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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thirlmere
A long thin lake, sandwiched between two mountains
Seen from Steel Fell at the southern end of the lake
Thirlmere is located in the Lake District
Thirlmere
Thirlmere
Thirlmere is located in the former Allerdale Borough
Thirlmere
Thirlmere
Location in Allerdale, Cumbria
LocationLake District National Park, Cumbria, England
Coordinates54°32′N 3°04′W / 54.533°N 3.067°W / 54.533; -3.067
Lake typeReservoir
Primary inflowsLaunchy Gill, Dob Gill, Wyth Burn, Birkside Gill
Primary outflowsThirlmere Aqueduct (engineered off-take); St John's Beck (natural)
Basin countriesEngland
Max. length6.05 km (3.76 mi)
Max. width0.7 km (0.43 mi)
Surface area3.25 km2 (1.25 sq mi)
Max. depth40 metres (131 ft)
Shore length115 km (9.3 mi)
Surface elevation178 m (584 ft)
Islands2
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Thirlmere is a reservoir in the Borough of Allerdale in Cumbria and the English Lake District. The Helvellyn ridge lies to the east of Thirlmere. To the west of Thirlmere are a number of fells; for instance, Armboth Fell and Raven Crag both of which give views of the lake and of Helvellyn beyond.

It runs roughly south to north and is bordered on the eastern side for much of its length by the A591 road and on the western side by a minor road. It occupies the site of a former natural lake: this had a fordable waist so narrow that it was (and is) sometimes regarded as two lakes. In the 19th century Manchester Corporation constructed a dam at the northern end, raising the water level, flooding the valley bottom, and creating a reservoir to provide the growing industrial city of Manchester with water supplies via the 96 mile-long Thirlmere Aqueduct.

The reservoir and the aqueduct still provide water to the Manchester area, but under the Water Act 1973 ownership passed to the North West Water Authority; as a result of subsequent privatisation and amalgamation they (and the catchment area surrounding the reservoir) are now owned and managed by United Utilities, a private water and wastewater company.

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Transcription

The natural lake

We now approached the lake of Wyburn, or Thirlmer, as it is sometimes called; an object every way suited to the ideas of desolation which surround it, No tufted verdure graces it's banks, nor hanging woods throw rich reflections on it's surface: but every form which it suggests, is savage, and desolate.[1]

Before the construction of the reservoir there was a smaller natural lake, known by various names including Leathes Water,[2] Wythburn Water[3] Thirle Water,[4] and Thirlmere.[5] (The Leathes were the lords of the manor, the valley in which the lake sat was Wythburndale (after the hamlet of Wythburn at its head), 'Thirlmere' probably is derived from " 'the lake with/at the narrowing' from OE þyrel 'aperture', pierced hole' plus OE mere 'lake'")[6] The Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1867[7] shows a single lake (Thirlmere) with its narrowest point at Wath Bridge roughly level with Armboth; at this point "The water is shallow and crossed by a bridge, so that piers are easily built and connected with little wooden bridges, and that difficult problem in engineering - crossing a lake - accomplished"[8] and the map shows both a bridge and a ford between the west and east banks. ('Wath' = 'ford' in Cumbrian placenames: the 'Bridge' itself can be seen in a photograph of the pre-reservoir valley: it was repeatedly carried away by floods (e.g. in November 1861.[9]))

Because of this constriction there were "practically at low water two lakes, the river connecting them being crossed at the Narrows by a little wood and stone bridge",[10] and the natural lake is sometimes characterised as two lakes.[11][a] The stream exiting the lake (St John's Beck) flowed north to the River Greta, which flowed west through Keswick to join the Cumbrian Derwent.

The 'Thirlmere scheme'

Use as a reservoir suggested

Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond, 6th Duke of Lennox, and 1st Duke of Gordon - chairman of the Royal Commission on Water Supply

In 1863, a pamphlet urged that Thirlmere and Haweswater should be made reservoirs, and their water conveyed (via Ullswater (used as a distributing reservoir)) 240 miles to London to supply it with two hundred million gallons a day of clean water; the cost of the project was put at ten million pounds.[12][13] The scheme was considered by a Royal Commission on Water Supply chaired by the Duke of Richmond, but its report of 1869 dismissed such long-distance schemes, preferring to supply London by pumping from aquifers and abstraction from the Thames.[14] The scheme continued to be proposed; by 1876, it had grown to include a branch feeder from Bala Lake and the cost had risen accordingly to £m 13.5;[15] however nothing ever came of it.

The original scope specified for the Duke of Richmond's Royal Commission had been the water supply of London and other large cities, but the Commission had found itself fully occupied by consideration of the metropolitan water supply.[16] For water supply elsewhere, its report had merely made general recommendations:

... that no town or district should be allowed to appropriate a source of supply which naturally and geographically belongs to a town or district nearer to such source, unless under special circumstances which justify the appropriation.

That when any town or district is supplied by a line or conduit from a distance, provision ought to be made for the supply of all places along such lines.

That on the introduction of any provincial water bill into Parliament, attention should be drawn to the practicability of making the measure applicable to as extensive a district as possible, and not merely to the particular town.[14]

Manchester looks to Thirlmere

The Corporations of both Manchester and Liverpool had already constructed a series of reservoirs to support their growth (Liverpool at Rivington, Manchester at Longdendale) but saw no possibility of further reservoirs there. Concerned that their existing water supplies would be rendered inadequate by their growth, they were now seeking further supplies: to comply with the Royal Commission's "no poaching" recommendation any further reservoirs would have to be much further afield. In 1875 John Frederick Bateman suggested that Manchester and Liverpool should supply themselves with water from Haweswater and Ullswater (made reservoirs) as a joint undertaking. Both Liverpool and Manchester Corporation rejected this, feeling that the interests of their city required its water supply to be independent of any other city. Instead in 1877, Liverpool initiated a scheme for a reservoir on the headwaters of the Vyrnwy in North Wales;[17] at the instigation of their chairman (a native of Cumberland with a second home at Portinscale on Derwentwater),[18] the Waterworks Committee of Manchester Corporation proposed to supply Manchester with water from a Thirlmere reservoir.[19]

J F Bateman (in 1859): engineer for the Longdendale reservoirs, advisor on the Thirlmere Scheme

In their report to the full Council, it was noted that water consumption had been 8 million gallons[b] a day in 1855, 11 million gallons a day in 1865, in 1874 18 million gallons a day on average with peak demand 21 million gallons a day. The reliable supply from the Longdendale reservoirs in periods of drought was only 25 million gallons per day, but in the last two years, demand had increased by 2.4 million gallons a day. Demand therefore was predicted to exceed the reliable supply in about seven years; it would take at least that to bring any major additional water supply on stream. Any major new works should aim to secure adequate supplies for the next thirty or fifty years; these could only be found in the mountains and lakes of northern Lancashire, Westmorland or Cumberland. Only Ullswater, Haweswater and Thirlmere were high enough to supply Manchester by gravity flow; the natural drainage of all three was to the north, but Thirlmere lay immediately below the pass of Dunmail Raise and the engineering to bring its waters south of the watershed would be significantly easier than for (for example) Ullswater. Thirlmere water had been analysed by Professor Roscoe who pronounced it superior even to that of Loch Katrine and thus one of the best waters known.[20]

Speaking to the report, the chairman of the Waterworks Committee noted that the catchment area [c] was over 11,000 acres (in which there were not more than 200 inhabitants) and the annual rainfall about 110 inches; fifty million gallons a day could be collected and sent to Manchester; unlike the massive dams in Longdendale, all that was needed was a wall fifty foot high across a gorge he could throw a stone across. As regards aesthetic objections: "he was himself a native of the district where this water was to be found, and … there was no man living who would protect the beauties of the scenery with greater ardour and zeal than he would, but no man with common sense would say that in the works they were contemplating they were destroying any of the beauties of the place"[20]

The report had predicted little opposition to the scheme, by which it asserted the "beauty of the lake will be rather enhanced than otherwise". Other councillors were less sure of this, one noting that "they were going for a scheme which however they might gloss it over themselves, would arouse an amount of feeling on a question of sentiment of which the council had little conception, and therefore they must prepare for a very heavy parliamentary contest"[20]

The Thirlmere Defence Association

Octavia Hill: "Could not a committee be formed to inquire into the matter, and, if found necessary to devise plans of opposition, and receive funds for the purpose?"

