River Ingol Explained

River Ingol
Pushpin Map:United Kingdom Norfolk
Pushpin Map Caption:Location within Norfolk
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:England
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Norfolk
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:East of England
Subdivision Type4:District
Subdivision Name4:King's Lynn and West Norfolk
Length:10.4km (06.5miles)
Source1 Location:Shernborne
Source1 Coordinates:52.862°N 0.5438°W
Source1 Elevation:28m (92feet)
Mouth:The Wash
Mouth Location:Wolferton Creek
Mouth Coordinates:52.8444°N 0.4529°W
Mouth Elevation:0m (00feet)
Basin Size:34.4km2

The River Ingol is a small river in the west of the English county of Norfolk.[1]

Sources

The source of the river can be found a little to the west of the village of Shernborne, about above sea level. It flows in a westerly direction across agricultural land towards Snettisham, and north of the hamlet of Ingoldisthorpe.

Watermill at Snettisham

On the river at Snettisham stands a watermill TF68083346 . This was built in 1800 for £800 at a time when bread was scarce and it was built by the community of Snettisham for the people of the village. It is believed that the present mill was built on an existing site although virtually no records have so far been found apart from the fact that Thomas Stonne was a Snettisham miller in 1626. At the time of Domesday, there were seven mills in Snettisham more than in any other Norfolk village. Today's mill is very small and originally consisted of a single small structure built of local dark brown carrstone with a pantiled roof. In 1877, machinery was improved and a granary and wagon store were added to the complex. The mill had three pairs of stones and unusually the larger two pairs were driven from above and the smaller pair from below, the latter pair required less power and was used when water levels were low. The mill worked on until 1940 producing flour and after that was used for animal feed production until 1960. The mill was restored, and brought back to working order by 1984. It was sold in 2008, and a planning application lodged to part convert it to holiday accommodation.[2] Permission was refused. 1 September 2008.[3]

Snettisham to the Sea

From Snettisham the river flows again across open agricultural land. The river's course has been modified but there are no embankments or flood defence structures to date. The lowermost reaches of the river run parallel to the coastline where the river backs up into a series of ponds and tidal flaps, discharging into the sea at low tide. These brackish lagoons, intertidal mudflats, and salt marshes all host a selection of birds, plants, and rare invertebrates. On Faden’s map of Norfolk of 1797, the tidal ponds of today were part of what was then Snettisham harbour and salt marshes, which was also then the mouth of the river Ingol

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ingol . Catchment Data Explorer. Environment Agency . 30 November 2016.
  2. http://www.norfolkmills.co.uk/Watermills/snettisham.html Norfolk Mills, Snettisham Watermill.
  3. Web site: Archived copy . 2009-06-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110607132452/http://www.west-norfolk.gov.uk/pdf/dcb010908.pdf . 2011-06-07 .