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The lock connects to Lock Island where there is a river police station and Hamhaugh Island, a canoeing club is based here and a ferry service runs from below the lock to the end of Thames Street, ], where there are two rowing clubs and a canoeing club. Overlooking the lock and the islands is the Thames Court pub/restaurant. The lock connects to Lock Island where there is a river police station and Hamhaugh Island, a canoeing club is based here and a ferry service runs from below the lock to the end of Thames Street, ], where there are two rowing clubs and a canoeing club. Overlooking the lock and the islands is the Thames Court pub/restaurant.


The lock is just upstream of ], the former home to the ] operas producer, ]. ], given to ] following the ], is located above the lock. The lock is just upstream of ], the former home to the ] operas producer, ].
==History==


A weir is recorded here in the 1086 ]. In ], the ] built a wooden ] here. A stone lock was built in ], next to the existing wooden one which was then filled in and removed.
=History=


==Access to the lock==

The lock is on the Middlesex bank, and can be reached from Shepperton down Ferry Road or from Chertsey via Dockett Eddy Lane leading to Towpath. There is usually ample parking space. From the Weybridge side it can only be reached by ferry.

==Literature and the Media==

The lock in ] '']'' at Plashwater Mill is based on Shepperton lock.

==Reach above the lock==

], given to ] following the ], is immediately above the lock. The Middlesex bank is quite open with several larger houses along it until Dunsey Meadows a site of scientific interest. The Surrey side is built up until Chertsey Meads, the site of the Anglo-Saxon Abbey sacked by the ]s, and the edge of ] itself. The ''']''' follows the Middlesex bank all the way to Chertsey Lock.


A weir is recorded here in the 1086 ]. In ], the ] built a wooden ] here in ]. A stone lock was built in ], next to the existing wooden one which was then filled in and removed.


== References == == References ==

Revision as of 21:44, 14 August 2007

Shepperton lock
(2005)

Shepperton Lock is a lock on the River Thames, England. It is located on the border between Surrey and Middlesex, near where the River Wey and the River Bourne meet the Thames.

The lock connects to Lock Island where there is a river police station and Hamhaugh Island, a canoeing club is based here and a ferry service runs from below the lock to the end of Thames Street, Weybridge, where there are two rowing clubs and a canoeing club. Overlooking the lock and the islands is the Thames Court pub/restaurant.

The lock is just upstream of D'Oyly Carte Island, the former home to the Gilbert and Sullivan operas producer, Richard D'Oyly Carte.

History

A weir is recorded here in the 1086 Domesday Book. In 1813, the City of London Corporation built a wooden pound lock here. A stone lock was built in 1899, next to the existing wooden one which was then filled in and removed.


Access to the lock

The lock is on the Middlesex bank, and can be reached from Shepperton down Ferry Road or from Chertsey via Dockett Eddy Lane leading to Towpath. There is usually ample parking space. From the Weybridge side it can only be reached by ferry.

Literature and the Media

The lock in Charles Dickens Our Mutual Friend at Plashwater Mill is based on Shepperton lock.

Reach above the lock

Pharaoh's Island, given to Admiral Nelson following the Battle of the Nile, is immediately above the lock. The Middlesex bank is quite open with several larger houses along it until Dunsey Meadows a site of scientific interest. The Surrey side is built up until Chertsey Meads, the site of the Anglo-Saxon Abbey sacked by the Vikings, and the edge of Chertsey itself. The Thames Path follows the Middlesex bank all the way to Chertsey Lock.


References


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Chertsey Lock
2.06miles
Shepperton Lock
Grid reference: ?
Sunbury Lock
2.95 miles
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