The Thames (pronounced "temz") is a river flowing through southern England and connecting London with the sea. It has a length of 346 kilometres (215 statute miles) with its source in the Cotswolds; it then flows through Oxford (where it is called the Isis), Maidenhead, Windsor, London proper, Greenwich, and then Dartford[?] before entering the sea. Part of the area west of London is sometimes termed the Thames Valley[?] whilst east of Tower Bridge development agencies and Ministers have taken to using the term "Thames Gateway".
About 90 kilometres from the sea, upstream of London, the river begins to exhibit signs of tidal activity as the North Sea begins to affect it. London was reputedly made capital of Roman Britain at the spot where the tides reached in 43 AD, but a variety of factors have pushed this spot up river in the 2000 years since then. The Romans called the river Thamesis. At London, the water is slightly brackish with sea salt.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, during the period now referred to as the Little Ice Age, the Thames often froze over in the winter. This led to the first "Frost Fair" in 1607, complete with a tent city set up on the river itself and offering a number of odd amusements, including ice bowling. After temperatures began to rise again, starting in 1814, the river never again froze over completely.
By the 18th century, the Thames was one of the world's busiest waterways, as London became the centre of the vast, mercantile British Empire. The coming of rail and road transportation, and the decline of the Empire in the years following 1914, have reduced the prominence of the river. London itself is no longer a port of any note, and the Port of London has moved downstream to Tilbury[?]. In return, the Thames has undergone a massive clean-up from the filthy days of the late 19th and early- to mid-20th centuries, and life has returned to its formerly dead waters.
In the early 1980s, a massive flood control device, the Thames Barrier, was opened. It is utilised several times a year to prevent water damage to London's low lying areas upstream.
There are many bridges and tunnels crossing the Thames, including Tower Bridge, London Bridge, Lambeth Bridge[?], and the Dartford Crossing.
Londoners rarely use the word 'Thames', it is simply referred to as 'the river'.
Photograph of the Thames taken from London Bridge looking towards Tower Bridge. (Photo taken by D. Alston.)
Crossings of the Thames
The crossings are listed in upstream order.- Dartford Crossing including two Dartford Tunnels (1963 and 1980) and the Queen Elizabeth II suspension Bridge (1991)
- Woolwich Foot Tunnel[?] (1912)
- Woolwich Ferry
- Thames Barrier
- Jubilee Line tunnel (between North Greenwich[?] and Canning Town[?]; 1999)
- Blackwall Tunnels[?] (1897; second bore 1967)
- Jubilee Line tunnel (between Canary Wharf[?] and North Greenwich[?]; 1999)
- Docklands Light Railway (1999)
- Greenwich Foot Tunnel[?] (Alexander Binnie, 1902)
- Jubilee Line tunnel (between Canada Water[?] and Canary Wharf[?]; 1999)
- Rotherhithe Tunnel[?] (Maurice Fitzmaurice, 1908)
- Thames Tunnel (Wapping to Rotherhithe Tunnel) (Marc Brunel, 1843; the world's first underwater tunnel, now part of the East London Line)
- Tower Bridge (1894)
- Tower Subway (Barlow & Greathead, 1870; now carries pipes and fibre-optic cables)
- Northern Line (City branch) tunnel (1900)
- London Bridge (1973)
- Cannon Street Railway Bridge[?] (1982)
- Southwark Bridge[?] (1921)
- Millennium Footbridge (2002)
- Blackfriars Railway Bridge[?] (1886)
- Blackfriars Bridge (1869)
- Waterloo and City Line tunnel (1898)
- Waterloo Bridge[?] (1945)
- Northern Line (Charing Cross branch) tunnel (1926)
- Hungerford Footbridges[?] (2002)
- Charing Cross (Hungerford) Bridge (1864)
- Bakerloo Line tunnel (1906)
- Jubilee Line tunnel (between Westminster[?] and Waterloo; 1999)
- Westminster Bridge[?] (1862)
- Lambeth Bridge[?] (1932)
- Vauxhall Bridge[?] (1906)
- Victoria Line tunnel (1971)
- Victoria Railway Bridge (Grosvenor Bridge) (1859)
- Chelsea Bridge (1937)
- Albert Bridge (1873)
- Battersea Bridge (1890)
- Battersea Railway Bridge (1863)
- Wandsworth Bridge (1938)
- Fulham Railway Bridge (1889)
- Putney Bridge (1886)
- Hammersmith Bridge (1887)
- Barnes Railway Bridge (1849)
- Chiswick Bridge (1933)
- Kew Railway Bridge (1869)
- Kew Bridge (1903)
- Richmond Footbridge (1894)
- Twickenham Bridge (1933)
- Richmond Railway Bridge (1848)
- Richmond Bridge (1777)
- Teddington Lock Footbridge
- Kingston Railway Bridge (1863)
- Kingston Bridge (1828)
- Hampton Court Bridge (1933)
- Walton Bridge (1954)
- Chertsey Bridge (1785)
- M3 Motorway Bridge (1971)
- Staines Railway Bridge (1856)
- Staines Bridge (1832)
- Runnymede Bridge (1961) (M25 motorway bridge added 1983)
- Albert Bridge, Datchet (1928?)