To protect the purity of Thirlmere water, Manchester Corporation set about buying up all the land in its catchment area; the price it offered [d] was such that there was little truly local opposition to the scheme.[24] In Keswick, the nearest town, over 90% of ratepayers signed a petition in favour (Keswick had suffered repeatedly from flooding after heavy rainfall in the Thirlmere area).[25] To the south, the only town council in Westmorland (Kendal) voted to support the scheme (hoping that a supply from the aqueduct would be a cheaper solution to their water supply problems than the new waterworks which would otherwise be needed):[26] a local paper noted that "the inhabitants of Westmorland are not much alarmed at it …so far they have stolidly refused to lose their tempers, or even waste many words over it".[27] At a meeting to form a Lake District Association to promote tourism in the region, it was quickly agreed not to take a view on the Thirlmere scheme; otherwise the Association would break up before it was fairly started.[28]

The aqueduct, however, was objected to by owners of land through which it would pass: under normal procedure, they would be the only objectors with sufficient locus standi to be heard against the private bill necessary to authorise the scheme. Those who objected to the change in the appearance (as they saw it, destruction of the beauty) of the lake would be unable to demonstrate any financial interest in the matter. They therefore needed to stop the project by mobilising opinion against the scheme; in 1876 this - together with economic hard times - had seen off a scheme to link the existing railheads at Keswick and Windermere by a railway running alongside Thirlmere.[29]

"If every person who has visited the Lake District, in a true nature-loving spirit would be ready, when the right time comes, to sign an indignant protest against the scheme, surely there might be some hope..." that Parliament would reject the Bill, urged one correspondent, who went on to urge legal protection for natural beauty, along the lines of that proposed for ancient monuments by Sir John Lubbock or for the Yellowstone area in the United States.[24] Octavia Hill called for a committee to organise (and collect funds for) an effective opposition.[30] A meeting at Grasmere in September 1877, considered a report on the Thirlmere scheme from H J Marten CE  and formed a Thirlmere Defence Association (TDA) with over £1000 of subscriptions pledged.[31] By February 1878, members of the TDA included Thomas Carlyle, Matthew Arnold, William Morris, Thomas Woolner R.A., John Gilbert R.A. and Derwent Coleridge.

Aesthetic opposition to the scheme was aggravated by the suggestion that Manchester Corporation would improve on nature[32] and varied in tone and thoughtfulness: the Carlisle Patriot thought Manchester welcome to take all the water it needed, provided only that it must not "destroy or deface those natural features which constitute the glory of the Lake District" and advised against any attempt to mitigate the offence by tree-planting; Thirlmere had "..a character of its own which makes the suggested artificiality intolerable. The rocky walls that hem it in boast no verdure: wild precipices, grand in the austerity of their barrenness cast their reflections on the mere, and by their wildness scout the municipal device of decoration.."[33] [e]

Ruskin: "as to these Manchester robbers ... there is 'no profit' in the continuance of their lives"
James Fraser, Bishop of Manchester: "two millions of people had a right to the necessaries of life from any portion of England"

John Ruskin denounced Manchester in general

I am quite aware that there are many amiable persons in Manchester - and much general intelligence. But, taken as a whole, I perceive that Manchester can produce no good art, and no good literature; it is falling off even in the quality of its cotton; it has reversed, and vilified in loud lies, every essential principle of political economy; it is cowardly in war, predatory in peace...[36]

and thought it would be more just if instead of Manchester Corporation being allowed to "steal and sell for a profit the water of Thirlmere and clouds of Hevellyn" it should be drowned in Thirlmere.[36] The Mancunian press thought it detected a similar (if less blatant) prejudice and an 'essentially Cockney agitation'[37] when papers such as the Pall Mall Gazette editorialised "The visible universe was not created merely to supply materials towards the manufacture of shoddy"[38] [f] Speaking at the opening of the new Town Hall in Manchester, the Bishop of Manchester declared himself surprised at the language of the scheme's opponents, many of whom, he thought, had no idea where Thirlmere was [39] but although he thought their aesthetic judgement wrong[32] his counter-argument was not aesthetic, but political

..one man in eight[g] was interested more or less in the vital interests of Manchester, and he thought when some of the carpings which dainty clubmen in London indulged in at their expense - that they had no right to take water from a Cumberland or Westmorland lake - he thought they had a right to stand up and claim their inheritance, and to claim that two millions of people had a right to the necessaries of life from any portion of England.[39]

Private Bill of 1878

Manchester gave the required notice of its forthcoming Bill in November 1877. It sought powers to dam the outflow from Thirlmere and to divert into it a number of neighbouring gills which did not already drain into it, to build an aqueduct from Thirlmere to Manchester, and to extract water from Thirlmere. In addition, a section of the existing Keswick-Ambleside turnpike north of Wythburn was to be diverted to run at a higher level, and a new carriage road was to be built on the western side of Thirlmere. Compulsory purchase powers were sought to allow these works to be carried out and to allow Manchester Corporation to buy and keep land in the Thirlmere catchment area.[40]

In response, the TDA issued a statement of its case. The scheme would destroy the distinctive charm of Thirlmere which was 'entirely free from modern erections out of harmony with the surroundings'; raising the level would destroy the many small bays that gave the west shore its character, the 'picturesque windings' of the existing road on the east side were to be replaced by a dead level road, at the northern end, 'one of the sweetest glens in Cumberland' was to be the site of an enormous embankment. Worst of all, in a dry season, the lake would be drawn down to its old level, exposing over three hundred acres of 'oozy mud and rotting vegetation'.[41] "Few persons, whose taste is not utterly uneducated, are likely to share the confidence of the water committee in their power to enhance the loveliness of such a scene, or will think that the boldest devices of engineering skill will be other than a miserable substitute for the natural beauties they displace."[41] Furthermore, the scheme was unnecessary: Manchester already had an ample supply of water; its apparent consumption was so high because it was selling water to industrial users, and to areas outside Manchester [h] and Manchester sought to increase such sales because they were profitable. [i] Manchester could easily get more (and of superior quality) from wells tapping the New Red Sandstone aquifer; if they were still unsatisfied there were vast untouched collecting grounds in the moorlands of Lancashire. There was also a more general point; the Thirlmere scheme, if approved, would set a precedent for municipalities to buy up whole valleys in the Lake District, leaving them at the mercy of "bodies of men, skilful and diligent enough in managing local affairs, but having little capacity to appreciate the importance of subjects beyond their daily sphere of action"[41] with painful consequences for their natural beauty.

Second Reading debate

In January 1878, Edward Howard, the MP for East Cumberland who had given notice of a motion calling for a Select Committee looking at the problems of water supply to Lancashire and Yorkshire (which would have prevented progress of the Thirlmere Bill until the Select Committee had reported), announced that he would delay introducing the motion until the Thirlmere Bill had been defeated at second reading.[47] Normally, private Bills were not opposed at Second Reading; their success or failure was determined by the Committee stage which followed. However, when the Second Reading of the Thirlmere Bill was moved, Howard spoke against it, and was supported by William Lowther, MP for Westmorland. Two Manchester MPs spoke for the Bill, as did the MP for Cockermouth, Isaac Fletcher, a West Cumberland mine-owner and industrialist.[48] The Chairman of Ways and Means said it was impossible that the Bill could be considered by an ordinary Private Bill Committee, and suggested that it should be referred to a Hybrid Committee, where "persons might be examined who have not those sharply-defined interests which are usually represented before a Private Committee. Such a Committee might consider this question through all its bearings, public as well as private; and they might, at all events, lay down a principle for the guidance of the House in dealing with future questions connected with the water supply of populous districts."[48]: c1524  Only if this was promised could he vote for the Second Reading; other speakers followed his lead, and it was on this basis that the Bill then passed its Second Reading.[48]

Committee Stage

Lyon Playfair, chairman of the committee

The bill was considered by a committee chaired by Lyon Playfair:[49] [j] its terms of reference were (bulleting added for clarity)

