2017

NS2774 : Metal structure beside Whinhill Reservoir

taken 7 years ago, near to Greenock, Inverclyde, Scotland

Metal structure beside Whinhill Reservoir
Metal structure beside Whinhill Reservoir
This object is on the embankment on the reservoir's east side; see NS2774 : Whinhill Reservoir: path on the embankment, where it can be seen ahead, to the right of the path, and NS2774 : Dam, Whinhill Reservoir, a view in the opposite direction, where it is visible some way behind and slightly to the right of the footpath signpost.

As those pictures show, the pole is more or less in line with an old sluice, NS2774 : Whinhill Reservoir: sluice, to which it is perhaps related. On the sides of the pole are groups of nine holes arranged vertically in line; compare NS2774 : Metal structure beside Whinhill Reservoir, which shows the entire structure from the other side.

See NS2774 : Whinhill Reservoir: view down the embankment for comments on its probable function.
Whinhill Reservoir

Whinhill Reservoir is alongside the course of Greenock Whinhill Golf Club, but it is accessible by means of footpaths.

In the 1790s, a dam was built here on the Carts Burn for the Cartsdyke Mill Company. Though referred to as the Whin Hill Dam or Whinhill Dam, it was known more colloquially as Beath's Dam (sometimes spelled Beith's Dam), after the miller who owned it.

Its banks gave way on the 15th of March 1815. The breach was not repaired until 1821. The dam was later purchased by Shaws Water Company (see Link for more on Shaws Water Works).

The dam collapsed again on the 21st of November 1835, flooding the eastern extremity of Greenock, and a part of neighbouring Cartsdyke (which was then a separate village, not yet part of Greenock). The flood, sweeping trees along with it, destroyed a substantial bridge over the burn, near Cartsburn House. Nearly 40 people were killed by the inundation, the majority of them children (the flood occurred shortly after 11pm, when many people were in their beds).

The following account of the floods is from the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland (1884): "in 1815 the dam of a reservoir built in 1796 to drive the machinery of the Cartsburn Cotton Spinning Company burst, but without serious results(*). It was restored in 1821, and in 1825(*) the reservoir was taken over by the Shaws Water Company. In November 1835, an unhappy accident occurred. There had been an unusually heavy rainfall, reaching 3½ inches in 48 hours, unparalleled even in Greenock. About eleven at night the dam burst, rushing down the gorge of the Cartsburn to the town, and besides destroying much property, causing a loss of thirty-eight lives".

(*) The Spectator, in its issue of 28th November 1835, differs in some particulars: following its detailed account of the 1835 flood (which the article acknowledges as being based on an account given in the Greenock Advertiser), it states that "in the spring of 1815, the banks of this reservoir gave way, and considerable damage to property was done in very nearly the same track. The breach was not filled up until 1821; when the reservoir was judicially inspected, and found to be safe. In 1829 it was purchased by the Shaws Water Company, to increase the supply of water for the town of Greenock".

The embankment is said to have been of poor construction, and it is thought to have been further weakened by the tunnelling activities of vermin; this led to its being rapidly washed away at the start of the flood (G M Binnie, "Early Dam Builders in Britain"): see the discussion at LinkExternal link (Greenock Telegraph).

An aqueduct from the north-eastern corner of the reservoir leads ESE. At the lower end of the aqueduct, at NS28177456, water flows into it from a smaller reservoir that is centred on NS28117454; the first-edition map (surveyed in 1857) labels it "Reservoir (Shaws Waterworks)".

Below that point, the watercourse, following a natural channel through Auchmountain Glen, is called the Carts Burn; it is shown as the "Kar Burn" on Blaeu's 1654 map of Renfrewshire (see LinkExternal link at NLS); the earlier manuscript map Pont 33 (c.1583—1596; see LinkExternal link at NLS) shows "Kartsburn", probably referring not to the burn itself but to the area that is named after it.

On OS maps from 1896 to at least 1938, some filter beds are shown just to the east of Whinhill Reservoir. They were centred on NS27967459, but that area is now grassed over.

A water treatment works dating from after the Second World War stands just to the north-east of the smaller reservoir, at NS28207463.


Creative Commons Licence [Some Rights Reserved]   © Copyright Lairich Rig and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
Geographical Context: Water resources Image Buckets ?: Closeup Primary Subject: Reservoir Infrastructure
1:50,000 Modern Day Landranger(TM) Map © Crown Copyright
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1:50,000 Modern Day Landranger(TM) Map © Crown Copyright
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Grid Square
NS2774, 66 images   (more nearby 🔍)
Photographer
Lairich Rig   (more nearby)
Date Taken
Monday, 24 July, 2017   (more nearby)
Submitted
Wednesday, 16 August, 2017
Subject Location
OSGB36: geotagged! NS 2786 7465 [10m precision]
WGS84: 55:56.0399N 4:45.4364W
Camera Location
OSGB36: geotagged! NS 2785 7465
View Direction
East-southeast (about 112 degrees)
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Image Type (about): geograph 
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