River Eden, Kent
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Eden Broadmead Water (section) | |
|---|---|
The mouth of the River Eden, where it joins the River Medway in Penshurst, Kent | |
Rivers in Kent | |
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| Location | |
| Country | England |
| Region | Kent |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | |
| • location | Titsey, Surrey |
| • coordinates | 51°16′37″N 0°02′12″E / 51.27694°N 0.03667°E |
| Mouth | confluence with River Medway |
• location | Penshurst, Kent |
• coordinates | 51°10′12″N 0°11′04″E / 51.17000°N 0.18444°E |
| Basin features | |
| Tributaries | |
| • left | Gibbs Brook, Eden Brook |
| • right | Kent Brook |
The River Eden is a tributary of the River Medway in south east England. It rises at the foot of the North Downs escarpment near Titsey in Surrey and runs initially southwards through Oxted before turning eastwards to enter Kent. After flowing through Edenbridge and passing Hever Castle, the Eden meets the Medway at Penshurst.[1]
The name 'Eden' is a back-formation from Edenbridge, (Eadhelmsbrigge (Eadhelm's Bridge) in Old English).
The Eden rises at the foot of the North Downs in Titsey parish, Surrey (grid reference TQ 420 551), about 350 metres north of Clacket Lane motorway services.[1] It initially runs southwestwards through Oxted, before turning south. From its source to its confluence with the Gibbs Brook (which it meets to the north of Crowhurst), the Eden is also known as the Broadmead Water.[2]
Downstream of Haxted Mill, the river meets its principal tributary, the Eden Brook, and turns eastwards to enter Kent above Edenbridge. The river continues to flow eastwards, feeding the ornamental lake at Hever Castle, before turning southeastwards to meet the Medway at Penshurst.
Much of the catchment area of the Eden lies on Weald Clay.
Water quality
According to the Environmental Change Network, water quality in the Eden is mainly classified as General Quality Assessment (GQA) Class C, although the headwaters near Oxted are Class D. The river receives treated sewage effluent from two Southern Water sewage treatment works (STW), serving Edenbridge and Oxted respectively; the stretches receiving these effluents are both subject to EC Urban Water Treatment "Sensitive Waters" investigations. There are other, much smaller, private sewage treatment works throughout the catchment. The river and its tributaries support coarse fisheries. Average flows at Penshurst range from 3.909 m3/s in January to 0.485 m3/s in July. Water to fill Bough Beech Reservoir, owned by SES Water, is pumped from a point just upstream of Penshurst.
Water quality of the River Eden in 2019:
| Section | Ecological Status | Chemical Status | Overall Status | Length | Catchment | Channel |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper Eden[3] | Poor | Fail | Poor | 6.873 km (4.271 mi) | 22.808 km2 (8.806 sq mi) | |
| Middle Eden[4] | Moderate | Fail | Moderate | 8.611 km (5.351 mi) | 15.143 km2 (5.847 sq mi) | Heavily modified |
| Lower Eden[5] | Moderate | Fail | Moderate | 26.99 km (16.77 mi) | 79.807 km2 (30.814 sq mi) | Heavily modified |
Watermills
The River Eden powered a number of watermills. From source to the Medway they were:
Titsey Mill
This was an old manorial mill. A Roman Villa at Titsey was converted into a fulling mill.[2][6]
Limpsfield Mill
TQ 404 534 51°15′44″N 0°00′41″E / 51.2623°N 0.0115°E
The 1868 ordnance survey map identifies the site of this pre-conquest mill from the position of its sluice.[7] This has been renewed and the pond is occasionally in water.[8]
Tidy Green Mill, Limpsfield
This was a Domesday site, the mill at Limenensfeld then being valued at 2s. This mill may take its name from the Tydye/Tidy family. This mill was demolished in 1892.[2][9]
Upper Mill, Oxted
TQ 386 523 51°15′10″N 0°00′50″W / 51.2528°N 0.0139°W
This mill was demolished in the late 18th century;[2] by 1817 the site of the millpond was used for cottages.[10]
Middle Mill, Oxted

