The Abbey River is a right-bank backwater of the River Thames in England, in Chertsey, Surrey — in the town's northern buffer zone. The L-shaped conduit adjoins mixed-use flood plain: water-meadows landscaped for a golf course, a motorway and a fresh water treatment works on the island it creates, Laleham Burway to its east and north in turn. Its offtake from the River Thames is at the inflection point of Penton Hook, Staines upon Thames below its lower weir close to the Chertsey-Thorpe boundary in the Borough of Runnymede. Its outfall is the weir pool of Chertsey Lock back into the Thames, visible from Chertsey Bridge.
Under the "River Thames Scheme", proposed by the Environment Agency, a fish ladder will be installed on the Abbey River and the riverbed will be lined with gravel to provide additional habitats for spawning. A new flood relief channel, intersecting the river, will be constructed to improve the drainage of floodwater from the Abbey Meads to the Thames.
The Abbey River with the Thames encircles Laleham Burway, which belonged to Chertsey Abbey founded in the 7th century AD of Anglo Saxon England. It forms a better-drained flood meadow beside the Thames and provides a mill race (leat). The bulk of its large island thereby formed passed to Laleham manor which for about seven centuries let it to farmers breeding and selling horses and cattle. In the 18th and 19th centuries the stream became ancillary to pasture, used for seasonal drainage and ornamental value of houses and a farm, Abbey Chase, adjoining its southern meander close to the centre of Chertsey, rather than corn, wheat and barley milling. It today contains Laleham Golf Course, park homes built of light materials on decking, a line of riverside homes and a groundwater fresh water waterworks with emergency/dry period storage reservoir, producing of drinking water per day. Laleham Burway re-incorporates in its modern definition Abbey Mead for many years considered its southern tract (and the parent of Laleham Burway in terms of naming). For more than a millennium the tract formed the largest Island in the non-tidal River Thames; namely the largest upstream of its tidal section known as the Tideway where there are two larger islands. It is much smaller than Canvey Island and the Isle of Sheppey and narrowly ahead of Andersey Island facing Abingdon-on-Thames, another market town with an abbey which had multiple medieval mills, another of note being Westminster Abbey, the island of which Thorney Island no longer exists. The outfall of the Abbey River is above Chertsey Bridge, into the weir pool of Chertsey Weir. The manmade strictly-considered "island" the bypass channel forms is outranked in size since the 2002 completion of the Jubilee River by the example containing Dorney and Eton, Berkshire.
The Abbey River is a subchannel of the Thames, so is believed to have similar water quality and species to the main river.SEA 2009, p. 133
The site of the abbey was bought in 1861 by Mr Bartrop, the secretary to the Surrey Archaeological Society, a combination of earlier collections and other archaeologists centred at Guildford Museum. Among the "appurtenances" (land holdings and interests) of the site of the abbey were the "watermills known as the Oxlake or Okelake mills" and "a small river or brook known as the Abbey River or the Bargewater".
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