Guest tsavo Posted June 12, 2007 Share Posted June 12, 2007 The Rivelin Tunnel ran from Ladybower to Rivelin. This picture shows miners on their train, which was powered by the electrical cables overhead, at the western entrance to the tunnel. This tunnel was constructed as an offshoot to the main aqueduct to feed water for Sheffield and was funded by the Sheffield Corporation. ....the Rivelin tunnel? Came across this picture in Picture Sheffield but have never heard of a tunnel. What did it carry? Presumably water, but where to. Any answers or suggestions would be welcome. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bayleaf Posted June 12, 2007 Share Posted June 12, 2007 It's a tunnel that carries water from Ladybower to the works in Rivelin. If you go up to Redmires and walk along the leet that runs onto the moor, you'll see a stone tower next to the leet. This was a sighting tower for the surveyors and engineers driving the Rivelin tunnel. On the subject of tunnels in Rivelin, there was a proposal around 1900 for a suburban railway for Sheffield. This would have run from a station in Fitzalan Square, down to St. Mary's, then up to Endcliffe, up the Porter Valley and then through a tunnel into Rivelin, down to Malin Bridge, along Holme Lane, to connect with the Manchester line at Wardsend, and back into the city centre. At the time the Council planned housing estates for the Porter and Rivelin Valleys and this line would have served both. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest tsavo Posted June 12, 2007 Share Posted June 12, 2007 Thanks Bayleaf, presumably the water is pumped through. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted June 12, 2007 Share Posted June 12, 2007 .....the Rivelin tunnel? Came across this picture in Picture Sheffield but have never heard of a tunnel. What did it carry? Presumably water, but where to. Any answers or suggestions would be welcome. Now, of course I could have answered this question, with no effort at all, but, boy am I glad Bayleaf got the answer in first, because, quite frankly, I was utterly floored by this one Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neddy Posted June 12, 2007 Share Posted June 12, 2007 Here wi go, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest tsavo Posted June 13, 2007 Share Posted June 13, 2007 Here wi go, Thanks, Neddy. Have rotated the pic. Saves everyone getting a stiff neck. Well spotted. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neddy Posted June 13, 2007 Share Posted June 13, 2007 Just started transcribing this one, History and description of the Sheffield Water Works,1924 very interesting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest tsavo Posted June 13, 2007 Share Posted June 13, 2007 Great stuff, keep em coming! :) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest carlie167 Posted October 18, 2007 Share Posted October 18, 2007 Here wi go, Fascinating stuff, but what are holding tanks please and are they still used <_< Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neddy Posted October 18, 2007 Share Posted October 18, 2007 Fascinating stuff, but what are holding tanks please and are they still used Well I know the Moonshine tank is still in use, and would presume the rest are, just a place to store the water ready for use. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bayleaf Posted October 19, 2007 Share Posted October 19, 2007 Fascinating stuff, but what are holding tanks please and are they still used So are the Ringinglow tanks. They're not at Ringinglow proper, but off Ringinglow Road, nearly opposite Wigley Farm. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neddy Posted October 19, 2007 Share Posted October 19, 2007 Can anyone tell me what the letter is at the start of the third line down. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bayleaf Posted October 19, 2007 Share Posted October 19, 2007 Can anyone tell me what the letter is at the start of the third line down. Its an H,, the word is Haec meaning this or these (but I'm willing to take a second opinion on the translation!) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neddy Posted October 19, 2007 Share Posted October 19, 2007 Its an H,, the word is Haec meaning this or these (but I'm willing to take a second opinion on the translation!) That'll do for me thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bayleaf Posted October 27, 2007 Share Posted October 27, 2007 A bit more detail about the tunnel. It was dug to enable compensation water liabilities on the Rivelin to be met without draining water from Redmires, as previously happened. It was to be 4.5 miles long, with a fall towards Rivelin of 1 in 3,600, which means the Rivelin end is 6ft 7 in. lower. It is 6ft 6in high and 6ft wide, and emerges by the Wyming Brook Drive at the side of the lower dam. The tunnel was begun in 1903 and completed in 1909 at a cost of £135,151, which was £13,000 below the estimate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neddy Posted October 27, 2007 Share Posted October 27, 2007 Rivelin Tunnel Sheffield's share of the Derwent water is taken from the joint aqueduct at Lady Bower, at a point about three miles south of the Derwent Reservoir, and conveyed by gravitation through a tunnel, which the Corporation constructed under Bamford Edge, dividing the valleys of the Derwent and the Rivelin, to the works of the Corporation in the Rivelin valley. The length of the tunnel is 7,652 yards or 4 miles 612 yards, and the gradient is 1 in 3600. It has a semi circular arch with vertical side walls and dished invert, the height being 6 feet 6 inches and the width 6 feet, and the lining is partly in cement concrete, and partly in brickwork, varying according to the nature of the strata. It was driven through from each end without shafts, which is believed to be unique, having regard for its length. The system of ventilation adopted proved exceptionally efficient. The whole of the apparatus for driving, haulage, pumping, ventilation and lighting was worked by electrical plant, which greatly conduced to the efficiency of working and the health of the workmen. The ground tunnelled through consisted of millstone grit and hard shale interspersed with bands of rock. with the exception of the Severn Tunnel, which is only 12 yards longer, it is the longest tunnel in England, and certainly the longest in Great Britain for Waterworks purposes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest tsavo Posted October 27, 2007 Share Posted October 27, 2007 The nice thing about SH is you can ask virtualy any question and imformation pours from all sides. Thanks to all who contributed. Just one thing though, is it visible at either end? ......someone knows! Thanks again. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
