Tred Avon River Explained

Tred Avon River
Name Other:Third Haven River
Name Etymology:Corruption of "Third Haven"
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Maryland
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:Eastern Shore
Subdivision Type5:Cities
Subdivision Name5:Easton, Oxford
Source1:Seth Demonstration Forest
Source1 Coordinates:38.7534°N -76.0344°W
Source1 Elevation:65feet
Mouth:Choptank River
Mouth Location:Benoni Point
Mouth Coordinates:38.6673°N -76.1858°W
Mouth Elevation:0feet
Tributaries Left:Papermill Pond, Jacks Creek, Playtors Creek, Peachblossom Creek, Trippe Creek, Goldsborough Creek, Town Creek
Tributaries Right:Dixon Creek, Shipshead Creek, Maxmore Creek, Plaindealing Creek, Fox Hole Creek

The Tred Avon River (a corruption of "Third Haven River") is a main tributary of the Choptank River in Talbot County on Maryland's Eastern Shore. The river is long.[1]

Geography

The Tred Avon's headwaters are located approximately 2.5miles southeast of Easton, the county seat. The river flows 5miles roughly west past the city then widens and flows southwest about to the mouth just south of Oxford at Benoni Point.[2] The mouth is marked by the Choptank River Light, a 35-foot spider in the main channel.[3]

Name

"Tred Avon" is a corruption of "Third Haven."[4] It follows the dropped 'h' characteristic of early Chesapeake sailors from western England. The United States Geological Survey's Geographic Names Information System lists the following variant names for the Tred Avon River:

History

With the colonial port of Oxford founded near its mouth between 1666 and 1668, the river served as a major shipping lane in the international tobacco trade until the end of the American Revolutionary War, when wheat became the Eastern Shore's main cash crop and Oxford's monopoly on colonial trade ended, leading to an economic downturn.[5] With the decline in trade came a post-Civil War rise in oyster harvesting, causing a renewed local economic boom lasting until the depletion of oyster beds in the Tred Avon and lower Choptank in the 1920s from overharvesting.[5]

Maryland governor Martin O'Malley sought to revive the river's oyster beds through citizen participation by initiating the "Marylanders Grow Oysters" project in September 2008, which encourages waterfront property owners to grow oysters from their piers using cages; after a 9- to 12-month growing period, the oysters are moved to a protected sanctuary in the Tred Avon.[6]

The Oxford–Bellevue Ferry, believed to be the oldest privately operated ferry service in the United States,[7] offers shuttle service across the river from April to November.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed April 1, 2011
  2. 587869 . Tred Avon River . January 6, 2011.
  3. P192 Cruising the Chesapeake; A Gunkholer's Gide (Third Edition), William H Shellenberger, McGraw Hill, 2001
  4. Wiencek, Henry (1989). "Virginia and the capital region." Smithsonian Guide To Historic America. (New York: Stewart, Tabori & Chang) p. 294.
  5. Web site: A Landing at Oxford . November 8, 2008.
  6. Web site: Governor O'Malley Announces New Citizen Oyster-Growing Program, Maryland Oyster Planting Record . Maryland Office of the Governor . September 24, 2008 . November 8, 2008.
  7. Web site: Oxford-Bellevue Ferry . November 8, 2008.