  • to inquire into, and report upon the present sufficiency of the water supply of Manchester and its neighbourhood, and of any other sources available for such supply;
  • to consider whether permission should be given to make use of any of the Westmoreland and Cumberland lakes for the purpose, and if so, how far and under what conditions, to consider the prospective requirements of the populations situated between the lake district and Manchester;
  • to inquire, and report, whether any, and, if so, what, provisions should be made in limitation of proposals for the exclusive use of the water of any of the said lakes[49]
Manchester's case

Manchester fielded a legal team headed by Sir Edmund Beckett QC, a leading practitioner at the parliamentary bar: they called witnesses to make the case for the scheme. Manchester waterworks supplied an area containing 800,000 inhabitants, about 380,000 of whom lived within the city boundary. In dry summers, the water supply had to be cut off at night to conserve stocks. In 1868, admittedly before the works in Longdendale were complete, this had happened for 75 days.[50] Water consumption was about 22 gallons a day per person, but it was that low because Manchester had discouraged water-closets and baths in working-class housing[51][k]The waterworks did not make a profit; by Act of Parliament the total water rate could not exceed 10d per pound rental within the city; 12d in the supplied area outside the city[l] (to have equal rates would be unfair to the rate payers who stood as guarantors for very large capital expenditure) Manchester was not profiteering from its present water supply,[m] nor was it out to profit from the scheme: it would accept whatever obligation to supply areas along the aqueduct route (and/or price cap on sales outside the city) the committee saw fit to impose.[53]

There was no possibility of adding further reservoirs in Longdendale and no suitable unclaimed sites south of the Lune; the headwaters of the Lune were in limestone country, making both water quality (soft water was preferred by domestic customers and needed for textile processing)[56] and reservoir construction problematical.[57] Thirlmere water was exceptionally pure whereas water pumped from the sandstone even when drinkable generally had considerable permanent hardness[58] Taking water from Ullswater rather than Thirlmere would cost about £370,000 more. Thirlmere had higher rainfall than Longdendale (even in the driest year, 72 inches should be expected) and (by raising the water level) storage sufficient to allow the supply of fifty million gallons a day through any reasonably sustained drought:[57] the reliable supply from Longdendale was only half that.[56] The aqueduct to Manchester would (at different points on its route) be a tunnel through rock, a buried culvert constructed by cut-and-cover, or cast-iron pipes (for example where the aqueduct crossed a river, it would normally do so by an inverted syphon in pipes). Five 40-inch diameter pipes would be provided to take the full fifty million gallons per day, but initially only one pipe would be laid - others would be added as demand increased.

'A gravel shore': Deergarth How, Thirlmere in the dry summer of 2003

The former secretary of the Duke of Richmond's Royal Commission gave evidence of the scheme they had considered, which involved raising the level of Thirlmere 64 feet. Examination of the area around the outlet showed that Thirlmere had previously overflowed at a level 65 feet higher than at present. [59] [n]Hence "it would only be necessary to dam up the present outlet ... to raise the lake to its original level"; were this done "the lake when filled will be more in keeping with the grandeur of the hills around" Variations in reservoir water level would only expose a gravel or shingle shore (as happened now with natural fluctuations in level): there was nothing in the water to support the formation of mudbanks.[59] The Commission had thought it would be unreasonable for London to take water from the Lakes without considering the needs of the industrial North; it had remarked favourably on Manchester supplying nearby towns as an instance of how by combination small towns might secure a better supply than they could by their own efforts. The same principle applied to supplying towns on the route of the aqueduct.[59]

Independent witnesses

A number of independent witnesses were then called by the committee. Professor Ramsay, Director-General of the Geological Survey of Great Britain, confirmed the previous higher level of the lake: Playfair said he considered the evidence of the 'degradation of the lake by the gorge being opened' most important.[60][o] Robert Rawlinson, chief engineering inspector to the Local Government Board favoured the Thirlmere scheme (thirty years earlier he had proposed a similar scheme to supply Liverpool from Bala Lake) and vouched for the competence of Bateman.[60]

Opposition on aesthetic grounds

After calling witnesses with a straightforward locus standi under Private Bill standing orders and hearing their objections (detriment to salmon fishing in the Greta if floods and spates were eliminated, the dangers to gentlemen's residences from aqueduct bursts, interference of the aqueduct with natural drainage, and the undesirable disturbance from constructing the aqueduct through gentlemen's private pleasure grounds (and doing so on five occasions where pipes were used).)[61] witnesses with aesthetic objections were heard. A Stourbridge solicitor[62] owning a house and 160 acres in Grasmere objected to the trace of the aqueduct as 'a great scar on the landscape'; he had laid out £1000 on building roads on his land in hopes of selling plots for the construction of houses: 'you may build houses without disfiguring the district', but the aqueduct would destroy the essential local feature of the district.[63]

A Keswick bank manager objected because the dam would be vulnerable to a waterspout, experienced in St John's Vale many times. He was supported by William Wordsworth (the only surviving son of the poet) who spoke of waterspouts at Rydal, and went on to object that raising the level of Thirlmere would remove its natural indentations: repeated attempts by him to dilate on the lake's associations with the Lake Poets were treated unsympathetically by counsel for Manchester and eventually ended by the committee chairman. Witnesses then testified to Thirlmere having a muddy bottom (but one said it was only found at more than twelve feet down.)[64] The brother (and heir) of the lord of the manor[p] gave evidence that the beauty of Thirlmere lay in it being more secluded than other lakes: his counsel used his examination to suggest that Manchester Corporation was buying excessive amounts of land with a view to selling off building plots should the waterworks scheme be defeated.[65]

A Grasmere villa-owner likened the scheme to 'some modern Cockney' daubing paint on a picture in the National Gallery and claiming it to be an improvement; he predicted stinking mud around the edges of Thirlmere because that was what found around Grasmere.[66][q] W E Forster held both that if Manchester needed water and could get it nowhere other than Thirlmere, the scheme should go ahead; but that - if it did - beauty more valuable than any picture that was or was to come would be lost to the people of England, who would not be recompensed by any amount of compensation to landed proprietors: Parliament should ensure that beauty was not lost unnecessarily. (Forster was not only a prominent politician with a house near Ambleside,[r] but also a partner in a West Riding worsted manufacturer,[s] and Beckett pressed him on why the generation of dust and smoke and 'turning rivers into ink' in the valleys of the West Riding was not in greater need of Parliamentary scrutiny than raising the level of Thirlmere was.)[69]

Need for the Thirlmere scheme questioned

Manchester's current and future needs for water were then disputed, the adequacy of the Thirlmere scheme queried, and alternative schemes for increasing the supply of water to Manchester suggested. Edward Hull, director of the Irish section of the Geological Survey, gave evidence on the ready availability of water from the New Red Sandstone aquifer around Manchester. He estimated that one square mile could yield 139,000 gallons a day; a single well would give up to two million gallons a day. The Delamere Forest region, 25 miles from Manchester, had 126 square miles of the sandstone and was untapped: it should be possible to extract 16,500,000 gallons a day from it.[70] George Symons gave evidence on rainfall. He predicted that in the driest year, the rainfall at Thirlmere would be no more than 60 inches; about ten inches of this would be lost in evaporation, and Manchester were promising to maintain flows down St John's Beck equivalent to another nine inches. In cross-examination he conceded that he had had a rain gauge at Thirlmere since 1866 and the lowest annual rainfall it had recorded was 82 inches; re-examined he thought Manchester could not get 50 million gallons a day from Thirlmere; the most they could rely upon was 25 million gallons a day.[71][t] Alderman King, the only Manchester alderman to have voted against the scheme, reported that since 1874 the water consumption had decreased[u] and in his opinion Manchester's present supply was adequate for the next ten years. He pointed out that Bateman had originally suggested using Ullswater, rather than Thirlmere, as a reservoir, and had at the start of the Longdendale scheme been over-optimistic in his estimate of its cost and yield; he therefore thought the Thirlmere scheme imprudent from the point of view of Manchester ratepayers.[73]

Henry Marten MICE thought that Manchester's high consumption in the early 1870s had been due to wastage; his calculations were that it would be fifteen years before Manchester needed more water. When it did, it could increase reservoir capacity in Longdendale; much of the rain falling there currently ran to waste.[74] It might also be prudent to reduce the amount of 'compensation water' released from the Longdendale reservoirs to feed mills downstream, and to have contingency arrangements to pump water from the sandstone aquifer in time of drought[75] He also objected to Manchester claiming so productive a source of water for itself, and doubted if it would deal fairly with other towns wanting Thirlmere water; if it did, the scheme would be of general public benefit. Playfair 'perhaps speaking more as a sanitarian' queried whether Liverpool was so sanitary a town as to be a good example of how Manchester might reduce consumption, and whether the existing restrictions on consumption in Manchester should not eased by increasing the water supply: Marten disagreed (if Liverpool was insanitary, it was because of the presence of foreigners, it being a seaport.)[76]