- Victoria Bridge, Datchet (1967?)
- Black Pott's Railway Bridge (1892)
- Windsor Bridge (1824)
- Windsor Railway Bridge (1849)
- Windsor By-pass Bridge (1966)
- Summerleaze Footbridge (1992)
- M4 Bridge (1961)
- Maidenhead Railway Bridge (1838)
- Maidenhead Bridge (1777)
- Boulter's Lock Bridge (1912)
- Cookham Bridge (1867)
- Bourne End Railway Bridge (1895)
- Bourne End Footbridge (c.1998)
- Marlow By-pass Bridge (1972)
- Marlow Bridge (1832)
- Temple Footbridge (1989)
- Henley Bridge (1786)
- Shiplake Railway Bridge (1897)
- Sonning Bridge (c.1775)
- Reading Bridge (1923)
- Caversham Bridge (1926)
- Pangbourne Bridge
- Goring Railway Bridge
- Goring Bridge
There are also many tunnels used by "tube" trains as part of the London Underground network or (at Greenwich), the Docklands Light Railway, and a free ferry for vehicles, cycles and people on foot during daylight hours at Woolwich. A further tunnel is under construction as part of a high speed international railway line between Ebbsfleet in Kent and Stratford in Newham[?]. It is due to be completed in 2007 and will be downstream of all older crossings.
Islands in the Thames
Listed in upstream order.- Canvey Island[?]
- Isle of Grain[?]
- Frog Island, Rainham
- Isle of Dogs
- Chiswick Eyot
- Oliver's Island, Kew
- Brentford Ait
- Lot's Ait
- Isleworth Ait
- Corporation Island, Twickenham
- Glover's Island, Twickenham
- Eel Pie Island, Twickenham
- Trowlock Island, Teddington
- Steven's Eyot
- Raven's Ait, Hampton Court
- Boyle Farm Island
- Thames Ditton Island
- Ash Island, East Molesey
- Tagg's Island, Hampton Court
- Garrick's Ait
- Platt's Eyot
- Sunbury Court Island, Sunbury
- Swan's Rest Island, Sunbury
- Rivermead Island, Sunbury
- Sunbury Lock Ait
- Wheatley's Ait
- Desborough Island, Shepperton
- D'Oyly Carte Island
- Lock Island
- Hamhaugh Island
- Pharaoh's Island
- Penton Hook Island
- Truss's Island
- Church Island, Staines
- Hollyhock Island, Staines
- Holm Island, Staines
- The Island, Hythe End
- Magna Carta Island, Runnymede
- Pats Croft Eyot
Other rivers with the same name include:
- Thames River (Ontario, Canada)
- River Thames, Connecticut[?]
Common misspelling and questions (FAQ)
hames tames thmes thaes thams thame htames tahmes thmaes thaems thamse thame tthames thhames thaames thammes thamees thamess 5hames rhames fhames 6hames ghames 6hames yhames ghames tyames tgames tbames tuames tnames tuames tjames tnames thqmes thwmes thzmes thwmes thsmes thzmes thajes thanes thakes thakes tha,es tham3s thamws thamss tham4s thamds tham4s thamrs thamds thamew thamea thamez thamee thamex thamee thamed thamex yhames tyhames thameesAt the first she angrily resisted gracefully retreated, declaring, with royal scorn for truth, that "she one to which she owed some of her most brilliant triumphs in diplomacy. the slightest shame, but only amusement at the simplicity of those who Chartered, 1606. Colonization of Virginia.] Her natural instincts, her thrift, and her love of peace inclined her and Catholics. But while the news of St. Bartholomew's Eve seemed to the Huguenots in France, and to stem the persecutions of Philip in the no enthusiasm. She encouraged every branch of industry, commerce, Raleigh's plans for colonization in America, permitting the New Colony the "Merchant Company," intended to absorb the new trade with the of England. The only relation she had in the world was her cousin, Mary afforded a rallying point for malcontents, who asserted that her the Pope to sanction the divorce. Mary Stuart, who stood next.