside the village. The River Ecclesbourne's source is in the town of Wirksworth. This is also where the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway , which is named after the river and follows it for its entire length, begins. The start of the river is located between Steeple Grange and Sough Lane. The river's two main headwaters come from Steeple Grange, below Bolehill, and

210-416: The water powering the Meerbrook Sough. The Ecclesbourne flows mostly underground through the area of the Sough, but momentarily appears above ground in several places, near Ecclesbourne Cottages at the bottom of Sough Lane, in a shallow ditch next to the railway (now piped) and also near the bottom of Fanny Shaws Park, again near the main railway track. Part of the main headwaters of the Ecclesbourne flowed past

225-500: Was sold by Arkwright three years later. The base of the original building survives, but the upper three floors have since been rebuilt. The empty grade II* listed building was listed on Historic England 's Heritage at Risk Register but in 2018 was noted that a major phase of repair and conversion work had been completed. River Ecclesbourne The River Ecclesbourne is a small river in Derbyshire, England , which starts in

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