Alternative sources suggested

Edward Easton agreed with Marten that the restrictions on consumption in Manchester were not too stringent and was astonished at Bateman's claim that there were no further suitable reservoir sites in Longdendale; in one weekend he had identified four or five suitable sites. After Longdendale there were other possible sites, amongst many others those on the headwaters of the Derbyshire Derwent[77][v] Thomas Fenwick gave evidence on the practicality of using reservoirs on the Derwent, but had to admit that he did so based on the work of a one-weekend visit to the area, that the Derwent catchment area did not naturally belong to Manchester, and that the Derwent flowed past Chatsworth so any interference with its natural flow would have to be agreeable to the Duke of Devonshire. The Derwent valley was almost as beautiful as the lakes, but lacked a lake; its beauty would be improved by a reservoir. Aqueducts (like one he had built for Dewsbury) were scarcely visible once built, and much more care was now taken in the construction of dams; dam failure was a thing of the past.[79]

Playfair declined the offer of further evidence from Manchester on getting water from the Derwent catchment area, as its proponents had given no real detail, nor any notice to potential objectors: a brief comment by Bateman would suffice.[80] Bateman was then re-examined on the possibility of increasing storage at Longdendale. Easton's suggestion of additional sites was 'utterly absurd'; all practicable sites were already taken: "He had been working in these valleys for nearly thirty years, and he thought he knew something more about them than a man who made a galloping journey over them in one day". Taking water from the Derwent catchment area would require a nine-mile-long tunnel, and cost nearly as much as Thirlmere for half the yield.[81]

Closing submissions

Counsel for the TDA conceded that if Manchester needed the water, then it must have it; but it had been shown the beauty of the lake would be greatly damaged, and therefore Manchester needed to show that there was no other way to meet its needs: it was not for the objectors to provide a worked-up alternative scheme. It had been shown there was no necessity; Manchester would not need more water for many years to come. The scheme had been brought forward to gratify the ambition of Manchester Corporation and Mr Bateman, its engineer. In purchasing land around Thirlmere they had exceeded their powers, as they had done for many years by supplying water outside their district, as though they were a commercial water company, not a municipal undertaking.[82] Bateman's calculations were based upon aiming to fully meet demand in a dry year, but failure to do so would cause only temporary inconvenience: one might as well build a railway entirely in a tunnel to ensure the line would not be blocked by snow. In any case, more storage could be provided in Longdendale and the Derwent headwaters, and more water could be extracted from the sandstone.[83]

He was followed by counsel for various local authorities,[w] arguing against the Bill being passed without it laying any obligation on Manchester to supply water at a reasonable price to neighbouring authorities and to districts through which the aqueduct passed. As counsel for the TDA objected, these 'objectors' were - in everything but name - supporters of the scheme speaking in favour of it.[84]

Beckett began by attacking the aesthetic issue head-on. He objected to the false sentimentality of "people calling themselves learned, refined, and aesthetical, and thinking nobody had a right to an opinion but themselves", and in particular to Forster who thought himself entitled to talk about national sentiment and British interests as though there were no two views of the case. The lake had been higher in the past, and there was no good reason to think it would not look better covering 800 acres than covering 350. Forster talked of Parliament interfering to protect natural beauty, just as it interfered to protect the commons, but the analogy failed: Forster wanted to interfere (on the basis of 'national sentiment') with the right of people to do they saw fit with their own property; this was communism. Forster was not even consistent: he saw no need for Parliament to have powers to prevent woollen mills being built at Thirlmere, and turning its waters as inky as the Wharfe. Aesthetics disposed of, the case became a simple one. Manchester was not undertaking the project because it loved power: nothing in the Bill increased its supply area by a single acre; it sold water to other authorities because Parliament expected it to; it was nonsense to suggest that the town clerk of Manchester needed instruction on the legality of doing so. It was clear that the population of South Lancashire would continue to increase; it was absurd for counsel for the TDA to object to this as an unwarranted assumption upon which the argument that Manchester would need more water in the foreseeable future rested. As for the suggestion that more water might be got in Longdendale, this rested on overturning the settled views of an engineer with thirty years experience in the valley by a last-minute survey lasting under thirty hours by Mr Easton, whose conduct was shameful and scandalous. Other schemes had been floated; the Derwent, the Cheshire sandstone, but they were too hypothetical to be relied upon. The Thirlmere scheme, which by its boldness ensured cheap and plentiful water to South Lancashire for years to come,[x] was the right solution. If it was rejected, Manchester would not pursue 'little schemes here and there, giving little sups of water'; they would wait until Parliament was of their turn of mind.[86]

Committee findings and loss of Bill

The committee agreed unanimously to pass the bill in principle, provided introduction of a clause allowing for arbitration on aesthetic issues on the line of the aqueduct, and of one requiring bulk supply of water (at a fair price) to towns and local authorities demanding it, if they were near the aqueduct (with Manchester and its supply area having first call on up to 25 gallons per head of population from Thirlmere and Longdendale combined.)[86] Suitable clauses having been inserted, the committee stage of the bill was successfully completed 4 April 1878.[87] The report of the committee said that

  • Manchester was justified in seeking additional sources of supply; there were already nearly a million inhabitants of its statutory supply area and a shortfall could arise within ten years. It would be unwise to expect any increase in the supply from Longdendale. The Derwent scheme was too costly (and given in insufficient detail) to require consideration, and it would be unjust to other Lancashire towns to allow Manchester to appropriate catchment areas closer than the Lakes.
  • Thirlmere was of great natural beauty. Formation of the reservoir would restore the lake to a former level; characteristic features would be lost, but new ones would be formed. The purchase of the land in the catchment area (with a view to preventing mines and villas) would preserve its natural state for generations to come; the construction of roads would make its beauty more accessible to the public. Fluctuations in level (except in prolonged drought) would not be significantly greater than the current natural variation, and (the margin of the lake being shingle, not mud) would be unimportant. Hence, "the water of Lake Thirlmere could be used without detriment to the public enjoyment of the lake". As for the aqueduct, beyond temporary inconvenience and unsightliness during construction, there would be little or no permanent injury to the scenery.
  • the interest of water authorities on or near the line of the aqueduct in securing a supply of water from it had been considered. In accordance with the recommendation of the Richmond Commission, an appropriate clause had been inserted, and the preamble of the bill adjusted accordingly.[88]

The Bill received its Third Reading in the Commons 10 May 1878 (the TDA, however, appealing to its supporters for £2,000 to fund further opposition in the Lords.)[89] The TDA then objected that the Bill, as it left the Commons, did not meeting the standing orders of the House of Lords, as the required notice had not been given of the new clauses. This objection was upheld,[90] and the Standing Orders Committee of the House of Lords therefore rejected the Bill.[91]

Bill of 1879

Manchester returned with another Thirlmere Bill in the next session: the Council's decision to do so[92] was endorsed by a town meeting and, when called for by opponents, a vote of ratepayers (43,362 votes for; 3524 against)[93] The 1879 Bill as first advertised[94] was essentially the 1878 Bill as it had left the Commons, with some additional concessions to the TDA (most notably that Thirlmere was never to be drawn down below its natural pre-reservoir level) being made later.[95] In February 1879, Edward Howard introduced a motion calling for a Select Committee looking at the problems of water supply to Lancashire and Yorkshire (which would have prevented progress of the Thirlmere Bill until the Select Committee had reported). In doing so, he criticised (without prior notice) the conduct of the hybrid committee of 1878.

