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Rivers: River Blythe.

Pedrocut

Master Barmmie
We don’t have a thread for the River Blythe.

Is this the River Blythe ? It is labelled Keeper's Bridge, Marston Green, Warwickshire
description: 1900s. View creator: Thomas Taylor.
(Birmingham Archives and Collections)

I believe it to be Blythe Bridge nearer to Coleshill. Can anyone verify ?

IMG_6342.jpeg
 
I recon your right. If it’s the one on the bend of the B4114 Blyth Road I have stood in the same spot as that lad in the picture.
 
looks like blyth Bridge, Shustoke bridge which has its origins in the Medieval period but was widened in the 20th century. No part of the original bridge remains visible. It is situated on Blythe Road, 1.5km north east of Coleshill. fishing was private fishing club i think

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i fished the blythe regularly on a sunday if your coming down maxtoke lane from the high st the first stretch is cuttle cottage day ticket water.
 
In 1950's I would find my way to R Blythe on two fronts, From Coleshill down Maxstoke Lane to the "lido" at the bottom of the hill by the bend.(picture) And to Packington ford for minnow fishing, using bottles with indented bottoms. Not sure where they came from we certainly didn't have Champagne! What freedom our bikes gave us to roam from the council estate at Garrett's Green
 

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Hold our horses !

I don’t think that the first bridge (Keeper’s Bridge) is Blythe Bridge which now carries the B4114 Coleshill–Shustoke Road.
There is another picture, Bridge over River Blythe at Shustoke Road, Coleshill, Warwickshire. J.H. Pickard, 1890s.
(Birmingham Archives and Collections)
This has 4 arches and the first picture has three.

IMG_6365.jpeg


There is a picture here from Geograph…Blyth Hall packhorse bridge, not far away in the Blythe Estate.

 
Here is Duke Bridge, (on the Blythe) a little further South on Coleshill Road.

 
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If you follow the River Blythe there are so many bridges marked - some named, some not, some just footbridges. I wondered if "keepers" was a local name for a bridge used by gamekeepers from one of the big houses.
 
you could be right Janice
The name Keeper's Bridge over the River Blyth in Warwickshire likely comes from a former gamekeeper's cottage or a lock keeper's cottage that was situated near the crossing... there was a few keepers around that erea from packington estate they chased me a few times:grinning::grinning::grinning:
 
The title on the first picture gives Keeper’s Bridge, Marston Green. The river at the bridge looks a reasonable size, yet the Cole is North of Marston Green and the Blythe to the East.
Could the Archives be wrong in choosing Marston Green ?
 
If you look at the modern map and the GE view you will see the Blythe and Cole meet each other some way above Pete’s Keeper’s Cottage near the Old Mill.

Back in 1902 the maps show that the Cole meets the Blythe below the old Mill and then flow on together to join the Tame.
 
The Blythe Mill was a watermill on the River Cole, which is sometimes confused with the River Blythe.
It is located near the current Blythe Mill Farm Supplies company at Blythe Road in Birmingham.
  • The original watermill was operational into the 1970s, and parts of its machinery, including an internal undershot wheel, remain.
  • The nearby River Cole was diverted in the 1960s, which ended the mill's water-powered operations.
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Blythe
1761835678851.jpeg
 
i used to go trout fishing where the 2 rivers ran close together,you put the money for a day in a box on the gate and took a ticketcoleblythe.png
 
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