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Hockley Brook

Hockley Brook
Birmingham - Spaghetti Junction - Hockley Brook and Canal.jpg
The brook (right) near its end, with the Birmingham & Fazeley canal alongside.
Etymology Aston
Country England
Region Birmingham
Basin features
River mouth River Tame
Progression Trent - Humber - North Sea
Tributaries

Hockley Brook is a brook, or stream, in north Birmingham, England. It rises just outside the city, in Smethwick, and runs though Black Patch Park and then through the city's Soho, Hockley and Aston districts, to its confluence with the River Tame, beneath Gravelly Hill Interchange. From there, its waters flow, via the Trent, to the Humber Estuary and the North Sea. At the eastern end, it is known to locals as Aston Brook, giving its name to Aston Brook Street.

It previously marked the boundary between Birmingham (then Warwickshire) and Smethwick (then Staffordshire); between the then Staffordshire country villages of Handsworth and Smethwick; and between Birmingham and Aston, before the city absorbed the latter district.

The brook once fed several mills and provided water for Matthew Boulton's Soho Manufactory.

In post-World War II years, it was culverted (buried in pipes) for much of its length.

Local historian and artist Ron "Smudge" Smith titled his 1998 autobiography A Paddle in Hockley Brook.


Coordinates: 52°29′46″N 1°55′10″W / 52.496046°N 1.919417°W / 52.496046; -1.919417 (Hockley Brook - nominal location)


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