The President of the Local Government Board thought a Royal Commission unnecessary (much information had already been gathered and was freely available), and Howard's motion was too transparently an attempt to block the Thirlmere Bill. Forster regretted the decision of the hybrid committee, but it had been an able committee, and its conclusions should be respected. Playfair also defended the committee; it had (as required by the Commons) carefully examined the regional and public interest issues which a Royal Commission was now supposedly needed to re-examine properly. As a result of this, a clause had been introduced which made the Bill effectively a public one; the Lords had then refused to consider the Bill because the additional clauses fell foul of requirements for a purely private Bill. Howard withdrew his motion.[96] At committee stage, the preamble was unopposed and the only objector against the clauses[y] was unsuccessful. Committee stage was completed 25 March 1879;[97] the same objection was made at the Lords Select Committee, and was again unsuccessful;[98] the Bill received Royal Assent in May 1879.;[99] it became 42 & 43 Vict. c. 36[44]

Conversion to Manchester's reservoir

'Oozy mud': Woodhead reservoir in the dry summer of 2005

The scheme on pause

The Act set no time limit for completion of the work, but the compulsory purchase powers it gave were to expire at the end of 1886. There was no immediate shortage of water, and it was decided to undertake no engineering until purchasing of property and way-leaves was essentially complete.[100] However, these were not pursued with any great urgency (especially after the replacement of the chairman of the waterworks committee, Alderman Grave), [z] and 1884 Grave began a series of letters to the press calling for greater urgency.[103] He was answered by Alderman King, long opposed to the scheme, who urged that it be dropped, pointing out that in 1881 the average daily consumption of water had been under 19 million gallons a day, less than 2 million gallons a day more than in 1875; on that basis not until 1901 would average daily consumption reach the limits of supply from Longdendale.[104] In turn, Bateman (complaining "Where almost every statement is incorrect, and the conclusions, therefore, fallacious, it is difficult within any reasonable compass to deal with all") responded: the reassuring calculation reflected a recent period of trade depression and wet summers; the question was not of the average consumption over the year, but of the ability of supply and storage to meet demand in a hot and dry summer; as professional adviser to the water committee he would not have dared incurred the risk of failing to do so by delaying the start of work for so long.[105] The waterworks committee steered a middle course; the Thirlmere scheme was not to be lost sight of, they argued in July 1884, but - in view of the current trade depression - it should not be unduly hastened.[106]

The summer of 1884 was, however, one of prolonged drought. At the start of July, after three months with little rain, there was still 107 days supply in the reservoirs;[106] by the start of October there was no more than 21 days: "The great reservoirs… are, with one or two exceptions, empty - literally dry. The banks are parched, the beds of the huge basins are in many places sufficiently hard owing to the long continued absence of water to enable one to walk from one side to the other, or from end to end, almost without soiling one's boots."[107] Furthermore, the water drawn down from the reservoirs had had 'a disagreeable and most offensive odour'[108][aa] The drought broke in October; it had lasted a month longer than that of 1868, but the water supply had not had to be turned off at night; the waterworks committee thought the council could congratulate itself on this[111] but in January 1885 the committee sought,[ab] and the council (despite further argument by Alderman King) gave permission to commence the Thirlmere works.[109]

Construction work

The dam at the north end of Thirlmere (seen from Raven Crag)

The first phase was to construct the aqueduct with a capacity of ten thousand gallons a day, and to raise the level of Thirlmere by damming up its natural exit to the north. The engineer for the project was George Hill[109] (formerly an assistant, and then partner of Bateman). Contracts for the aqueduct went out for tender in autumn 1885; by April 1886 excavation of the tunnels had begun and hutted camps had sprung up (at White Moss, and elsewhere) to house the army of navvies (who were paid 4d an hour):[114] The original contractor suspended work in February 1887,[115] and the contract had to be re-let.[116] A further Bill (supported by the Lake District Defence Society and Canon Rawnsley) was contemplated for 1889 to allow Thirlmere to be raised only 20 ft in the first instance, and defer improvement of the road on the west side of the lake [117] but was not proceeded with. Boring of the tunnel under Dunmail Raise was completed in July 1890,[118] and work then began on the dam at the north end of Thirlmere. There were then between five and six thousand men working on the Thirlmere project.[119]

Before any supply from Thirlmere became available, there were two dry summers during which Manchester experienced a 'water famine'. The summer of 1887 was the driest for years,[120] with stocks falling to 14 days' supply in early August,[121] and the water supply consequently being cut off from 6 pm to 6 am. Stocks at the start of 1888 were markedly lower than in previous years, and as early as March 1888 the water supply was again cut off overnight (8pm-5am), but spring rain soon allowed a resumption of the constant supply. 1893 saw another dry summer, with stocks falling to twenty-four days' supply by the start of September and that - a councillor complained - of inferior quality with 'an abundance of animal life visible to the naked eye' in tap water. By now, the aqueduct and dam were complete, but under the 1879 Act the roads around Thirlmere had to be completed before any water could be taken from it.[122] The summer of 1894 was wet, and starting to use Thirlmere water would mean charges of £10,000 a year; the opening was therefore delayed until October 1894.[123] There were two opening ceremonies; one at Thirlmere followed next day in Manchester by the turning-on of water to a fountain in Albert Square.[124][ac]

Thirlmere as Manchester's reservoir

First phase: 10 million gallons a day, lake 20 ft above natural

Thirlmere from lower slopes of Raven Crag in the 1890s: water level 20ft above natural

For the next ten years, the level of Thirlmere was twenty feet above that of the old lake: lowland pasturage was lost, but little housing. The straight level road on the east bank was favourably commented upon in accounts of cycling tours of the lakes, and it was widely thought - as James Lowther (MP for Penrith and the son of the Westmorland MP who had spoken against the 1878 Bill at its Second Reading) said at the Third Reading of a Welsh Private Bill - "the beauty of Thirlmere had been improved" by the scheme.[125]

Thirlmere water reached Manchester through a single 40-inch diameter cast iron pipe; due to leakage, only about 80% of the intended 10 million gallons a day supply reached Manchester.[126] and, as early as May 1895 more than half the additional supply was accounted for by increased consumption.[127] An Act of 1891 had allowed Manchester to specify water closets for all new buildings and modification of existing houses;[128] Manchester now encouraged back-fitting of water closets and reduced the additional charge for baths.[129] The average daily consumption in 1899 was 32.5 million gallons a day,[130] with 41 million gallons being consumed in a single day at the end of August[131] In June 1900, Manchester Corporation accepted the recommendation of its Waterworks Committee that a second pipe be laid from Thirlmere; it insisted that despite any potential shortfall in water supply a 'water-closet' policy should be continued.[132] The first section of the second pipe was laid at Troutbeck in October 1900. Hill noted that it would take three or four years to complete the second pipe, at the current rate of increase of consumption as soon as the second pipe was completed it would be time to start on the third.[133]

In April 1901, the Longdendale reservoirs were 'practically full';[134] by mid-July they held only 49 days' supply, and it was thought prudent to cut off the water supply at night;[135] by October stocks were down to 23 days', even though water was running to waste at Thirlmere[136] In 1902, the constant supply was maintained throughout the summer and the Longdendale stocks never dropped below 55 days' consumption,[137] but 1904 again saw the suspension of supply at night, with stocks falling as low as 17 day's supply at the start of November just before the second pipe came into use.[138]

Subsequent phases and consequent criticism

Thirlmere and Helvellyn 1905 (A. Heaton Cooper painting): water level 35ft above natural (Hawes How now an island with satellite islets)

The second pipe could deliver 12 million gallons a day, giving a total capacity of the aqueduct of twenty million gallons a day.[139] The water level was raised to 35 ft above natural;[140] the area of the lake now increasing to 690 acres.[141] Seventy-nine acres of Shoulthwaite Moss (north of Thirlmere) were reclaimed as winter pasture to compensate for the loss of acreage around Thirlmere.[142] A third pipe was authorised in 1906,[143] construction began in October 1908,[144] and was completed in 1915: this increased the potential supply from Thirlmere to thirty million gallons a day against an average daily demand which had now reached forty-five million gallons:[145] in the summer of 1911 it had again been necessary to suspend the water supply at night.[146] The lake was then raised to fifty feet above natural; a fourth and final pipeline was completed in 1927,[147] its authorisation having been delayed by the First World War until 1921;[148] as early as 1918 Manchester Corporation had identified the need for a further source of water, and identified Haweswater as that source.

