Frome | |
Froom | |
River | |
The river by Snuff Mills
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Name origin: British Celtic, meaning 'fair, fine, brisk’ | |
Nickname: Danny | |
Country | England |
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Region | West Country |
District | South Gloucestershire, Bristol |
Tributaries | |
- left | Nibley brook, Folly brook, Fishponds brook, Coombe brook |
- right | Ladden brook, Bradley brook, Horfield brook |
City | Bristol |
Source | Dodington Park |
- location | Chipping Sodbury, South Gloucestershire, England |
- elevation | 515 ft (157 m) |
- coordinates | 51°30′39″N 2°20′39″W / 51.510726°N 2.344268°W |
Mouth | Floating Harbour, Bristol |
- location | Bristol, England |
- elevation | 33 ft (10 m) |
- coordinates | 51°26′56″N 2°35′54″W / 51.4489°N 2.5983°WCoordinates: 51°26′56″N 2°35′54″W / 51.4489°N 2.5983°W |
Length | 20 mi (32 km), south west |
Discharge | |
- average | 60 cu ft/s (2 m3/s) |
- max | 2,473 cu ft/s (70 m3/s) |
- min | 2.3 cu ft/s (0 m3/s) |
River system | Bristol Avon |
Diagrammatic map of the River Frome and tributaries in Bristol and South Gloucestershire
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The River Frome /ˈfruːm/, historically the River Froom, is a river in South Gloucestershire and Bristol, England. It is approximately 20 miles (32 km) long, rises in Dodington Park, South Gloucestershire, and flows in a south westerly direction through Bristol, joining the former course of the river Avon in Bristol's Floating Harbour. The mean flow at Frenchay is 60 cubic feet per second (1.7 m3/s) The name Frome is shared with several other rivers in South West England and means 'fair, fine, brisk’. The river is familiarly known in east Bristol as the Danny.
Originally the Frome joined the Avon downstream of Bristol Bridge, and formed part of the city defences, but in the thirteenth century the river was diverted through marshland belonging to St Augustine's Abbey (now Bristol Cathedral), as part of major port improvement works. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the lower reaches of the river were culverted and the river now flows under The Centre into St Augustine's Reach.
As with many urban rivers, the Frome has suffered from pollution, but several stretches run through parks and reserves that sustain a range of wildlife. The power of the water was harnessed in many watermills and the area around the river mouth was developed as shipyards by the eighteenth century. As the city of Bristol developed in the nineteenth and twentieth century, flooding became a major problem, remedied by the construction of storm drains and diversions.