Cod Beck, North Yorkshire


Cod Beck is a river in North Yorkshire, England. It has a catchment area of. It flows for over from Osmotherley, through Thirsk, and enters the River Swale just to the south of Topcliffe.

History

The river extends for from above Cod Beck Reservoir at Osmotherley on the edge of the North York Moors through Thirsk and on to join the River Swale about a south of Topcliffe. In 1767 an Act of Parliament was obtained to canalise the river from its mouth on the Swale, as far upstream as Thirsk; but apart from one set of locks, this scheme failed. The river flowing through Thirsk powered at least one mill, the Union Mill, which ground corn. Osmotherley had five mills which were powered by the river; three textile, one corn, and one timber.
Cod Beck has a long history of flooding Thirsk and a feasibility study completed in April 2005 recommended additional flood defences and upstream storage. In 2011, a proposed flood defence scheme in Thirsk was cancelled due to the Environment Agency having its budget cut by 41%. The highest water level recorded at Thirsk was In January 2021.
The name Cod Beck is a derivative of Cold Beck. The surrounding topography means the beck follows an unusual course, running westwards at first away from the Hambleton Hills, then heading south at Foxton until it meets the Swale. The total area that the beck drains is just over.
The river quality is recognised as being good, and supports native white-clawed crayfish, grayling, trout, stone loach, bullhead and lamphrey. Otters have also been noted along the watercourse.

Settlements

from source