At the committee stage of Manchester's 1919 Bill to tap Haweswater, the average daily demand on Manchester's water supply in 1917 was said to have been 51.2 million gallons a day, with the reliable supply from Longdendale being no more than 20 million gallons a day and Thirlmere being able to supply 30 million gallons a day, which would rise to 40 million gallons a day when the fourth pipe was laid.[149] The aqueduct capacity could be increased to fifty million gallons a day by laying a fifth pipe,[150] but could not be increased beyond that whilst the aqueduct was still being used to deliver water to Manchester.[151]

Looking across Thirlmere from Fisher Crag to Helvellyn - showing 'tide-mark', diverted Keswick-Ambleside road, and tree-planting[ad]

At the committee stage of the Haweswater bill, objectors made no mention of the aesthetic concerns raised against the Thirlmere bills: "The world now knows that many of the fears then expressed were very foolish ones, and would never be realised under any circumstances, or at any place"[152] said the Yorkshire Post although Manchester countered the suggestion that it should not annex Haweswater, but instead further raise the level of Thirlmere because "it would mean such injury to the Lake District that they would have the whole country up against them"[149]

The modern reservoir (Ordnance Survey one-inch map 1947)

When the Lords defeated Manchester's Bill for abstraction of water from Ullswater in 1962,[ae] however, many speakers pointed to Manchester's stewardship of Thirlmere to show why the Bill should be defeated:[154][153]

  • to improve the retention of water in the catchment area, from 1907 onwards Manchester had planted extensive stands of conifers on both banks of the reservoir; as they grew, they had radically altered the appearance of the area, and (as James Lowther - now Lord Ullswater - complained) destroyed the views from the road on the west bank provided to give the public views of Helvellyn[155]
  • As Thirlmere water became more essential as a supply to Manchester, the draw-down of the reservoir in dry weather increased to double the 8–9 foot promised in the 1870s.[156][157]
  • "Large flooding of a valley bottom means an end to farming, and Thirlmere and Mardale are farmless and depopulated"[158] but this was not just because of the higher water level. There was no provision for water treatment downstream of Thirlmere (or Longdendale), and Manchester therefore relied on minimising pollution at source. To achieve this, it minimised human activity in the catchment area. Much of the settlement around Wythburn church (including the Nag's Head, a coaching inn with Wordsworthian associations) remained above water level[159] but it was suppressed,[160] accommodation for necessary waterworks employees being provided at Fisher End and Stanah east of the northern end of the reservoir.[11] Eventually Manchester Corporation closed Wythburn churchyard, St John's in the Vale being now more convenient for its future customers.[161]
  • To protect the water from contamination by tourists and visitors, bathing boating and fishing were prohibited, and access to the lake effectively banned. This policy was supported by "...barbed wire, wire netting, regimented rows of conifers and trespass warning notices, as common as 'Verboten' notices in Nazi Germany…[162]" said the Yorkshire Post in 1946.

Thirlmere after Manchester

Under the Water Act 1973 ownership passed from Manchester to the North West Water Authority; this was privatised (as North West Water) in 1990 and a subsequent merger created United Utilities, a private water and wastewater company, which now owns and manages the reservoir and its catchment area. Keswick is now supplied with Thirlmere water (via a water treatment works at Bridge End to the north of the dam), and (as of 2017) it is intended to also supply West Cumbria from Thirlmere by 2022,[163][needs update] thus allowing cessation of water abstraction from Ennerdale Water.[164] The crenelated building housing the original 'straining well' at the northern end of the tunnel under Dunmail Raise (made redundant by a water treatment plant at the southern exit of the tunnel under the Raise) which began operation in 1980[165]) is now a Grade II listed building.[166]

The new water treatment plant has permitted greater public access to the lake, and the views across the lake from the roads on either side have been restored by the selective felling of non-native trees between them and the lake shore.[167]: 327  A permissive path allows access to the summit of Great How (333 metres (1,093 ft)), which lies between the northern end of the reservoir and the A591 road.[168][169][170] The landscape remains heavily influenced by land management policies intended to protect water quality;[167]: 323  in April–May 1999 there were 282 cases of cryptosporidiosis in Liverpool and Greater Manchester and the outbreak was thought to be due to the presence of the Cryptosporidium parasite in livestock grazing in the Thirlmere catchment area.[171]

South of the lake, the only habitation is the occasional hill farm around Steel End. From the south end of the lake to the dam, the reservoir completely covers the floor of a narrow steep-sided valley whose sides have extensive and predominantly coniferous forestry plantations, without dwellings or settlements. During periods of dry weather, the water level drops revealing a wide band of bare exposed rock.[167]: 342  According to the Lake District National Park Authority:

If the damming of the valley and the enlargement of two small lakes to form a large reservoir was landscape change on a large scale, so was the afforestation of nearly 800 hectares of land to prevent erosion, protect water quality and to profit from harvested timber. It is regarded by many as the greater crime. The large blocks of non-indigenous conifers and the scar left by draw-down of the reservoir in dry periods are undoubtedly elements which detract from Thirlmere’s natural beauty. However, the valley still has the drama of its soaring fellsides, a large body of water and north of the reservoir the rural charm of St John’s in the Vale. It is stunning scenery.[167]: 328 

Further reading

Notes

  1. ^ sometimes said to have been named Leathes Water and Wythburn Water
  2. ^ All measurements in gallons are in Imperial gallons; that of 1824 was less than the current Imperial gallon, but insignificantly so
  3. ^ What he meant, although he said watershed. Throughout the Thirlmere controversy, and more widely in the period, 'watershed' was the term used both (incorrectly) for catchment area and (correctly but less frequently) for the dividing line between catchment areas.
  4. ^ For example, they paid Sir Henry Vane, lord of the manor of Wythburn £45,000 for the lordship and 7,500 acres[21] In 1888 it was said that it had cost £240,000 to buy up the catchment area, and another £185,000 to obtain wayleaves on the aqueduct route.[22] However some of the purchases were compulsory and followed contested arbitrations; in these cases Manchester paid a high price, because of the wording of their Act as regarded compulsory purchase powers; as was noted in a House of Lord debate fifty years later:

    the extraordinary Thirlmere case which your Lordships will remember in which the Manchester Corporation acquired a considerable amount of land for its reservoir, which was relatively valueless hillside land. The value to the sellers was trifling; it would have been generous to have valued it at £5 an acre; at all events it was a very small sum; but the value of the land as a catchment area to the citizens of Manchester in providing them with water was, of course, very high, and accordingly the Manchester Corporation, because of the existence in the Act of the words "to a willing purchaser" had to pay a most exorbitant sum because the land was valuable to them for the purpose for which they wanted it.[23]

    .

