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River Colne, West Yorkshire

River Colne
River Colne - geograph.org.uk - 324944.jpg
The River Colne at the bottom of Chapel Hill just out of the Huddersfield Town Centre,the mill on the left is Folly Hall Mill built in 1822 by Joseph Kaye
Country England
Basin features
Main source Confluence of Redbrook Clough and Haigh Clough
768 feet (234 m)
53°36′19″N 1°57′28″W / 53.60528°N 1.95778°W / 53.60528; -1.95778
River mouth River Calder near Bradley
53°40′49″N 1°43′52″W / 53.68028°N 1.73111°W / 53.68028; -1.73111Coordinates: 53°40′49″N 1°43′52″W / 53.68028°N 1.73111°W / 53.68028; -1.73111
Basin size 95 square miles (245 km2)
Physical characteristics
Length 12 miles (19 km)

The River Colne /ˈkln/ is a river in West Yorkshire formed by a confluence at the foot of the Pennines close to the village of Marsden.

Numerous brooks formed by rainwater high (between 300 and 480 metres AMSL) in the Pennines of West Yorkshire, flow down the hillsides through the small valleys (known locally as Cloughs) to feed two Yorkshire Water reservoirs; March Haigh Reservoir and Redbrook Reservoir. Thereafter, Haigh Brook and Redbrook continue the journey down the slopes, again being fed by numerous tributaries, until the two streams converge at a scenic spot called Close Gate Bridge. This confluence forms the River Colne.

The river flows from west to east through the Colne Valley passing through the villages of Marsden, Slaithwaite and Milnsbridge to Huddersfield and then on to Cooper Bridge where it feeds the larger River Calder.

Its tributaries include Wessenden Brook, Bradley Brook, Crimble Brook, Mag Brook, Fenay Brook, New Mill Dike and the River Holme.

The Colne Valley was famous for the production of woollen and cotton cloth regarded as some of the finest quality produced anywhere and all due to the soft acidic waters of the River Colne and its brooks running down through the side valleys (cloughs) from the peat moors above.

The Huddersfield Narrow Canal follows the course of the river through the valley, as does the Huddersfield Line railway, and the A62 road. The river itself is too shallow and rocky to be navigable by any watercraft.


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