TQ 390 513 51°14′55″N 0°00′35″W / 51.2487°N 0.0098°W
The surviving corn mill building, now just "Oxted Mill",[10] has been converted into offices. It dates from 1892-5, although on a site in use from much earlier. Originally two buildings, the older one housed an overshot wheel of 12 feet (3.7 m) diameter, breadth 5 feet 6 inches (1.7 m). The newer mill, opened on 12 June 1893, was a roller mill driven by a 4 feet (1.2 m) turbine producing 63 horsepower (47 kW) at 63 revolutions per minute.[10] The building was used as a factory for making woodworking tools in the 1950s.[2][11][12]
Coltsford (Cottsford) Mill, Oxted

TQ 397 506 51°14′15″N 0°00′08″E / 51.237379°N 0.002114°E
A Domesday site. This mill retains its machinery, which dates from c.1860 and is all cast iron. The mill is used as a corporate event centre, and there is a trout fishery nearby. The cast iron waterwheel still turns.[2][13]
Mill site
This mill stood just downstream of Coltsford mill, it may have been known as "Crowherstmelle".[2]
Haxted Mill, Edenbridge

TQ 418 455 51°11′28″N 0°01′49″E / 51.191026°N 0.030162°E
Haxted Watermill stands in Surrey close to the borders with Kent. It is a Domesday site and the mill was mentioned in the will of Sir Reginald de Cobham in 1361. The western half of the building dates to c.1580 and the eastern half dates to 1794. The mill was last used to grind flour in 1919 but worked until 1945. It was turned into a museum in 1969 but is now a brasserie and bar.[2][14][15]
The current overshot waterwheel has a diameter of 10 feet (3.0 m) and a width of 9 feet (2.7 m). It was installed in about 1830, but by 1972 the 72 iron buckets had failed and were replaced by fibreglass replicas. The bearing-stone for an earlier, undershot waterwheel was found during renovation and this dates to the 14th century. In full working order the current wheel produced about 11 horsepower (8.2 kW), rotating at 8 r.p.m. and driving three pairs of millstones, through gearing, at 120 r.p.m. The pit wheel and wallower are of the same date as the waterwheel, but the great spur wheel, made of oak with applewood teeth, has been dated to 1580. The mill originally operated three pairs of millstones, but in the later years of its working life one pair was removed.
Town (Honour's) Mill, Edenbridge
In 1291 a water powered pump was at work here, draining the marshland between Lingfield and Edenbridge. The present corn mill building dates to the early 19th century, but incorporates parts of an older structure. The cast iron low breastshot waterwheel drove three pairs of stones. The mill last ground by water sometime before the First World War, and was working by electricity into the 1970s. The waterwheel was used to work ancillary machinery until 1968, when the cast iron pit wheel was broken in the floods of that year.[2][16]
Hever Castle Mill
There was a corn mill at Hever Castle.[17]
Chiddingstone (Cranstead) Mill

TQ 496 461 51°11′40″N 0°08′31″E / 51.194428°N 0.141964°E
Possibly a Domesday site. In the 18th century, the millers were the Keeys family, Richard c.1740, followed by his son Richard. In 1840, the mill was owned by Henry Streatfield and in the occupation of James Young. The wife of his son James Jr died in 1853, James Jr was describes as being "of Chiddingstone mill". The mill was last worked in the 1930s.
This mill was a derelict shell for many years, but the building has now been house converted. No machinery survives. A picture of the mill before conversion can be seen here and more pictures can be seen here.[2][18][19][20][21]
Vexour Park mill
TQ 511 454 approx 51°11′16″N 0°09′47″E / 51.187743°N 0.163123°E
A weir in Vexour Park marks the site of a long vanished watermill.
Tributaries
The main tributaries of the Eden are the Gibbs Brook, Eden Vale Stream, and the Eden Brook, which has the Felbridge Water as a tributary. The Kent Brook, which forms the boundary between Surrey and Kent for part of its length, joins near Edenbridge.[22]