  5. ^ However, the Bishop of Carlisle - opposing the scheme in a letter to the Times - said that Thirlmere was 'as wild as it was centuries ago, and the wooded crags that overhang it are unsurpassed in beauty';[34] the contemporary Ordnance Survey 6" map[7] shows significant wooded areas, but these were the result of the planting (and felling) of previous generations, not the hand of Nature[35] Undoubtedly though Thirlmere in the 1870s was less heavily wooded than it is today
  6. ^ They will certainly have detected ignorance: shoddy was made from recycled wool, and therefore in the West Riding, rather than Cottonopolis
  7. ^ in England, judging from context
  8. ^ until the 1880s Manchester's boundaries were very tightly drawn, excluding (for example) Rusholme and parts of Moss Side, in both of which by an Act of 1854 Manchester could act as a water authority.[42] Manchester also sold water to other water authorities without any specific parliamentary (or governmental) authorisation. In 1862, the Stockport District Waterworks Company went to law to have the purchase of Manchester water by the Stockport Water Company stopped as outside the powers of the SWC and Manchester. The case was not heard, because the SDWC could not demonstrate any consequent financial loss: only the Attorney General could pursue the question of whether Manchester Corporation was exceeding its powers.[43] It was confident that the general trading powers granted it under an Act of 1847 covered the situation; certainly its sale of water to third parties was known to and endorsed by the Richmond Commission, and did not attract any intervention by the Attorney General. The SDWC's doubts did not survive its takeover of the SWC: in 1886 it was noted that "Besides the population of Manchester, that of Salford and of twenty-seven townships beyond the limits of the city rely wholly on the city works. In addition, the Corporation supply in bulk the whole of the water distributed to eleven townships by the North Cheshire Water Company, and to two townships by the Tyldesley Local Board, and also afford a partial supply to the Stockport District Waterworks Company and the Hyde Corporation, who together supply twenty-eight townships"[44]
  9. ^ Manchester Corporation waterworks were not-for-profit, as stipulated by Act of Parliament authorising them:[45] expenditure and revenue were estimated for the year ahead, and the water rate within Manchester set to cover the expected deficiency.[46]
  10. ^ and containing Sir John Lubbock, who had repeatedly brought forward Bills to protect ancient monuments from destruction by private owners. Other members were Thomas Brassey, Lord Eslington, Thomas Knowles, Benjamin Rodwell, Thomas Salt, and Ughtred Kay-Shuttleworth:[49] Lord Eslington left the Commons (and hence the committee) when he became the second Earl of Ravensworth on the death of his father.
  11. ^ out of 133,000 houses in the supply area, only about 11,000 had water-closets (local Acts required provision of an earth closet);[52] for houses with a yearly rental of £20 or less there was a surcharge of 8s a year for a bath; nonetheless tenants now sought after properties with baths[51]
  12. ^ the water rate had two components; a public rate (paid in the first instance by owners, ) and a domestic rate (paid directly by occupiers) with a minimum charge of 5s a year in the city, 8s a year elsewhere.[53]
  13. ^ The North Cheshire water company bought its water from Manchester, and was able to pay a 10% dividend;[54] the supply of Manchester water to the North Cheshire water works was authorised by the latter's private Act of 1864[55]
  14. ^ somewhat to the west of the then current outlet; there had been an intermediate stage during which the lake had been about 20 ft higher [59]
  15. ^ Whilst in modern usage 'degeneration' automatically implies worsening, the OED -whilst leading with 'worsening' uses - would just about allow a non-judgemental 'lowering'
  16. ^ The lord of the manor of Legburthwaite only had daughters and the estate was entailed on male heirs; a sub-plot not entered into here is a running legal dispute between the brothers over what the current lord of the manor could legally do with the entailed estate
  17. ^ he rejected the attempt of counsel for Manchester to link this with the overflowing cess-pits of the houses in the vicinity.
  18. ^ … the wooded valley, in one of the nooks of which, at Fox Ghyll, Mr. W. E. Forster, M.P. for Bradford, has a house romantically situated, with a picturesque outlook. Standing on the lawn, and looking round at the tall spruce pines, graceful larches, hollies in flower, rhododendrons in bloom, and ripe and ruddy with pendant blossom, and listening to the murmur of a mountain torrent that courses down from the hills behind the house, while the Rothay foams in front, one can readily understand how distasteful it must be to have those grand hills on the opposite side of the dale invaded by navvies, and a tunnel or conduit formed, high up on the hill-side, to convey the waters of Thirlmere to Manchester. The conduit has to pass close to the grounds of many beautiful mansions and parks, clustered on the slopes of Rydal and Grasmere, and this is really the most objectionable part of the scheme….[67]
  19. ^ Fison & Forster, who had moved their operations from Bradford to a mill at Burley in Wharfedale). "The huge mills belonging to Fison and Forster are on the banks of the river; indeed the Wharfe provides most of the motive power of the mills. In summer it is not unusual to see the whole volume of water in the river turned into the mill goit"[68]
  20. ^ Bateman's estimates were based on measurements in Borrowdale adjusted on the basis of under a year's measurements at Thirlmere; after about twenty years of measurements, including three dry years in the 1880s, it became clear that Bateman had only marginally overestimated the reliable rainfall (72" estimated; 70" worst measured) but (it now being thought advisable not to rely on draw-down during a dry year being recouped by a wet one succeeding it) had overestimated the sustainable supply by about 30%[72]: 54 
  21. ^ because of a great commercial depression, with many firms working half-time or closed, he told Playfair
  22. ^ "Mr Easton went over a lot of ground. But he would probably have done better... had he confined his attention to a single alternative scheme ... instead of making a number of suggestions about which, when he was cross-examined, he was unable to supply any detailed information"[78]
  23. ^ Oldham, Leigh, Hindley, Hyde, and Wigan (Knowles, one of the MPs on the committee, was MP for Wigan): a JP from a rural area through which the aqueduct passed also gave evidence on the benefit access to Thirlmere water would be.
  24. ^ According to a shareholder of the Stockport and District Water Company in 1893, Manchester would be able to supply Thirlmere water at 3d per thousand gallons, whereas if the SDWC built a reservoir at Lyme Park, water from that would cost 7½d per thousand gallons[85]
  25. ^ a landowner in dispute with Leigh and Hindley who now wished to cancel a contract to build a reservoir on his land now there was a prospect of obtaining Thirlmere water
  26. ^ The 'chief clerk and cashier' of the waterworks department (a married man) absconded to Paris with the widow of his predecessor. He was found to have embezzled more than £2,000 over a number of years. He had been able to do so because audit procedures were weak, and had not been followed. The absconding chief cashier had been thought so trustworthy by his department head, and by Grave that both had used him to carry out private financial errands;[101] although he had £400 of Grave's when he absconded, subsequent internal investigation showed that in 1876-1878 Grave had owed hundreds of pounds and persistently borrowed money to a much greater extent than he had admitted to the investigating committee.[102]
  27. ^ The Longdendale reservoirs received the run-off from peat moors, and were now "fearfully filled up with decayed vegetation"[107] (to a depth of 8ft or more in places);[109] this now supported a considerable population of pond snails which spawned in the summer months; decomposition of the spawn produced the noticeable fishy odour so widely complained of[110]
  28. ^ "The long drought of " [1884]", the serious inconvenience to trade, and the imminent danger of an insufficient supply of water … are too well known to need recapitulation. They have occasioned your committee the most serious anxiety, … the time has arrived for active measures being taken in connection with the Thirlmere works..."[112] The reservoirs were not fully replenished until October 1885, when water was again running to waste, having last done so in March 1884.[113]
  29. ^ not the current Albert Square fountain; that was erected to mark Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee
  30. ^ A car park entrance can be seen on the road at extreme left (at Highpark Wood, where there was a small wood pre-reservoir); from it the course of the old road can be seen descending into the reservoir
  31. ^ To be precise, the Bill got its Second Reading, but entered its committee stage accompanied by an instruction that the committee should strike out all clauses relating to the Ullswater scheme.[153]
  32. ^ ('guess, God and great big margins' would appear to be the conclusion: roughly what might be expected of Victorian engineering) Thirlmere data invaluable, but its interpretation in this paper seems to have missed two points:
    • Bateman's estimate of drought year rainfall was optimistic, but not by 30%: his claim that Thirlmere could supply 50 million gallons a day even in a drought year was based, not on that being sustainable year after year, but on a continuation of Longdendale practice - being prepared to run down water stocks in drought year so much that the next year was entered with lower stocks, trusting to it being a wet one.
    • When Thirlmere came on-stream, it did so with an aqueduct delivering only 10 million gallons a day. This had always been intended, and risk-aversion ( of Manchester Corporation, not of Bateman, who never specified the timing of the anticipated series of step increases in aqueduct capacity) should not be evaluated on the basis of a sudden increase to the 50 million gallons a day which Thirlmere was intended to eventually deliver.

