Thank you for your patience while we retrieve your images.
Taken 23-Sep-01
Visitors 46


27 of 42 items
Thumbnails
Info
Categories & Keywords

Category:
Subcategory:
Subcategory Detail:
Keywords:
Photo Info

Dimensions1280 x 960
Original file size1.14 MB
Image typeJPEG
Color spacesRGB
Date taken23-Sep-01 11:07
Shooting Conditions

Camera makeFUJIFILM
Camera modelFinePix4900ZOOM
FlashNot fired
Exposure prog.Normal
ISO speedISO 200
Metering modePattern
The chain ferry at Hampton Loade

The chain ferry at Hampton Loade

Hampton Loade Ferry is a pedestrian cable ferry linking the villages of Hampton Loade and Hampton across the River Severn in the English county of Shropshire and providing a link to Hampton Loade village from Hampton Loade station on the heritage Severn Valley Railway, in Hampton village.[1]
The crossing has been in use for around 400 years, and may have provided a route across the Severn during the Middle Ages. In 2004 a new ferry was built by the nearby Ironbridge Gorge Museum to the design of the previous boat, which had seen 38 years' service. The new craft is of wooden construction, measures 20 feet by 9 feet, and carries up to 12 passengers.[1][2]




Hampton Loade Ferry information for passengers
The ferry was affected by the floods of 2007, which damaged the river banks and access roads and also affected the Severn Valley Railway, with a consequent loss of tourist revenue to the ferry. As a result, the ferry did not operate during the remainder of 2007 or during 2008, and the owner put it up for sale. Local people created the Hampton Loade Community Trust, acharitable trust, to reopen the ferry. This was achieved in April 2009.[3][4]
The Hampton Loade Ferry is a reaction ferry, propelled by the river current. An overhead cable is suspended across the river, and the ferry is tethered by a second cable, to a pulley block that runs on the suspended cable. To operate the ferry it is angled into the current, causing the current to move it across the river.