madannie77 Posted May 16, 2009 Share Posted May 16, 2009 The nice thing about SH is you can ask virtualy any question and imformation pours from all sides. Thanks to all who contributed. Just one thing though, is it visible at either end? ......someone knows! Thanks again. Here I go again, replying to a really old thread! There is an article on the Rivelin Tunnel in Industrial Railway Record Issue 197 (June 2009), which has the works yard photograph referred to earlier and also a picture of a works train emerging from the western end of the tiunnel. It is overhead electric and the catenary is about four feet above groound level! Unfortunately the article is not available as a live link (unlike earlier Industrial Railway Society articles such as the one on Tinsley Viaduct). Reference is made to an article by Jean Cass in The Transactions of the Hunter Archeological Society, Volume 18 page 60 (1995) entitled "The Rivelin Tunnel 1903-1910" Mention is also made of "Reservoir Railways of Manchester and the Peak" by Harold D Bowtell (Oakwood Press 1977), which is probably more concerned with thebig reservoirs in the Peak District, but mentions the Rivelin Tunnel construction railway. This book is long out of print and seemingly as rare as hen's teeth in the second-hand book market. Apparently the tunnel takes approx 2.5 million gallons of water a day and is still in use. It apparently cost £135,000 - not bad for a 4.5 mile long tunnel, and it was under budget! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted May 16, 2009 Share Posted May 16, 2009 Here I go again, replying to a really old thread! Any, and all, old threads we are happy to see re-ignited, especially if new/updated (i.e. old) information is contributed. There are many fine old topics (with great detail) awaiting input from newer members with greater knowledge than us old-timers, it just needs people to root around to find 'em - or ask ... Never be concerned about posting stuff, if it's been done before, so what; your input may just add to what has been posted and may, just, provide a great spark for further input/comment. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hilldweller Posted October 4, 2009 Share Posted October 4, 2009 Most Sheffielders are aware of the Totley Tunnel that carries the railway line out through the Hope Valley and onward to Manchester. How many people however, know of the existence of an even longer (although rather smaller) tunnel situated some four and a half miles to the north? This 4.5 mile long tunnel was built to carry Sheffield's share of the water from the Derwent Valley Impounding Scheme, a job that it still does today after almost a hundred years. The tunnel runs from a point just above the fisheries office at Ladybower where it receives a supply from the piped aquaduct fed from Howden and Derwent Dams. The outfall of the tunnel lies by the lower Rivelin Dam, close to the point where the Wyming Brook joins the dam. It can be found by leaving the A57 and driving along the embankment of the lower dam as far as vehicles are allowed, parking and walking past the vehicle barrier for a couple of hundred yards. The exit portal can be seen on the right hand side, guarded by ornate gates at the end of a grass covered underground tank which also receives the Wyming Brook. The tank discharges through a slot into the lower dam. The tunnel was dug at around 8 feet diameter and lined with stone and brickwork to a finished size of around 6.5 feet high and 6 feet wide. It has a flat base and an arched roof and a total fall over it's length of around 6.5 feet. It was started around 1903 and finished in 1909. Because of difficulties in the dam construction it did not carry water until 1913. During the construction enormous quantities of water were encountered and even today about 5% more water exits the tunnel than enters it. To facilitate the alignment of the tunnel various siting pillars were built over the surface route of the tunnel and remains of some of them exist today. One in particular, puzzles people walking along the path by the catchwater that enters the top Redmires Dam by the north-east corner. One thing that puzzles me, after a working life in various branches of electrical engineering, was that small electric locomotives were used with an overhead catenary supply system. Because of the length of the catenary and the very real problems of "volt-drop" the supply voltage must have been quite substantial; in my estimation at least a hundred volts D.C. and probably greater. With the limited height clearance and the quantities of water involved it must have been a potentially (pun intended) lethal situation. If anyone has any details of the actual system used I would be grateful for the information. Nowadays workmen working in confined and wet situations must use only very low voltage safety supplies. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike142sl Posted October 4, 2009 Share Posted October 4, 2009 I think we had a discussion about this tunnel earlier this year, including a few pictures. I'll see if I can find it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike142sl Posted October 4, 2009 Share Posted October 4, 2009 Yes here it is http://www.sheffieldhistory.co.uk/forums/i...mp Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hilldweller Posted October 4, 2009 Share Posted October 4, 2009 Yes here it is http://www.sheffieldhistory.co.uk/forums/i...mp Sorry about any duplication of the topic, I looked using the search function before I posted but couldn't find any referance to the tunnel. Hilldweller Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bayleaf Posted October 4, 2009 Share Posted October 4, 2009 Sorry about any duplication of the topic, I looked using the search function before I posted but couldn't find any referance to the tunnel. Hilldweller No problem, join the club! Good to see you posting! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveHB Posted October 4, 2009 Share Posted October 4, 2009 Sorry about any duplication of the topic, I looked using the search function before I posted but couldn't find any referance to the tunnel. Hilldweller Like Bayleaf says "join the club!" Not directed at yourself hilldweller, but for all our members ... The 'search function' on the main page is rhubarb, best off searching individual listings ie; SHEFFIELD HISTORY CHAT Scroll to bottom of page 'Enter Keywords' and 'Search forum' but doing that don't always come up with full results, searching on here as in most other forums 'can be a Hit-Miss-situation' Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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