References

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  58. ^ evidence of Professor Roscoe "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 13 March 1878. p. 6.
  59. ^ a b c d evidence of Dr Pole "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 13 March 1878. p. 6.
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  61. ^ "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 15 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  62. ^ "Death of Mr. Gainsborough Harward". Birmingham Mail. 11 April 1914. p. 4.
  63. ^ evidence of G Haward "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 16 March 1878. p. 6.
  64. ^ "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 16 March 1878. p. 6.
  65. ^ examination of Mr Stanleigh Leathes "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 20 March 1878 p5-6. 20 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  66. ^ evidence of Sir Robert Farquhar "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 20 March 1878 p5-6. 20 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  67. ^ "A Spring Excursion: No III". Leeds Mercury. 4 May 1878. p. 12.
  68. ^ "Local Notes". Burnley Express. 10 April 1886. p. 5.- explaining why Forster 'a noble statesman' was being buried at Burley.
  69. ^ "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 23 March 1878. p. 6.
  70. ^ evidence of Professor Hull F.R.S. "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 20 March 1878 p5-6. 20 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  71. ^ evidence of G.J.Symons, F.R.S. "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 21 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  72. ^ Bradford, William (July 2012). "An Evaluation of the Historical Approaches to Uncertainty in the Provision of Victorian Reservoirs in the UK, and the Implications for Future Water Resources Planning" (PhD thesis). University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository. School of Civil Engineering College of Engineering and Physical Sciences The University of Birmingham. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
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  74. ^ evidence of Mr H.J. Martin MICE "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 21 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  75. ^ further evidence of Mr H.J. Martin MICE"Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 22 March 1878 p5-6 Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 22 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
  76. ^ further evidence of Mr H.J. Martin MICE"Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 22 March 1878 p5-6 Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 22 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
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  80. ^ guidance on points on which Bateman was to be examined (immediately before his further evidence) "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 27 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
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  82. ^ Mr Cripps "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 27 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
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  84. ^ "Manchester Water Supply : The Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 28 March 1878. pp. 5–6.
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  87. ^ "Manchester Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 April 1878. p. 10.
  88. ^ "The Thirlmere Water Scheme - Report of the Committee". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 13 April 1878. p. 6.
  89. ^ "The Thirlmere Scheme". Carlisle Journal. 14 May 1878. p. 2.
  90. ^ "Thirlmere Water Scheme: Decision of the Lords' Examiner". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 24 May 1878. p. 6.
  91. ^ untitled paragraph under general heading "London, Saturday, June 1". Evening Standard. London. 1 June 1878. p. 4.
  92. ^ 42 for, 2 against "Manchester City Council: The Thirlmere Water Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 15 August 1878. pp. 6–7.
  93. ^ "Manchester and the Thirlmere Water Scheme". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 12 September 1878. p. 5.
  94. ^ "Parliamentary Notice- In Parliament- Manchester Corporation Waterworks". Carlisle Journal. 15 November 1878. p. 8.
  95. ^ "Sir R. Farquhar on the Thirlmere Scheme". Westmorland Gazette. 22 March 1879. p. 5.
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  98. ^ "The Thirlmere Water Scheme". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 10 May 1879. p. 4.
  99. ^ "Imperial Parliament : House of Lords: Royal Commission". Evening Standard. London. 24 May 1879. p. 2.
  100. ^ "Manchester City Council: The Thirlmere Water Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 April 1882. p. 6.
  101. ^ "The Alleged Frauds on the Manchester Corporation: Strange Disclosures". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 14 June 1880. p. 6.
  102. ^ "The Manchester Corporation and the Hepton Frauds: Extraordinary Report of the Waterworks Committee". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 1 September 1880. p. 6.
  103. ^ eg letter from John Grave dated Cheetham Hill, Manchester, 28 January 1884, printed as"Thirlmere: Waterworks Committee Report for 1883". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 29 January 1884. p. 7.
  104. ^ "Manchester Waterworks". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 12 January 1884. p. 6.
  105. ^ "The Manchester Waterworks: Mr Bateman's Reply to Alderman King". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 5 February 1884. p. 6.
  106. ^ a b "Manchester City Council: The Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 3 July 1884. p. 6.
  107. ^ a b "The Manchester Water Supply: Threatened Famine". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 25 October 1884. p. 5.
  108. ^ letter from Tom Smith Dickenson Road Longsight 16 June 1884, printed under title "Manchester City Council: The Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 17 June 1884. p. 7., analysis of the water was reported by 'Oswald Wilkinson FCS Public Analyst for the Borough of Stockport Victoria Laboratory, 28 & 51, Arcade Chambers, St Mary'sgate, Manchester' in a letter published as "Manchester Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 5 July 1884. p. 7.
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  111. ^ "Manchester City Council: The Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 30 October 1884. p. 8.
  112. ^ "Proposed Prosecution of the Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 2 January 1885. p. 5.
  113. ^ "The Manchester Corporation Waterworks". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 29 January 1886. p. 6.
  114. ^ "The Thirlmere Water Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 22 February 1886. p. 6.
  115. ^ "The Thirlmere Water Scheme - Stoppage of the Works". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 11 February 1887. p. 5.
  116. ^ "The Thirlmere Waterworks". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 07 May 1887 p5. 7 May 1887. p. 5.
  117. ^ "The Manchester Water Supply: The New Thirlmere Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 December 1888. p. 8.
  118. ^ "The Thirlmere Water Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 11 July 1890. p. 7.
  119. ^ "The Thirlmere Waterworks: Interview with the Engineer". Manchester Times. 5 October 1894. p. 5.
  120. ^ statistics are given in "Manchester Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 20 January 1888. p. 6.
  121. ^ "The Manchester Water Supply: Alarming Outlook". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 11 August 1887. p. 5.
  122. ^ "Council Meetings: Manchester: The Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 7 September 1893. p. 6.
  123. ^ "The Opening of the Thirlmere Waterworks: Important Statement". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 September 1894. p. 7.
  124. ^ "Manchester's New Water Supply: Completion of the Inaugural Proceedings". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 15 October 1894. p. 8.
  125. ^ "House of Commons: Water power and Welsh scenery". Daily News. London. 7 August 1901. p. 2.
  126. ^ "Curtailment of Manchester Water Supply: Stringent measures". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 20 July 1901. p. 18.
  127. ^ "The Manchester Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 11 May 1895. p. 6.
  128. ^ "Manchester Corporation Bill". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 2 July 1891. p. 8.
  129. ^ "Manchester Corporation Waterworks: Annual Report and Estimates". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 30 April 1898. p. 15.
  130. ^ "Manchester's Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 January 1900. p. 17. (stocks at the start of 1900 were under 90 days' supply; at the start of 1899 they had been over 140 days')
  131. ^ "Manchester Water Supply - Improved Outlook". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 2 September 1899. p. 14.
  132. ^ "Council Meetings : Manchester : The Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 14 June 1900. p. 8.
  133. ^ "Manchester's Water Supply: A Half Million Scheme". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 5 October 1900. p. 10.
  134. ^ "Manchester Water Supply: The April Rainfall". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 12 April 1901. p. 8.
  135. ^ "Curtailment of Manchester Water Supply: Stringent Measures". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 20 July 1901. p. 18.
  136. ^ "Water Still Lacking: The Recent Rainfall and the Manchester Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 1 October 1901. p. 5.; stocks went as low as 19 days' at the start of November
  137. ^ "Manchester Water: All Anxiety Dispelled for This Year". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 17 October 1902. p. 2.
  138. ^ "Second Pipe in Use: Thirlmere's Increased Tribute to Lancashire". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 4 November 1904. p. 7.
  139. ^ "City Council : Sir John Harwood and the Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 3 October 1901. p. 6.
  140. ^ "Thirlmere Second Pipe". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 12 October 1904. p. 9.
  141. ^ "Manchester Water Supply". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 21 June 1907. p. 17.: the extent of the 35ft lake does not appear to have been mapped
  142. ^ "Committee's Estimates". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 20 April 1906. p. 3.
  143. ^ "Sewage Scheme Saving". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 20 July 1906. p. 18.
  144. ^ "Manchester's Water Supply: Third Pipe from Thirlmere: Unostentatious Ceremony". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 16 October 1908. p. 12.
  145. ^ "City's Water Supply: Thirlmere Third Pipe Line Completed". Manchester Evening News. 3 February 1915. p. 2.
  146. ^ "Water Shortage: Position in Manchester: Sir Bosdin Leech Interviewed". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 12 September 1911. p. 7.
  147. ^ "£1,000,000 Reservoir : Manchester Works That Have Taken Twenty Years". Leeds Mercury. 27 September 1927. p. 8.
  148. ^ "Fourth Line of Pipes From Thirlmere". Lancashire Evening Post. 4 August 1921. p. 4.
  149. ^ a b "Manchester and its Water Supply: The Proposed Tapping of Haweswater". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 8 May 1919. p. 12.
  150. ^ "Haweswater Scheme: Opposition of the Blackburn Corporation: The Danger of a Tunnel Through Whitendale". Lancashire Evening Post. 23 May 1919. p. 3.
  151. ^ "Manchester Corporation and the Haweswater Scheme: Westmorland's Need of Water". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 14 May 1919. p. 9.
  152. ^ "Manchester's Annexation of Haweswater". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 7 June 1918. p. 4.
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  158. ^ "Guardianship of Hill Lands: Friends of Lake District Call for National Park Commission". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 19 October 1944. p. 6.
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